All Law & regulation articles – Page 115
-
News
FRC review threatens to impact actuarial profession
An advisory group to the government review of the Financial Reporting Council is to explore the extent to which actuaries should be subject to formal regulation in response to the pensions-related nature of recent corporate failures.
-
NewsSchemes must play part in war on scams
Pension schemes and providers have been urged to increase member awareness of scam tactics and tighten data security, amid the revelation that average losses from fraudulent and inappropriate inducements eclipsed the size of the average pension pot in the UK.
-
News
Scam victims lose £91,000 on average
On the go: The Pensions Regulator and the Financial Conduct Authority have launched a joint media campaign to combat pension scams, amid the revelation that average losses from fraudulent and inappropriate inducements eclipsed the size of the average pension pot in the UK.
-
NewsOmbudsman’s police ruling highlights trustee duty of care
The Pensions Ombudsman has upheld a police officer’s complaint that Northumbria Police transferred his pension to a new scheme without having conducted adequate checks or provided him with sufficient warning about scams.
-
News
Regulator charges third party for supplying false information
The Pensions Regulator is prosecuting an accountant for falsely claiming that the business he was working for had enrolled its staff into an occupational pension. It is the first time that the regulator has charged a third party for this offence.
-
News
Select committee launches costs and transparency inquiry
The Work and Pensions Committee is to conduct an inquiry into transparency in the pensions industry, questioning whether individuals are able to understand the cost, performance and value for money of their pension products.
-
News
Brewery fined for refusing to share information with TPR
Samuel Smith Brewery and its chairman must pay fines of almost £28,000 for failing to hand over to the Pensions Regulator requested information relating to its defined benefit schemes, Brighton Magistrates Court ruled on Monday.
-
News
Select committee chair loses no confidence vote by local party
Labour MP Frank Field has lost of vote of no confidence in his constituency, as local party members try to oust the Work and Pensions Committee chair over his support for Brexit.
-
News
Communications essential as cold-calling ban takes step forward
The Department for Work and Pensions has taken a further step towards implementing a ban on cold calls related to pensions, but experts have cautioned that the delayed measure will not be sufficient on its own to stamp out scams.
-
News
ABI expresses concerns over dashboard speculation
On the go: The Association of British Insurers has expressed concerns over the “threat to the pensions dashboard”, following speculation yesterday that secretary of state for work and pensions, Esther McVey, wants to kill off the project.
-
News
CMA wants mandatory tendering to tackle competition weaknesses
On the go: UK pension schemes will be required to conduct competitive tender processes before hiring their first fiduciary manager, under recommendations set out by the Competition and Markets Authority on Wednesday.
-
NewsMandatory tenders welcomed by pensions industry
UK pension schemes will be required to conduct competitive tender processes before hiring their first fiduciary manager, under recommendations set out by the Competition and Markets Authority on Wednesday.
-
Opinion
How would a lack of government support affect dashboard progress?
Analysis: Reactions to speculation that the secretary of state for work and pensions wants to scrap the pensions dashboard project have been unsurprisingly negative.
-
OpinionIDWG cost disclosures are only the beginning
The code submitted by Chris Sier’s working group on cost disclosure should make a material and positive difference to the industry, writes the Society of Pension Professionals’ president Paul McGlone, but schemes have an obligation to make use of this new information.
-
News
Government appoints first CEO of single financial guidance body
On the go: The Department for Work and Pensions has appointed John Govett as the first chief executive officer of the new single financial guidance body.
-
News
Select committee hails CDC as 'new Beveridge' for UK pensions
Collective defined contribution schemes could usher in a new era of progress for the welfare state, according to the Work and Pensions Committee’s latest report, as the influential group of MPs seeks to increase pressure on government to facilitate the swift creation of CDC schemes.
-
NewsRentokil blames internal administration for £25k fine
Business services group Rentokil Initial has blamed its internal pensions administration for failures involving the Initial Hospital Service Limited No.1 Pension Scheme, which led to a £25,000 fine from the Pensions Regulator.
-
News
BA wins appeal over discretionary increase
The trustees of the Airways Pension Scheme went beyond their remit in granting a 0.2 per cent discretionary increase to members’ pensions in 2013, the Court of Appeal has ruled.
-
News
PLSA pushes for retirement income targets and AE increases
The Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association has set out its final recommendations from its ‘Hitting the Target’ consultation, calling for an increase in minimum auto-enrolment contributions to 12 per cent, and the introduction of retirement income targets.
-
Features
Should the FCA set a drawdown charge cap?
The Financial Conduct Authority’s final report for its Retirement Outcomes Review focused on the challenges facing drawdown consumers.








