loader from loading.io

Listener Questions - Episode 19

The Meaningful Money Personal Finance Podcast

Release Date: 07/02/2025

QA39 Listener Questions, Episode 39 show art QA39 Listener Questions, Episode 39

The Meaningful Money Personal Finance Podcast

Pete and Roger answer six listener questions covering Coast FIRE strategies with GIAs, US 401(k) tax implications in the UK, record keeping for IHT-exempt gifts, Australian pension taxation for UK residents, pension contributions to avoid the £100k tax trap, and managing a £2M portfolio as Power of Attorney. Shownotes:     01:17  Question 1 Hi Pete and Roger, I’m 29 and working towards Coast FIRE within the next 2–3 years so I can begin a digital nomad lifestyle — working remotely while knowing my long-term retirement is taken care of. Right now, I’ve got: - £45k in...

info_outline
Becoming A Financial Adviser - Part Two: The SOFT Stuff show art Becoming A Financial Adviser - Part Two: The SOFT Stuff

The Meaningful Money Personal Finance Podcast

This week we finish off our two-parter on how to become a financial adviser. In this session, we cover the ‘softer’ part of the job, the human side which is arguably MUCH more important than the hard numbers… Shownotes:   02:18 - Why Financial Planning Is Not About Money 05:30 - Planning vs Product  14:38 - The Core Human Skills of Great Advisers 25:50 - Behavioural Coaching (The Real Job) 33:15 - Judgement, Responsibility, and Pressure 38:31 - Ethics and Integrity in the Real World 47:57 - Who Thrives on the SOFT Side 50:05 - Bringing the Hard and Soft Together

info_outline
How To Become A Financial Adviser, Part 1 show art How To Become A Financial Adviser, Part 1

The Meaningful Money Personal Finance Podcast

This week, Roger and I discuss the answer to a frequently-asked question - how does one become a financial adviser? Clearly Roger and I make it look like a sexy profession, but as you can imagine, we have lots to say on the subject… Shownotes:   01:47 - What People Think Financial Advisers Do (and Why That’s Incomplete) 07:25 - The Structure of a Modern Advice Firm 17:29 - Career Progression 22:31 - Qualifications and Regulation (The Reality, Not the Myth)  29:14 - Routes Into the Profession 37:20 - The Economics of Advice (High-Level) 46:39 - Who the HARD Side Will Appeal...

info_outline
Listener Questions, Episode 38 show art Listener Questions, Episode 38

The Meaningful Money Personal Finance Podcast

It’s another Meaningful Money Q&A, taking in the £100k tax trap, splitting pensions on divorce, safely switching investment platforms and much more! Shownotes:     01:59  Question 1 Hi Roger and Pete, Long time listener, first time questioner. My wife and I have both earned in excess of £100k for a few years now, meaning I am acquiring a peculiar set of skills on the various ways to use pension contributions, rollover allowances, gift aids, etc to keep us both below the (entirely bananas) £100k cliff-edge each year. My question is on the £60k pension annual allowance....

info_outline
Understanding RISK show art Understanding RISK

The Meaningful Money Personal Finance Podcast

This is an important episode. Here, Roger and Pete dive deep into one of the most important subjects for anyone looking to improve their finances to understand - RISK. It’s misunderstood and it’s misrepresented, but risk can be your friend if you treat it right. Shownotes:   Get the PDF emailed to you - Risk Lens Guide:     02:18 Everything you need to KNOW 04:17 - Market & investment risks (the ones everyone worries about) 08:37 - Inflation & purchasing power risk (the silent wealth killer) 13:35 - Behavioural risk (where most damage is actually done) 18:31 -...

info_outline
Listener Questions, Episode 37 show art Listener Questions, Episode 37

The Meaningful Money Personal Finance Podcast

Welcome to the first podcast of 2026 where Roger and Pete answer more of your varied and interesting questions, covering everything from what to do when you’ve maxed out your pension and ISA, to whether you should borrow on your mortgage to invest! Shownotes:   01:30  Question 1 Hello to Roger and his trusty sidekick Pete, Only kidding Pete, but it will make Roger feel good briefly. I must credit the pair of you for your continued dedication and commitment to educating the wider population on all things financial.  I have gone from strength to strength in planning my...

info_outline
Christmas Episode 2025 show art Christmas Episode 2025

The Meaningful Money Personal Finance Podcast

Join Roger and Pete for a 2025 retrospective where we look into the kind of year it’s been and a little bit ahead to 2026. MERRY CHRISTMAS! Shownotes:   02:04 Meaningful Money - Podcast, YouTube, Academy 12:05 Antidote to the noise. 16:40 Bank of Dad 22:39 Jacksons 31:18 Personal Reflection 45:18 Thanks To... Meaningful Money Podcast on YouTube:   Meaningful Money Youtube Channel:   Meaningful Academy:   Jacksons:  

info_outline
Listener Questions, Episode 36 show art Listener Questions, Episode 36

The Meaningful Money Personal Finance Podcast

Welcome to the last Q&A session of 2025. In this show we cover selling properties to invest in pensions instead, starting to invest for the first time, UFPLS vs FAD and SO MUCH MORE! Shownotes:   02:05  Question 1 Big thanks to Pete and Roger for all the excellent advice. This question is for some of the 2.8 million UK landlords. Even those with just one property in their own name—not through a limited company—are increasingly affected by fiscal drag. Looking ahead, I plan to sell down much of my property portfolio in later life (because who wants to be a landlord at 70?)....

info_outline
Listener Questions Episode 35 show art Listener Questions Episode 35

