Financial Times Weekend 22-23Feb2020

(Dana P.) #1
8 | FTMoney FINANCIAL TIMESSaturday22 February 2020

Finance on Instagram: what’s
not to like?
Most people in the article
who have built up a good pot
either got lucky with a windfall,
or have had high paying jobs.
The guy whose net worth is
$3.8m forgot to mention that
most of it came from the sale
of his business in 2014.
It’s borderline irresponsible
to give people the fantasy that
they can retire early, or
become a millionaire if they
are average people on average
wages. —KKR, via FT.com

Interesting that most of the
Instagram financial advisers in

the article are women. —
Saltpetre, via FT.com

I find the language used by
the Insta crowd nauseating, e.g
side hustle. It’s trying to be a
cutesy way to normalise the
fact that a lot of people don’t
earn enough to support
themselves. It’s very
patronising. —Antinomy, via
FT.com

Pensions tax relief: is time
running out?
A tax on the pension lump
sum will result in mass
retirements of those who can
but have not yet retired. This

will include many hospital
consultants , GPs and other
health professionals and may
worsen our current staffing
crisis, which was brought on
by the last stupid reforms. —
AdamD, via FT.com

If the tax break is so wrong,
why not tax those in receipt of
their pension who already
received the tax break (and
who have significantly more
generous pensions than the
current working generation)?
Yet again the government
protects a generation of
pensioners who enjoy a far
higher standard of living than

those who will come after (or
those who have come before),
at the expense of the younger
generation. Cowardly. —
Average Josephine, via FT.com

Just keep it simple. I would
go for a lifetime allowance on
contributions (not the pot).
You could use the current £1m
level, and a flat rate of income
tax relief. Would the
government like to save
money? OK, how about
tackling the completely
unaffordable and over-
generous public pension
schemes. This should have
been done 30 years

ago. —Floreat, via FT.com

By merely talking about it,
the Tories will have scared
savers into believing that a
Conservative government
considers rules on long-term
retirement planning as fair
game. That can also be
extended to Isas. —Mr
Grumpy, via FT.com

Can you afford to retire when
you want to?
The lifetime allowance is a
skimming operation and
particularly nasty for private
sector defined contribution
retirees. The worst of

Whitehall, inflicted by those
with gold-plated defined
benefits schemes. —Robbie2,
via FT.com

Phew, I appear to be at peak
unhappiness and anxious age.
On the bright side there is a
steep line of upside ahead of
me until my demise. What a
relief. —Alternative view, via
FT.com

Y


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READERS WRITE


Bobby Seagull Serious Money


S


olvingpuzzles—asa
mathematician,andquiz
showenthusiast—iswhat
rocksmyworld.
Sothisfinancial
conundrumposedbyFTreaderPeter
Stauntonintriguedme—whatdrives
ourofteninefficientdesireto
compartmentaliseourmoney?
OneofthewinnersofmyFT
ChristmasMathsQuiz,Peter’s
tiebreakersuggestedthistopicfora
ChristmasLecture,basedonthe
hiddenpowerofpersonalfinances(I
hadacameoroleinthe2019Royal
InstitutionChristmasLectures
hostedbyDrHannahFryonthe
hiddenpowerofmaths).
Thefatheroftwoboys,Petersaid
hewasstruckbythenumberof
parentswhosavetofundtheir
children’seducation.
Manyusecashaccountsbearinga
lowinterestratefortheselong-term
savings,butsimultaneouslypay
muchhigherratesontheirownshort-
dateddebts.Thisisillogicalandona
parwithborrowingmoneytoinvest
insavings.Sowhydoparentsdoit?
LatestHMRCstatisticsshowmore
parentsopenJuniorIsas(Jisas)for
theirchildren.Inthe2017-18taxyear,
therewasa14percentincreasein
newaccounts,witharecord£902m
ofourhard-earnedcashstashed
away.However,57percentofthat
totalwassavedintocashIsas.
Consideringthatthelock-upona
Jisaaccountcouldbeaslongas18
years,thereturnoncashisunlikelyto
beatstockmarketinvestments.
WhentheJuniorIsawaslaunched
onNovember12011,theannual
subscriptionlimitwas£3,600

