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KiwiSaver

How the sausage gets paid

9 March 2015
Reading time: 2 minutes


Posted by Tom Hartmann , 0 Comments

Surprise – you’re an investor! Perhaps you knew that.

With KiwiSaver, savers have become budding capitalists, putting in their hard-earned capital and taking a certain amount of risk, with the aim of earning future returns. They just may not realise it.

You may know you’re putting money in, and that your employer and the government are contributing. But you may not know exactly how much risk is involved – perhaps too little if you are 20, or too much if you are 60.  And what exactly do you get in return for that risk?

There are the costs of paying a fund manager to take care of your money and taxes to pay along  the way. Not to mention inflation, which eats away at your buying power over the years.

Let’s take a look at how “the sausage gets made”, as they say. Someone earning $50,000 who invests for 30 years in a KiwiSaver growth fund would typically end up with a nest egg made up of:

Subtotal: A whopping $636,000!               

But here’s how it gets paid:

End result: A much more modest $214,000.

Obviously, some things that influence your end results are not under your control. I haven’t figured out a way to change inflation yet, and taxes are one of those sure things in life.

But how about the fees we pay for fund managers? There you have some options, since you can pick the fund that works best for you. In the KiwiSaver fund finder you can compare your current fund’s fees with an average to see how much you’re paying. (You can also gauge the right level of risk for your stage in life.)

And for how much you might pay over your entire KiwiSaver experience, you can use this KiwiSaver fees calculator to see how those tiny percentage points can change your results by tens of thousands of dollars.

Investment returns don’t all end up in your pocket, so it’s worth making a call on how much you’re willing to pay for them. 

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Kids and money Budgeting Goals Scam alert KiwiSaver Money mindset Managing debt Money tips Investing

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