After moving to CH, is it mandatory that you transfer the previous pension fund into your new Swiss fund? Or am I allowed to keep two in different countries? Transfer has turned out to be much more complex than I thought. What are the pros and cons of not transferring?
I left mine in the UK for a while before bringing it, but didn't have to.
More to the point, why would you want to?
I still have my Swiss pension fund, although I moved away almost 3 years ago.
I did close every other Swiss bank account/investment/what have you because I did not want to deal with FBAR going forward (and I wanted that cash for an investment here).
Check again with Julius Bär. It would be impossible for them to know whether you had any pension assets elsewhere unless you told them, and even then, why would they care? Their job is to make as good a return on your assets as they can. How much of that you actually receive after they take their cut is another story.
Wow, really? Have you not been following the public tirade against pension companies here? Pillar 2 pension funds must provide a federally mandated return to their investors (currently it's somewhere between 1 and 2% p.a.) and that's just what most of them do -- provide the legal minimum. The rest goes into reserves against that rainy day when the fund manager might not be able to scrape up a 1% return on its investment pot. You may have to hunt far and wide to find an employer who contributes to a Pillar 2 fund that returns all earnings to its members.
Don't invest with a crap manager is pretty universal; and actually most Swiss pension funds are significantly invested in low yield debt and give a return of 1% or so.
You won't win any friends asking people to "stay on track" - this isn't a customer service line or an advisor you're paying for, and anyway it's complete pointless on EF - dodgyken will probably now post a dodgy off-topic image to make the point