(it’srisento£4,236today).
Ifyouhadopenedoneofthefirst
accountsforyourchildandput
£3,600inaglobaltrackersuchasthe
Legal&GeneralInternationalIndex
Fundondayone,itwouldbeworth
£10,131today.That’satax-freegain
ofjustover£6,500.
SarahColes,thepersonalfinance
analystatHargreavesLansdownwho
crunchedthesenumbers,alsolooked
athowthetop-ratedcashJisaswould
haveperformed—andtheansweris
notanumberyou’lllike.
TheCoventryBuildingSociety
JuniorIsalaunchedsoonafterthe
Jisawasborn,offeringinterest
ratesthathaveconsistently
toppedthebest-buytables
(currently3.6percent
interest).
Evenso,shecalculatesthat
aninitial“investment”of
£3,600wouldbeworth£4,718
today—andagainofjust£286
onceyoutakeinflationintoaccount.
“EventhoughJuniorIsasoffer
higherinterestratesthanare
availableelsewhere,£286overnine
yearsisn’tthekindofgrowthparents
dreamof,”shesays.
Inheropinion,parentschoosecash
overstocksandshares,because,
whenitcomestotheirkids,they’re
hard-wiredtoavoidrisk.“The
troubleisthatthey’refocusingonthe
short-termriskofmarketvolatility,
ratherthanthelong-termpotential
forinvestmentgrowth.Overaperiod
of18years,that’sanawfullotof
potentialgrowthtomissouton.”
Otherexamplesoffinancial
compartmentalisingincludepeople
withthousandsstashedawayincash
savingswhopayahigherrateof
interestontheirmortgage,credit
carddebtsoroverdraft(whenthe
new40percentbankchargeskickin
thisspring,makesurethisdoesnot
applytoyou!)
Mentalaccountingisonereason
whywedothis,accordingtoTim
Harford,theFT’sUndercover
Economist.Werecentlyhadachat
aboutthe2017Nobellaureatein

economics,RichardThaler,known
forhisworkonmentalaccounting.
Tim’sviewisthatmental
accountingisa“psychological
tendencyweseemtohavethatmost
peopleintuitivelyknowabout”
althoughThalerwasparticularly
successfulathighlightingit.
InThaler’swork,hereferstoan
interviewwithactorsGeneHackman
andDustinHoffman.Harkingback
totheirdaysaspennilessyoung
actorsinLosAngeles,Hackman
recalledwhenHoffmanaskedto
borrowmoney.
InHoffman’sapartment,there
werejarslabelled“rent”,“electricity”,
“food”andmore,denotingvarious
householdexpenses.Thejarswere
stuffedwithcashapartfromthe
empty“food”one,whichHoffman
obviouslywantedtofill.Buttoavoid

eviction,therentandelectricitybills
hadtobepaid,sothosejarswere
filledfirst.
Thalerexplained:“Youcanthinkof
mentalaccountingasdumb,as
violatingtheeconomist’sbasic
assumptionthatmoneyisfungible.”
Butfromamorepragmaticoutlook,
mentalaccountingmighthelpus
prioritisespendingandsaving.
Thisurgeiswellevidencedinthe
modernfinancialworld.Digital
bankssuchasMonzooffersavings
potsforcustomerstosegregatecash
forspecificgoals,andthe“envelope
system”ofallocatingcashforspecific
purposesisgainingtractionamong
Instagram’sfinancialcommunity.
Thisissensibleforthoseonatight
budget—butwhataboutthe
wealthy?
Coldrationalitysuggeststhey
shouldtreatmoneyasfungible.But
RuthSturkey,acharteredfinancial
plannerfromParadigmNorton,says

