All Law & regulation articles – Page 79
-
News
New GMP guidance stops short of clarifying rules around conversion
New guidance on guaranteed minimum pensions has clarified the tax implication of equalising past inequalities between men and women, but critics have said it leaves unaddressed important questions for schemes hoping to convert GMPs into regular scheme benefits.
-
News
Provider nudges increase guidance uptake
On the go: A strong provider nudge drives three times more savers to seek pension guidance, trials arranged by the Money and Pensions Service have found.
-
News
TPR touts tougher DB approach and shrinking DC universe
On the go: The Pensions Regulator has stated its ambitions to extend its direct supervision of schemes and refocus on prompt transactions, after meeting the majority of its performance objectives over the past year.
-
News
Government ponders solutions to £17bn McCloud problem
The Treasury has set out two proposals for ending the discrimination between scheme members that resulted from its 2015 public sector pension reforms, with costs of unwinding its scheme changes estimated to cost £17bn.
-
News
Govt’s ‘landmark’ pensions bill proceeds to Commons
On the go: The pension schemes bill, which includes rules for pension dashboards and new powers for the Pension Regulator, has cleared its first hurdle in the House of Lords.
-
News
LGPS faced with huge McCloud admin challenge
On the go: Local Government Pension Scheme administering authorities urgently need to carry out impact assessments to clarify how many of their members fall under the scope of the McCloud judgment, according to Aon.
-
News
£4m lost to new forms of large-scale fraud
On the go: Fraudsters are targeting investors with new, innovative and large-scale scams, according to a report by the Investment Association published today.
-
News
Covid-19 could lead to 75% hike in deficit repair contributions
Deficit repair contributions may need to increase by 75 per cent if defined benefit schemes are to meet their recovery plan end dates, according to analysis published by the Pensions Regulator.
-
News
Pensions Ombudsman unhappy with FOS overlap
Pensions Ombudsman Anthony Arter believes the current overlap with the Financial Ombudsman Service should be addressed as the current stance is “confusing and not satisfactory”.
-
News
Chancellor spares pensions tax relief and triple lock for now
On the go: Pensions tax relief and the triple lock have once again been spared by the chancellor of the exchequer, although changes to these costly policies are expected down the line.
-
News
Podcast: Pension schemes bill could have ‘unintended consequences’
Podcast: The pension schemes bill defines criminal offences so broadly that it could have “unintended consequences” for the running of pension schemes, potentially stifling legitimate corporate activity. Tiffany Tsang, Local Government Pension Scheme and defined benefit policy lead at the Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association, and Eversheds Sutherland partner Jeremy Goodwin both agree that more clarity is needed, in an episode also covering fallout from the passage of the insolvency bill, the launch of the Make My Money Matter campaign, and a 16th century pension scheme bailout.
-
News
Environment Agency scheme takes aim at private equity ESG failings
When BBC sports presenter Gary Lineker took to Twitter after the Make My Money Matter campaign launch to say he “hadn’t even contemplated that investment into our pensions could be so questionable. Will be asking questions now, though”, he manifested the point and the goal of the campaign: most people have a vision for the future, but very few realise the power of pensions in realising it.
-
News
Pensions sector suffers more than one data breach every week
The UK pensions sector suffers more than one data breach every week on average, new figures reveal, with some of the industry’s biggest names failing to protect savers’ sensitive information.
-
News
Formal superfunds authorisation could take 5 years
The Pensions Regulator anticipates that it could take five years for the government to put in place a statutory authorisation framework to oversee defined benefit superfunds, as it looks ahead to publishing specific guidance for trustees considering a transfer to the new vehicles.
-
News
Ex-chancellor calls for flat-rate pension tax relief
On the go: Former chancellor of the exchequer Sajid Javid has called for a flat-rate pension tax relief as part of a wide-ranging post-Covid recovery plan published by the Centre for Policy Studies.
-
News
Lords commit TPR to preserving open DB schemes
The House of Lords has amended the pension schemes bill to ensure that open defined benefit schemes are not forced to derisk their investments in the same way as closed plans, in one of four defeats suffered by the government.
-
News
Lords back exclusion of financial transactions from dashboards
On the go: Peers in the House of Lords have shown their support for the exclusion of all financial transactions, such as the transfer of assets, from the pensions dashboard in order to protect savers from scams.
-
News
Peers push for restriction on commercial dashboards
On the go: Labour peers are pushing for an amendment to the pension schemes bill that will see a 12-month restriction placed on providers looking to operate their own pensions dashboards.
-
News
Government plans to push ahead with small scheme consolidation
On the go: The government looks set to press ahead with plans to encourage small schemes to consolidate, according to analysis of consultation documents by LCP.
-
News
Insolvency bill retains potential to damage DB schemes
Government attempts to mitigate the risk its new insolvency legislation poses to defined benefit pension schemes have only been partly successful, and company moratoriums could still see schemes lose out on valuable contributions, experts have said.