Important information - the value of investments and the income from them can go down as well as up, so you may get back less than you invest.

If your plans for 2025 include giving up work and moving into retirement, what’s happening in financial markets could make a real difference to your prospects for years to come.  

Retirees in the past may have been able to quit work with a high level of confidence about their financial future, but if you’re retiring today this is likely to be less certain with your income coming from sources that are influenced by the ups and downs in markets. 

Many of the risks you face are outside of your control. Nonetheless, understanding them will help you mitigate them and up your chances of maximising your income options. Here’s what the financial conditions for retirees look like in 2025. 

Pension pot performance 

The past few years have been a rollercoaster for those approaching retirement. Most saw their pension pots suffer sharp falls in 2022 as both stocks and bonds - the two assets most likely to comprise the bulk of portfolios - fell in tandem.  

Since then, there has been a divergence in the performance of shares and bonds. A recovery in stock markets began in late 2022 and the winning streak has continued largely uninterrupted ever since. Bonds, meanwhile, have failed to recover to their pre-2022 level.  

It means the state of pension pots going into 2025 will depend on the exact mix of assets - those holding a higher proportion of shares over bonds will have done best while those holding more bonds may still be behind where they were three years ago.  

For example, a blended fund of 60% shares and 40% bonds would now be 8.8% above its level from the start of 20221. A fund of just 20% shares and 80% bonds would be 6.2% below where it was at the start of 20222

That’s important because many workplace pension funds will increase allocations to bonds as retirement approaches. 

Annuity rates 

The silver lining of lower bond prices has been higher bond yields (prices of bonds move inversely to yields) and these have fed through to better rates on annuities, which take pension savings and pay a guaranteed income in return. 

Yields on government bonds - the assets used to price annuities - tend to rise and fall in line with interest rates. Rates have been elevated for some time and have only begun to fall back from their peak recently.  

Right now, the highest-paying annuity would generate an income of £9,4913, based on a healthy individual aged 65 and with a 3% increase in payments each year to mitigate inflation. 

It’s possible to form a view of where interest rates - and therefore annuities - will head in the future based on bond prices today. Right now, the bond market is suggesting that the Bank Rate will fall from its current level of 4.75% to around 4% by the end of 20254

This suggests annuity rates could move lower as well as 2025 goes on, although they should still remain higher compared to recent history.  

Drawdown 

Those planning on using an invested pension to generate an income may well have seen their pots recently grow thanks to the strong recovery in stock markets. However, what really matters now is how markets perform in the future.  

No one knows that for sure. For what it’s worth, analysts at Goldman Sachs recently forecast that the US market, which is not the whole stock market universe but by far the biggest component would rise at an annualised 3% over the next 10 years5. That would be low by recent historical standards. 

But as important as the long-term return from markets is the sequence in which returns come through because these can dramatically affect the value of your pension pot over time. If you begin regular withdrawals and your pot suffers investment falls, you face having to sell more assets in order to produce the income you need. This leaves fewer assets to benefit when prices recover. It’s an effect known as ‘sequencing risk’. 

Ideally, you will begin withdrawals in a rising market, allowing you to sell relatively fewer assets to get the income you need in the early years of retirement. We do not know, of course, where markets are headed in 2025. However, a quick look back at history is encouraging for anyone planning on beginning their withdrawals.  

The chart below shows the value of a £100,000 pot where 4% annual withdrawals were started in different years over recent history. By doing so, it demonstrates the range of different outcomes that have been achieved in different market conditions.  

The difference in the size of pots is accounted for by the sequence in which returns are made, with those experiencing strong returns at the start of withdrawals then able to retain more assets into the future. It’s a concept we explain in our principles for good investing

The encouraging part is that in almost all cases the pension pot was larger after 10 years than at the start of withdrawals. The key is to set withdrawals at a sustainable level in the first place.

State Pension

The State Pension is an important component in any retirement plan. Even if you aim on generating most of your income from other sources, the State Pension is valuable because it is both guaranteed and protected against inflation - things which are very expensive to replicate elsewhere.

The good news for retirees is that the State Pension has risen significantly recently thanks to the ‘Triple Lock’- the policy of increasing the payment in line with the highest of wages, inflation or 2.5%. This year it’s the wages figure which is highest meaning that the State Pension will rise by 4.1% next April.

It means pensioners will have seen their weekly payments jump from just £185.15 in 2022/23 to £230.30 in 2025/26 - a rise of more than 24% in three years.

Time for advice?

The overall picture facing anyone looking to retire in 2025 is complicated. Blending your income options in the most tax efficient way and monitoring your progress along the way to keep income sustainable, is key. Professional financial advice can help.

The Government’s Pension Wise service offers free, impartial guidance to help you understand your options at retirement. You can access the guidance online at www.moneyhelper.org.uk or over the telephone on 0800 138 3944.

Fidelity’s Retirement Service has a team of specialists who can provide you with free guidance to help you with your decisions. Fidelity’s retirement advisers use cash-flow modelling tools to help you plot a sustainable - but optimised - plan for income in retirement. They can also provide advice and help you select products though this will have a charge.

It’s important to feel empowered about retirement. So, if you’ve got a burning question you want to ask? Why not drop us a line.  Click here to ask your question.

Source:

1. VASEA Fidelity factsheet 09.12.2024
2. VALEA Fidelity factsheet 09.12.2024
3. HUB Financial Solutions - 12.2024
4. Savings rates in 2025: what’s the best home for your cash? Fidelity 22.11.2024
5. Goldman Sachs - 25 October 2024

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Important information - investors should note that the views expressed may no longer be current and may have already been acted upon. This information is not a personal recommendation for any particular investment. If you are unsure about the suitability of an investment you should speak to one of Fidelity’s advisers or an authorised financial adviser of your choice. 

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