fromsomecompartmentalising“is
anabsolutelifesaver”asithelpsthem
tofeel“preparedandorganised”.
“Mosthumanbeingsarenotas
rationalasweliketothinkweare,”
shesays,notingthisiswherea
financialplannercanhelp.
Unliketheanswerstomymaths
questionsinschool,sheargues:
“Financialplanningisanart,nota
science.”
Shetalkstoherclientsabouttheir
moneybygettingthemtovisualise
threepotsfortheirshort,medium
andlong-termgoals,whichcaneach
bepopulatedbasedontheir
individualneeds.
Aswe’veseenwiththeJuniorIsa
exampleabove,ifsmallamountsare
placedintothelong-termpotearly
on,theycancompoundimpressively
overtime.Butifsomeoneintheir50s
hasneglectedtheirlong-term
savings,thenagreaterproportionof
theirincomewillneedtobediverted.
TimHarfordsumsup:“Thaler’s
pointisthatwe’regoingtodostupid
thingsanyway,andthatmental
accountingharnesses[thaturge]to
makelessstupidchoices.”
AlthoughourwinnerPeter
Stauntonisadmittedlynota
psychologist,heenjoyslearning
abouthowwearenotrationalbeings
andhowthis“translatesintobiasesin
ourdecision-makingprocesses”.
Wecanbeguilty,Petersays,of
lookingat“pensions,mortgages,
savings,creditcards,insuranceallas
disparateitems”sothatwecanmore
easilydealwiththem,ratherthan
considerthemholistically.
Butmoneyismoney,nomatter
whatlabelyouhavestuckontothe
jar.Youcouldunlocksomeofthe
hiddenpowerofyourownpersonal
financesbytakingsometimeto
puzzleoverthebiggerpicture.

Bobby Seagull is a maths teacher and
the author of ‘The Life-Changing Magic
of Numbers’. A long-suffering West Ham
fan, he is co-host of the Maths Appeal
podcast. Twitter: @Bobby_Seagull;
Instagram: @Bobby_seagull

The puzzle of


managing


money


Unlike the answers to my


maths questions in
school, financial planning

is an art, not a science


FINANCIAL TIMESSaturday 22 February 2020 FTMoney| 9

Barratt Developments executive


sells down after half-year figures


Barratt Developmentschief
operating officer Steven Boyes
has sold a total of 435,000
shares at £8.4235 per share,
banking an aggregate sale
value of £3.66m.
The sale, conducted across
four tranches that included Mr
Boyes’ wife Andrea, occurred a
week after the release of the
housebuilder’s interim results.
Barratt’s half-year figures
revealed its highest half-year
home completion figure for 12
years, with the group
completing 8,314 homes —
representing a 9.1 per cent rise
on the previous year. Its
adjusted operating margin
edged up to 19.4 per cent from
19 per cent a year earlier.
Investors have flocked to the
housebuilder in recent months,
with the shares having gained
about 17 per cent since the
start of 2020. Barratt boasts
healthy cash flows and a
strong balance sheet,
forecasting full-year net cash
of around £600m.
The group is a good
dividend play, having now
extended an annual special
dividend of £175m to 2021.
While management has made
room for rewarding
shareholders, it maintains its
land investment strategy
which has supported the
growth of the business.
Barratt approved £406m of
land acquisitions over its
interim period, up from
£338m last year.
The company said the

transaction was conducted
“purely to balance personal
investments”. Mr Boyes, who is
also deputy chief executive,
has a residual interest of
457,890 shares.
Legal and professional
services providerGateleyhas
announced that certain
directors and employees have
sold 5.5m shares worth £11m
via a placing. While only 4.75m
shares were originally set to be
placed at 200p each via an
accelerated bookbuild, more
shares were divested in
response to “excess demand”.
The group said the placing
was to “satisfy market demand
and broaden the institutional
investor base of the company”.
The names of the directors
involved and their resulting
holdings have not yet been
disclosed.
Unlisted law firms typically
operate under a partnership
structure where lawyers buy
into the company to become a
partner and receive a share of
the profits. If a law firm goes

