Investment - Articles - M&G Investments - Inflation a major concern for investors


IFA survey by M&G Investments reveals that inflation is a major concern for investors

 Inflation is the biggest investment concern for nearly a fifth of IFA clients, according to a poll* of advisers undertaken by M&G Investments.
  
 Of the 882 advisers who responded to the M&G survey over several weeks in May, about 16% cited rising prices and inflation as the main worry for their clients.
  
 Unsurprisingly, capital losses on turbulent equity markets were the main fear for most clients, with just over 50% of advisers surveyed ranking this first. Around 20% of respondents cited a drop in income as the greatest concern for their clients.
  
 The poll also revealed that the introduction of the 50% income tax band for high-earners has had next to no impact on clients' investment strategy with fewer than one in 10 IFAs stating that this had any influence on investment thinking.
  
 Fewer than 30% of IFAs said they planned to outsource their investment decisions to discretionary managers.
 Jonathan Willcocks, Managing Director, Global Head of Retail Sales at M&G Investments, commented:
 "Given the almost daily news on rising prices, it is unsurprising that a relatively high number of advisers say their clients' main investment concern is how to tackle inflation. Having enjoyed a long period of low inflation - and in some goods a period of deflation - the insidious threat of inflation is back.
 "Naturally, capital losses and reduction in income continue to be the biggest concerns for investors. Feedback, such as the results of this survey, is vital in understanding what intermediaries and their clients issues are. This helps us to ensure our range of funds are relevant to their investment needs."

Back to Index


Similar News to this Story

PIMFA Women's Symposium tackles pivotal issues
Focusing on inclusion and the future of the industry, 500+ delegates heard from 80 expert speakers, including the Economic Secretary to the Treasury &
70 percent cut in capital rules red tape
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) is proposing streamlining the rules on the types of funds investment firms must hold to absorb losses and mainta
Rates set for May cut and more pruning later
Rates are widely expected to be cut in May. The markets are also pricing in around three more cuts for the rest of 2025. What it would mean for saving

Site Search

Exact   Any  

Latest Actuarial Jobs

Actuarial Login

Email
Password
 Jobseeker    Client
Reminder Logon

APA Sponsors

Actuarial Jobs & News Feeds

Jobs RSS News RSS

WikiActuary

Be the first to contribute to our definitive actuarial reference forum. Built by actuaries for actuaries.