All Continuous Mortality Investigation articles
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News
What a new mortality model means for your pension scheme
New mortality data and calculations being introduced later this year could increase liabilities for some DB schemes – but others could see theirs fall further.
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News
What does a rise in the mortality rate mean for pension funds?
The Continuous Mortality Investigation (CMI) showed a rise in the UK’s average mortality rate, but the Institute and Faculty of Actuaries (IFoA) said it was likely to be a pandemic-related rise.
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Features
Mounting Covid-19 death toll a bitter reprieve for pension schemes
Analysis: As the country anxiously tracks the accumulating death toll from Covid-19, pension trustees will eventually be forced to do a more perverse calculation: how much will the mounting fatalities reduce their funding deficits?
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News
Mortality rates see highest reduction since 2011
On the go: Mortality rates in England and Wales were on average 3.8 per cent lower in 2019 than in 2018, which is the largest annual fall in mortality rates since 2011, new data showed.
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News
Fewer deaths in 2019 could increase DB liabilities
On the go: The mild UK winter could lead to an increase in pension scheme liabilities as 2019 to date has seen relatively few deaths, according to a firm of longevity specialists.
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News
New lower life expectancy figures trim £20bn off DB liabilities
On the go: Life expectancies at age 65 are around five months lower for both males and females than they were a year ago, at 19.8 years and 22.4 years according to the Continuous Mortality Investigation. The figures come with caveats but are expected to cut £20bn from FTSE 350 defined benefit liabilities.
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News
Lower rises in life expectancy are no longer a blip
The recent slowdown in life expectancy rises has settled into a general trend, according to new data.
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Opinion
Good funding levels require good cash flow management
For trustees and sponsors with an underfunded pension scheme, the main objective is to get to a fully funded position.