public, those partners become
shareholders and salaried
employees.
Share ownership tends to be
concentrated at first. When
Gateley listed on Aim in 2015,
the former partners held 70
per cent of the issued share
capital and were subject to a
five-year “lock-in agreement”.
This arrangement dictates that
they can only dispose of a
maximum of 10 per cent of
their holdings in any 12-month
period after the first
anniversary of the IPO.
This is the fourth placing
since Gateley made its market
debut. Chief executive Michael
Ward and chief operating
officer Peter Davies, along with
their spouses, both trimmed
their holdings in the previous
placings. Mr Ward is due to
step down at the end of April,
but will remain with the group
and “retain a significant
shareholding in Gateley for the
foreseeable future”.Alex
Janiaud and Nilushi
Karunaratne

No. of
shares

Price
(p)

Value
Director Date (£)
BUY

SELL

Source: Investors Chronicle

OilCo Inv Spouse of Efstathios Topouzoglou 06-Feb-20
Midwich Stephen Fenby (Md) 07-Feb-20
Midwich Sharon Herbert 07-Feb-20
Fevertree Bill Ronald (Ch) 07-Feb-20
OilCo Inv Spouse of Efstathios Topouzoglou 07-Feb-20
OilCo Inv Spouse of Efstathios Topouzoglou 10-Feb-20
First Group Mark Sheppard 11-Feb-20
Wizz Air Iain Wetherall 14-Feb-20

Brewin Dolphin Charles Ferry 06-Feb-20
Greencore Patrick Coveney (Ceo) 07-Feb-20
Wizz Air Diederik Pen (Coo) 07-Feb-20
Severn Trent R Ballance 11-Feb-20
Severn Trent A Smith 11-Feb-20
Land Securities Group Robert Noel (Ceo) 11-Feb-20
Billington Holdings John Stuart Gordon 12-Feb-20
Barratt Developments Steven Boyes (Coo) 12-Feb-20
Barratt Developments Andrea Boyes (PCA) 12-Feb-20
Barratt Developments SJ Boyes (PCA)* 12-Feb-20
Barratt Developments A Boyes* 12-Feb-20
United Utilities John Russell Houlden 14-Feb-20
Whitbread Louise Smalley 18-Feb-20
Whitbread Robert Smalley (PCA) 18-Feb-20

67,000
200,000
3,000
7,229
65,000
70,000
75,000
9,100

36,141
154,249
15,000
3,497
10,510
113,127
200,000
116,090
288,910
15,000
15,000
18,000
5,000
3,000

740.7
500
500
1,390
741.9
751.9
580
4,475

359.6
237.33
4,175
2,605
2,605
966
410
842
842
842
842
1,002
4,734
4,768

496,269
1,000,000
15,000
100,483
482,235
526,330
435,000
407,22 5

129,963
366,085
626,250
91,097
273,786
1,093,128
820,000
97 7,478
2,432,622
126,300
126,300
180,360
236,700
143,040

* Discretionary Settlement 

PCA  person closely associated

D I R E C TO R S ’ D E A L S YO U R Q U E ST I O N S


What happens to my shares


if my broker goes bust?


called Beaufort Securities
collapsed and initially the
administrators sought to tap
into customers assets held
under their custody to partly
cover their fees. However, ulti-
mately a deal was struck
between the UK’s Financial
Services Compensation
Scheme and the administra-
tors to ring fence clients’ assets
which was approved by the
HighCourt.
While investors were pro-
tected and eventually had
their assets transferred to
another firm, the saga did
mean their investments were
in limbo for a period and the
experience was undoubtedly a
stressfulone.
Peter Parry of the UK Share-
holders Associa-
tionsays hold-
ingshares in
a nominee
account is
administra-
tively conven-
ient for many private inves-
tors. However, it is important
to understand that, when
using a nominee account, the
nominee is the legal share-
holder. This means that the
nominee’s name appears on

