Investors are racing to stuff money into a Stocks and Shares ISA before the 5 April deadline, but is a Self-Invested Personal Pension — or SIPP — actually a better option?
ISAs may be a brilliant tax-free wrapper but SIPPs have big attractions too, and often get overlooked in the seasonal rush. So I asked ChatGPT to weigh up their respective merits.
The chatbot said the ISA is “wonderfully simple”, as investments grow free of tax and withdrawals are tax-free too. There’s flexibility to dip in when needed, too. However, a SIPP offers valuable upfront tax relief on contributions. For a basic-rate taxpayer, every £80 invested is topped up to £100. Higher-rate taxpayers can claim even more back on their tax return, it noted.
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The catch is access, AI continued. “Pension money is locked away until at least age 55 rising to 57 from 2028. That makes it brilliant for retirement, less so for medium-term plans.”
ChatGPT then ducked the question by saying the choice ultimately “depends on individual investor’s time horizon, tax position and flexibility needs”. Not exactly earth-shattering, but not exactly wrong either.
My own take is that the two wrappers complement each other rather than compete. Someone with a bulging Stocks and Shares ISA but modest pension might decide to rebalance (and vice versa). An investor with a large lump sum to invest, such as an inheritance or bonus, may favour the SIPP, to take advantage of the £60,000 pensions annual allowance.
Once the wrapper’s sorted, the real work begins: picking stocks to go inside it. I wouldn’t dream of asking ChatGPT to do that for me, it’s erratic, makes mistakes and simply trawls secondhand stuff from the web. This requires human intelligence, rather than the artificial variety. Investors must use their own, rather than rely on a chatbot.
BAE Systems (LSE: BA) is one of the best performers in my own SIPP. The FTSE 100 defence giant has surged 50% over one year and 335% over five. I’m usually wary of stocks after such a run. BAE Systems trades on a price-to-earnings ratio of about 28, so it isn’t cheap. The slightest earnings miss, contract delay or negative procurement decision could knock confidence.
