All Defined contribution articles – Page 87
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Features
Lloyds switches DGF for equities in default fund
Trustees of the Lloyds Bank Pension Scheme No.1 have overhauled the default offering for their defined contribution members, ditching a diversified growth fund for a 100 per cent equity allocation in the first years of saving.
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News
DC value: Small schemes falling short of standards
On the go: Small defined contribution schemes are not meeting the Pensions Regulator’s expectations when it comes to demonstrating value for members, according to its latest research.
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News
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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News
More sponsors in talks with government over CDC
A handful of corporate entities have held exploratory discussions with the Department for Work and Pensions on collective defined contribution schemes, according to DWP defined benefit strategy team leader Julian Barker.
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Features
How can we restore trust in pensions?
Analysis: Savers have long remained detached and bemused by their pension arrangements. Indeed, the success of auto-enrolment has partly depended upon consumer inertia.
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News
DWP 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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Opinion
Mastertrust sector still concerned about new regime
The emergence of mastertrusts, providing retirement savings for millions of members across a range of employers, has transformed the pensions industry, and governing these schemes clearly entails a role of onerous responsibility.
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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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Opinion
How will the ageing population affect markets?
Of all the forces set to reshape the investment landscape over the coming decades, one stands above all others – the ageing of the world population.
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Opinion
DC Debate Q3: Updating asset allocations
In the second part of this quarter’s debate, our five DC professionals look beyond the traditional bond and equity portfolio to consider issues including diversified growth funds, alternatives and ESG.
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News
Millennials want more help with pensions, study shows
Millennials have a responsible attitude to retirement saving, despite pressure to get on the property ladder and pay off student debt, but more than half want more support and information about pensions, a study has found.
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Features
LPFA looks to build on latest property allocation
The London Pensions Fund Authority will cut the ribbon next year on the Pontoon Dock, a residential property project incorporating 154 high quality privately rented homes and 82 affordable homes available for rental or shared ownership.
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Opinion
DC Debate Q3: Getting the right amount of risk in defaults
In the first instalment of this quarter's DC Debate, five experts dive into the appropriate amounts of risk and diversification for defined contribution members at various points in their savings journey.
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News
Regulator tells schemes to consider cutting transfer values
The Pensions Regulator asked the trustees of 14 defined benefit schemes to review their transfer processes and consider cutting transfer values for members considering cashing in their benefits.
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News
Michael Johnson: Replace pensions tax relief with bonuses
In a bid to make pensions saving more progressive, the Centre for Policy Studies has recommended substituting tax relief on pensions for capped bonuses on individual and employers’ retirement contributions.
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Opinion
Financial health matters
Editorial: I like to think that most employers take their workers’ wellbeing seriously.
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News
Aegon not interested in scooping up failed mastertrusts
Pensions provider Aegon has declared itself uninterested in buying mastertrusts that drop out of the market as a result of authorisation, aiming instead at the more lucrative single-trust defined contribution market.
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News
Cost concerns hinder company action on staff financial wellbeing
Forty-nine per cent of employers currently have no defined financial wellbeing strategy in place, a recent survey has found, as experts urged corporate boards to tackle the subject formally.
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Features
Should schemes use social media to engage with members?
Any other business: On July 26, members of the Teachers’ Pensions Scheme were informed via Facebook that their service was experiencing disruption. Later that day, they were told that access had been restored. Some members disagreed.