the share register and the
nominee receives the divi-
dends. The private individual
is the “beneficial” owner of the
shares. The companies them-
selves have no details of the
beneficial shareholders and
are therefore unable to com-
municatewiththem.
This means that the benefi-
cial owners have no rights to
attend the annual general
meeting or to vote — although
the situation is slightly differ-
ent for Isas. In terms of secu-
rity, the investments and any
cash or dividends are, in the-
ory, ringfenced as if they were
held in trust, so that if the
nominee goes bust the inves-
tor’s money is protected
and cannot be used to pay the
creditors.
In practice, the situation is
less clear. When Beaufort
Securities was placed in spe-
cial administration by UK
regulators it quickly became
clear that Beaufort’s own
assets would not cover the
administrator’s fees. The sug-
gestion was therefore made
that investors with shares in
theBeaufort nominee should
take a “haircut” with a propor-
tion of their money requisi-
tionedtocovertheadministra-
tion costs. This would have
resulted in an immediate and
total loss of confidence in the
nominee system and, fortu-
nately, in this case the regula-
tor stepped in to cover the
shortfall.
Another concern for inves-
tors is that, if the nominee
fails, their accounts will be fro-
zen. Investors could find
themselves unable to trade
their shares or receive divi-
dends until the administration
is completed. For those who
are dependent on their divi-
dend income this could lead to
financial hardship. The inabil-
itytosellsharescouldalsolead
tofinancialloss.
Investors who believe they
have suffered loss from a nom-
inee’s failure can claim under
the Financial Services Com-
pensationScheme.

The opinions in this column are
intended for general information
purposes only and should not be
used as a substitute for profes-
sional advice. The Financial
Times Ltd and the authors are
not responsible for any direct or
indirect result arising from any
reliance placed on replies, includ-
ing any loss, and exclude liability
to the full extent.

YOUR QUESTIONS

Lucy
Warwick-
Ching

I use an online stockbroker to
purchase shares in quoted
companies. I receive share cer-
tificates in return. If my broker
were to go bust, what would
happen? Does the trading com-
pany whose shares I partly own
know of my existence? Is it
likely that my dividends would
be sent directly to me?

Jason Hol-
lands, man-
aging direc-
tor at Tilney
Investment
Management,
says it is important to consider
the security of your invest-
ments when choosing an
online platform, broker or
wealth manager. While it is
still possible to hold invest-
ments directly in your own
nameandreceivesharecertifi-
cates, this is cumbersome and
usually more costly when it
comes to dealing in shares.
Investments are now over-
whelmingly held on nominee
accounts where the investor is
the beneficial owner but does
not directly appear on the
shareholderregister.
The use of nominee
accounts means dealing costs
arelow, trades can be settled
quickly and without paper-
work and accurate, consoli-
dated valuations can also be
provided.
Under the rules and regula-
tions governing client assets,
these must be held on trust
and strictly segregated from
the assets of the business.
Nominee companies are non-
trading companies and so can-
not run up liabilities of their
own,sointheeventofabroker
or platform running into trou-
ble, assets held in the nominee
businessshouldbesecure.
Many broking firms and
platforms don’t hold custody
themselvesbutusethird-party
custodians, typically divisions
of large banking organisations.
Importantly, investments held
with UK regulated platforms
and brokers are also covered
by the Financial Services Com-
pensation, which means losses
of up to £85,000 per institu-
tionareprotected.
In 2018, a stockbroking firm

I own three properties in the
UK — two of which are in
London and are rented out,
and another in West
Midlands where I used to
live which my mother uses. I
moved in with my partner
last year, and I am registered
at his address on the
electoral roll.
We plan to sell my
partner’s house — and
potentially my property in
the West Midlands as well —
so we can buy a larger
property.
What are the stamp duty
implications, if I do or don’t
sell my original residence?
Also, I hear the government
may be reviewing the policy
on the additional stamp
duty paid on additional
property purchases. What
are the potential changes
and how could they impact
me?
Do you have a financial
dilemma that you’d like FT
Money’s team of experts to
look into? Email your
problem in confidence to
[email protected]

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Barratt shares have risen by 17 per cent this year
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