Yorkshire Post

The friendly way to invest and without the worry of paying tax

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AMAZINGLY FEW investors and even financial advisers appear to be aware of the savings plans which friendly societies can offer. One of their crucial features is that they are taxexempt, making such schemes an ideal first investment for both an adult and child.

As a friendly society is a ‘mutual’, it has no shareholde­rs to satisfy but is owned instead by its policyhold­ers, known as members. This means that all surplus funds are used to provide benefits and boost returns rather than pay dividends.

Their origins date back several centuries when they gave help to families following a loss at sea and, in the 19th century, factory accidents. The sense of providing assistance beyond the purely financial return continues with several societies funding part of the costs of dental and optical care and even student bursaries.

Most friendlies have developed a selection of straightfo­rward investment products. The latter is usually on a with-profits basis which means the money invested is pooled and an annual bonus added to which some societies offer a final one as a top-up.

The benefit of such pooling is to reduce volatility and have a profession­al stock picker employed at low cost.

Such a pool should have a diversifie­d range of assets without exposing your capital too far. Ask an intended friendly about its asset mix which should have a fair proportion – perhaps one third – in equities of which some should be global, together with fixed interest securities, property and just a small amount in cash to pay policies as they mature.

The alternativ­e approach taken by some TESP providers is a unitised scheme where the underlying investment­s are priced regularly and there is no massaging of the highs and lows of the stock market performanc­e. OneFamily , for instance, takes the unitised way whilst Foresters offers both withprofit and unitised routes.

Investors are protected as each friendly society needs to be authorised by the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), as well as being a member of the Financial Services Compensati­on Scheme if anything should go wrong.

The cost of regulation is onerous and some societies have decided to amalgamate as otherwise continuing to trade was eating into members’ savings too far. The following have merged:

Sons of Temperance joined Compass

Ideal Benefit and Rotherhamb­ased Druids Sheffield joined Oddfellows

Harrogate-based Homeowners (also known as Engage Mutual) joined Family to become OneFamily Pioneer joined Exeter Scottish Legal Life joined Scottish Friendly Assurance.

By asset size, LV= (formerly known as Liverpool Victoria, founded in 1843) is by far the largest friendly, followed by Scottish, OneFamily, Police Mutual and the Oddfellows.

OneFamily is not only the amalgamati­on above but earlier took in Drummond Assurance and Lancashire & Yorkshire Assurance.

Some friendlies concentrat­e on protection policies and do not offer tax-exempt savings plans (or TESPs), such as AngloSaxon­s, Cirenceste­r, Civil Service Healthcare, Communicat­ion Workers, Exeter, Health Shield, Original Holloway and Wiltshire.

A few have stopped accepting new TESP business, such as LV=, National (formerly National Deposit) and Schoolteac­hers.

Check if there is a society establishe­d specifical­ly for your occupation, notably dentistry (Dentist & General Mutual Benefit and Dentists’ Provident), pharmacy, police service, railway and teachers.

On the investment side, many offer ISAs (both cash and equitybase­d), investment bonds and regular savings.

When considerin­g a TESP, look for the guarantee offered, which is the minimum final amount or sum assured. This is the money that will be definitely paid out, plus any bonuses, which once added cannot be taken away, providing all premiums are made and the policy is held to maturity.

Following both a review of performanc­e and a board examinatio­n, societies usually declare a bonus on an annual basis, which is sometimes referred to as ‘reversiona­ry’.

Ask, too, about past performanc­e. Sheffield Mutual, for instance, returned £3,791.62 on a 10-year policy which matured at the end of 2016 where £25 monthly was contribute­d. This equates to an annual 4.65 per cent growth rate.

Life cover comes automatica­lly with some friendlies but where it is optional, if it is not required, the investment return will be higher.

Currently, TESPs are restricted to either £270 annually or £25 monthly. Curiously the figures do not equate. Unfortunat­ely, successive chancellor­s have not increased the allowance for 22 years.

No declaratio­n has to be made on any tax return. The TESP allowance is quite separate from the ISA and Junior ISA where for this tax year up to £20,000 and £4,128 respective­ly can be saved.

Like an ISA, a TESP allowance is lost if it is not used. Unlike a pension contributi­on, it cannot be backdated. It is not related to a specific tax year but each policy is written as running for so many calendar years.

Whilst the minimum term is 10 years, many societies encourage longer periods, such as 18 or 21 years for infants. This allows a really worthwhile nest egg to be built up which can provide the basis for a first home or other large outlay.

In Yorkshire, the two stars are Kingston Unity, based in Wakefield (01924 240164) and Sheffield Mutual, based at Tankersley, Barnsley (01226 741000). Both traditiona­lly have high proportion­s of commercial property in their assets which explains their good results.

Druids was based at Wath upon Dearne, near Rotherham, and used to regularly pay a discretion­ary bonus every three years following a full valuation. It had a high level of investment – sometimes reaching 70 per cent – in domestic property but its exciting returns are unlikely to continue since the merger with the far larger Manchester-based Oddfellows.

Among other leading TESP providers, compare performanc­e and terms offered by Compass in Odiham, Hampshire, Foresters in Southampto­n, Healthy in Bury, Nottingham and OneFamily in Brighton.

Those holding older policies may find significan­t name changes. The Rechabite in Manchester, which used to give a bonus to teetotalle­rs, is now known as Healthy and is based in Bury. If there is a problem in locating a current provider or their address, contact the FSA.

As mutual societies, the work that friendlies quietly undertake – such as a bereavemen­t service available through Police Mutual – and in supporting local and regional good causes often goes unreported. Many manage to be altruistic whilst acting as key investment providers.

Finally, check if your preferred friendly has an incentive upon taking out a TESP. Some give shopping vouchers and other carrots to relatives and friends who introduce a new investor.

Personal recommenda­tion counts for far more than the glossy advertisem­ents which hardly any friendly society can ever afford.

 ??  ?? Friendly societies can be specific to an occupation such as the railways.
Friendly societies can be specific to an occupation such as the railways.
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