All Law & regulation articles – Page 64
-
NewsKPMG fined £13m for ‘dumping’ Silentnight scheme into PPF
On the go: KPMG has received a £13m fine over serious misconduct in its role in the sale of bed manufacturer Silentnight, which lead to the company’s insolvency and its pension scheme having to be absorbed by the Pension Protection Fund.
-
NewsInvestors in line for £11m windfall as FCA wins Avacade case
On the go: The Financial Conduct Authority has won its case against unregulated introducer Alexandra Associates UK and its directors over the troubled transfer of £92m pension assets, after previous findings were upheld in the Court of Appeal.
-
NewsPublic pension fund staging on dashboards could be set for delays
Administrative burdens from the McCloud/Sargeant judgments to remedy age discrimination could delay the staging of public pension funds onto dashboards and cause confusion for members.
-
NewsSchemes challenge managers to tackle lack of diversity
On the go: Asset managers who wish to continue to work with some of the biggest pension schemes in the UK will have to disclose how they are targeting diversity or risk losing their business.
-
NewsRaise retirement age to help UK recovery, says policymaker
On the go: Raising the retirement age could help the country recover post-Covid, a policymaker has suggested.
-
NewsDC consolidation ‘too far, too soon’ but is an inevitability, experts say
On the go: The Department of Work and Pensions' proposals on consolidation within the defined contribution market go “too far, too soon”, and risk eroding the involvement of employers in their workforce’s retirement outcomes, experts have warned.
-
NewsMP introduces bill to investigate Atomic Energy Authority transfers
Conservative MP David Johnston has introduced a private members’ bill to allow the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman to investigate pension transfers made out of the UK Atomic Energy Authority pension scheme.
-
NewsTPR reviews schemes eligible for Fraud Compensation Fund
The Pensions Regulator and the Pension Protection Fund are undertaking a review of schemes that may be eligible for the Fraud Compensation Fund, following uncertainty surrounding instances where no independent trustee has been appointed to a scheme.
-
NewsTreasury and pension committees write to PM over online scam ads
On the go: The Treasury and Work and Pensions committees have written to the prime minister urging him to reconsider including paid-for online advertisements in the government’s online safety bill.
-
NewsAon and WTW cancel $30bn mega-merger
On the go: Aon and Willis Towers Watson have abandoned their planned $30bn (£21.7bn) merger after an intervention from the US Department of Justice.
-
NewsPensions Ombudsman taking longer to resolve old complaints
On the go: The Pensions Ombudsman has seen delays in resolving complaints, due to the impact of Covid-19 and the increased complexity of these cases.
-
NewsGovt to open new public sector scheme for judges in 2022
On the go: The Ministry of Justice has launched a consultation on creating a new public sector pension scheme for judges, which will address the issues caused by the McCloud judgment and allow the government to have a pensions-based solution for the whole judiciary.
-
NewsEmployer seeks £265,000 in damages from Plumbing Pensions
A plumbing employer has filed a summons at the Court of Session in Edinburgh seeking more than £265,000 in damages from Plumbing Pensions over its alleged repeated failures to manage the scheme’s Section 75 debt.
-
NewsPodcast: Too much jargon hampers sustainable investing drive
Podcast: Politicians and the pensions industry risk jeopardising the progress made on sustainable investing because they are too fond of jargon. Members are keen to get involved, but they have to understand what they are getting involved in. Georgia Stewart, chief executive of Tumelo, and Chris Hulatt, co-founder of Octopus Group, talk sustainability, inter-generational fairness and cryptocurrencies.
-
NewsDWP’s stronger nudge is not ‘fit for purpose’
On the go: The “stronger nudge” towards guidance recently proposed by the Department for Work and Pensions is inadequate on its own and will impact members too late in the process to have a real effect, according to industry experts.
-
NewsHMRC extends reporting and payment deadlines for scheme pays
On the go: HM Revenue & Customs has extended the deadline for savers who want to use their pension scheme to settle tax charges from a previous year.
-
NewsUSS employers pledge greater covenant support
Universities UK, the group representing 340 Universities Superannuation Scheme employers, has pledged additional covenant support to the pension scheme, in a move it said will spare its members the crippling contribution rate rises announced following the scheme’s 2020 valuation.
-
NewsOmbudsman slaps fine on ‘reckless’ trustee for multiple breaches
The Pensions Ombudsman has upheld a complaint against the trustee of a small pension scheme for multiple breaches of trust and instances of malpractice, while demanding they reimburse the scheme to the tune of hundreds of thousands of pounds.
-
NewsGovt introduces public service pensions bill in parliament
On the go: The government introduced the public service pensions and judicial offices bill in the House of Lords on Monday that will allow the implementation of the McCloud remedy.
-
NewsDWP failed in communicating women’s state pension age changes
On the go: The Department for Work and Pensions failed in communicating changes to women’s state pension age, according to the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman.