The Meaningful Money Personal Finance Podcast

It’s episode 600 of the podcast, not that we’re doing much to mark that milestone! We have some excellent questions today, taking in retirement planning, getting a mortgage if you have a new business and how flexible ISAs work! Shownotes:   02:43  Question 1 Hi Pete, I’m a single household, due to pay my mortgage off in my early 50’s….I have very little savings and pensions are everywhere and been ‘balanced fund choices’ as I either do self employed work or fixed term contracts. I’m really concerned I won’t have ‘enough’ to retire.  Where do I start to...

info_outline
Listener Questions Episode 34 show art Listener Questions Episode 34

The Meaningful Money Personal Finance Podcast

We’re getting into the groove of doing video podcasts now, and today we have another mixed bag of questions. They include the tax implications of moving abroad, whether to start a pension in your 60’s, whether it’s possible for a pension fund to be too big and lots more besides! Shownotes:     01:24  Question 1 Hi Pete and Roger Thanks for the fantastic podcast, YouTube videos (and book) I have learnt so much. My question is essentially about whether to overpay my mortgage or invest. I have watched Pete's videos on this subject but just wanted to check if my situation...

info_outline
 
More Episodes

It’s another mixed bag of your questions, taking everything from investing in offshore funds to evening up pension funds between spouses and lots more besides!


Shownotes: https://meaningfulmoney.tv/QA19 


00:57  Question 1

Hello Pete & Roger I am a regular listener to you show, love it and keep up the good work.

My question is…

I have a full 6 months emergency fund, I have no credit card debt or personal loans, I have a mortgage and I have just started investing 5% of my wages every time I get paid into the Vanguard all world tracker fund (keeping it simple)

I have a new car every 4 years on PCP (so I basically lease it) as I always chop in for a new car and never pay the balloon payment at the end, this PCP is at 8%. I would like to hear your thoughts on weather investing is still okay to do along side this, the reason for having a new car is that I use it until the warranty expires and then change due to rising repair costs and hassle free motoring. I have brought older cars outright in the past and always ended up costing me more in repairs over the years. I am planning on leasing my cars for the permanent future so if I do not start investing now I will never have a chance to invest, and I do not see leasing at car as a loan as such, more of a permanent lease. Feel free to shorten my message to suit and excited to hear your thoughts, all the best.

Adam


10:10  Question 2

Hello Pete and Rog!

First of all, a huge thank you for all the valuable content you share – I really appreciate it! Keep up the fantastic work! 

I had a quick question that’s a bit technical (apologies in advance!), but I was wondering if you might be able to cover the topic of UK-registered funds when investing in a GIA on the podcast?

I’ve heard that non-UK registered funds are taxed at the income tax rate rather than the capital gains tax rate. Is the best approach to check the ISIN against the list of UK-registered funds, even if the investment is made through a non-UK exchange (e.g., Amsterdam or Ireland)?

Also, when a new client comes to you with non-UK registered funds, how do you typically address this issue?

Thanks again for all that you do – really appreciate it! 

Best,
your #1 Fan!

14:00  Question 3

Hi Pete / Roger
Thank you for your great work with your Q&As. Your cashflow ladder idea is great advice but when I look at graphs of cautious, balanced, growth funds they all go up and down at the same time. Over the last 10 yrs every time there has been a big market fall all the funds I looked at (at all risk levels) recovered with 32 months max. If 2-3 years cash is held on the 1st rung of the ladder why shouldn’t I hold the rest in growth/agg funds? The cash rung will ride out the fall / recovery so I may as well put my money in a fund with the most growth potential? What am I missing?
Stephen

19:57  Question 4

Hi Pete and Roger,

Thanks for all you do. Your Podcasts and YouTube content has helped me get to retirement early.

I have a number of investments in my Pension which are there to continue to grow hopefully over time. I have a well diversified portfolio mainly using trackers.

I want to try to drop a particular individual investment from my portfolio that forms part of the Magnificent Seven, and is therefore part of a lot of the trackers I have. Unless I buy the FTSE Global index as individual shares can you see a way I cannot be in this one companies shares? Not sure there is an answer.

Much appreciated, Chris

24:11  Question 5

Hello

Love your podcast, I thought I was fairly clued up on pensions/finances but I have learnt so much more from your podcast. I recommend it to everyone! Especially my husband, who has so far failed to do so, he leaves the finances to me (which is probably why we are in this position as he has not addressed his pension). My question is:

Our pension pots are very unequal, we're both 47.  I have 2 DB pots (combined are due to pay out circa 14k from age 65). I am also on track to have around 750k in a private pension by the time I am 57, and am planning to retire at this point.  My husband currently only has around 18k in a private pension, and is retraining as a teacher so he will only have a small DB pension not accessible until 68. He will therefore need to continue working for a few years after I retire.  I will need around a 2k a month in retirement, but I am thinking I can take up to £67k per year from my pension (so to remain in the 20% tax band). Use 24k for myself, and then we pay the remaining 43k into husbands private pension (or however much his earnings allow). If he is a higher rate tax payer by then, he would gain a 40% uplift on this or if not he will still get the 20% uplift back so we aren't losing out.  One of the main reasons for doing it would be to even the pensions out so that we can both withdraw tax efficiently in future, rather than me having to withdraw from my pension for both of us and so paying more tax.

It seems like a no brainer but please let me know if I have missed something really obvious.

Thanks in advance!
Sarah

29:02  Question 6

Hello gents,

If you pay a charity and claim gift aid within a given tax year, does that take your income down when calculating benefit calculations?

E.g. if I earn £101k p/a and I give £2k to charity and (gift aid it), does that effectively bring my income below the £100k threshold for child government support like free childcare hours?

Thanks, David