All articles by Angus Peters – Page 15
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NewsThree big ideas for better member engagement
For all the successes of behavioural finance and auto-enrolment, the weight of retirement decisions on savers means member engagement is still important. Three experts pitch their ideas to improve scheme communications.
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PPF benefit top-up met with anger from solvent FAS members
The Pension Protection Fund’s plan to top up compensation where members receive less than half of their original pension unfairly misses out some members of the Financial Assistance Scheme, according to a pensions campaign group.
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PPF to top up pensions to 50% ahead of legislation
On the go: The Pension Protection Fund is to begin topping up the benefits of members whose compensation has fallen below half of their original entitlement “as quickly as possible”, after a European court found its current payment structure unlawful.
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Master trust members unfazed by AE increases
Savers auto-enrolled into a pension scheme are not dropping out of their plan any faster when nudged toward saving more money each month, according to the Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association.
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Fined Salvus trustees left £1.4m uninvested for 3 years
Four trustees of the Salvus Master Trust have been fined by the Pensions Regulator after they failed to invest £1.4m of member contributions over three years.
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Providers say retirement defaults could help poorer pensioners
Research highlighting the increasingly complex financial decisions and lower levels of income facing the next generation of retirees has led to renewed calls for default pathways through retirement.
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FeaturesNortel's £2.4bn buyout pricing beats offers from superfund
When Canadian telecoms company Nortel filed for bankruptcy in 2009, prospects for its defined benefit pension scheme members looked bleak.
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FeaturesBBC matches cash flows after strong 2017 returns
The BBC Pension Scheme has slashed its exposure to equity markets, in an attempt to lock in recent outperformance with liability-driven investment, private credit and alternative matching assets.
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More than 40 schemes in talks with Clara
Commercial consolidator Clara Pensions has entered into talks with more than 40 defined benefit pension schemes regarding potential transfers into the superfund, management has revealed.
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Opperman's consumer choice AE meeting draws ire of industry
Workplace pension providers and advisers have expressed fury at reports that minister for pensions and financial inclusion Guy Opperman will attend a meeting to discuss letting members choose their auto-enrolment provider.
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OpinionDo you want to live forever?
Editorial: Longevity serves as a useful euphemism in the pensions world.
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Features
Trustees pour cold water on wild consolidator claims
The Edi Truell-backed Pension SuperFund has been no stranger to controversy in its short lifespan.
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Life expectancy flatlines for first time in decades
Life expectancy in the UK has flatlined in the last two years, according to the Office for National Statistics, with drops in the life expectancy of babies born in Scotland and Wales putting an end to decades of improving longevity.
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Field asks TPR to learn lessons as Kodak zombie set to enter PPF
The chair of the Work and Pensions Committee has written to the Pensions Regulator asking it to reflect on lessons it should have learned from its handling of the Kodak Pension Plan, which this week announced it faced Pension Protection Fund entry.
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Lessons from Oz: Former regulator urges hybrid product adoption
A former deputy chairman of the Australian Securities and Investments Commission has urged UK defined contribution schemes to better protect members by developing default retirement products combining drawdown and lifetime income.
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OpinionSin stocks under scrutiny
Editorial: Responsible investment campaigners notched a significant win last week, with the government publishing long-awaited regulations on environmental, social and governance disclosures.
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Willetts: Tax pensioners more to stem potential opt-out rise
National insurance contributions from pensioners’ income could be used to stem opt-outs resulting from increased contributions under auto-enrolment, an influential Conservative peer has suggested.
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NewsDWP scraps plans for schemes to check members’ ethical views
Controversial plans by the government to force trustees to outline how they have taken members’ ethical views into account in their investment strategies have been scrapped, it was revealed on Monday.
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Features
Will private credit become a mainstay of DC portfolios?
Analysis: Private credit is flavour of the month with yield-starved defined benefit funds, but has only attracted defined contribution business from the giants of the mastertrust sector. Could renegotiations on fees open up the asset class for today’s savers?
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PPF must not cut pensions by more than half, EU court rules
The Court of Justice of the European Union has ruled that the cap imposed on benefits paid by the Pension Protection Fund is unlawful when it reduces the payments made to a saver by more than half.





