More defined benefit news – Page 128
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Ethics v profit: Should pension funds divest from ‘sin stocks’?
PLSA Investment Conference 2018: A debate on investment in so-called sin stocks threw up questions around what it means for pension funds to act ethically, and whether the regulatory risk associated with such stocks makes divestment financially sound.
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IDWG chair calls for reform by April
PLSA Investment Conference 2018: Chris Sier, chair of the Financial Conduct Authority’s Institutional Disclosure Working Group, has called for the introduction of reforms promoting asset management transparency by the beginning of April.
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Civil service scheme overpaid pensioners by £22m
Pensioners of the Civil Service Pension Scheme have received historic overpayments of £22m and face reduced pensions to correct the mistake.
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TPR appoints new policy lead
The Pensions Regulator has hired David Fairs as its executive director for regulatory policy, analysis and advice.
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MPs probe pension funds on climate risk amid wider ESG push
MPs are probing pension funds on their approach to climate change risk, as experts expect a ‘multi-pronged attack’ to push environmental concerns higher up trustee agendas.
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DB deficits continue to decrease but tensions remain
Defined benefit deficits across UK private sector pension schemes have decreased to £105bn from £180bn last year.
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Universities minister: Compensate students for UCU pensions strike
Universities minister Sam Gyimah has said universities should compensate students for teaching time lost because of academics' ongoing strike over pensions.
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Sainsbury’s tackles bills with DB scheme merger
Supermarket giant Sainsbury’s is hoping to save on pension costs by combining its two defined benefit schemes, a move advisers say can also bring strategic alignment for the sponsor.
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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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Trustees lack info to judge fid man and consultant VfM, finds CMA
Competitive processes are not providing customers with the necessary information to judge the value for money of investment consultants and fiduciary managers, the Competition and Markets Authority has said.
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Post Office workers’ scheme agrees £450m buy-in
The Royal Mail Pension Plan has agreed a £450m bulk annuity transaction to insure the liabilities of its Post Office Limited section.
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PPF reassures Toys R Us members after insolvency
US retail chain Toys R Us has become insolvent despite a creditor agreement late last year. Its pension scheme, with an estimated £25m deficit, has been in a Pension Protection Fund assessment since December.
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Attractiveness of deferred debt arrangement remains to be seen
Employers in multi-employer pension schemes will now be able to delay the requirement to pay an employer debt when they cease accrual in the scheme, but opinions are divided on how attractive this will be.
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'Risk-averse' former Carillion FD sold off shares
MPs have published evidence from Carillion's former financial directors, showing that one sold all of his shares in the company as soon as possible after retiring.
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Could airline black box approach take off in the pensions industry?
A Pensions Institute report published on Wednesday has suggested that emulating the airline industry’s black box thinking approach of systematically analysing mistakes could solve many of the problems facing defined benefit schemes.
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Carillion: Regulator blasted for grasp of key facts on DB
Executives at the Pensions Regulator have been lambasted by MPs for being poorly informed and undermining confidence in pensions, after they appeared unable to answer questions on subjects including “a major KPI” of defined benefit scheme health.
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University of Oxford learns hard lesson with Care closure
The University of Oxford has introduced a defined contribution scheme for new joiners and is making a number of other changes to reduce costs as universities are waking up to their pension deficits. One expert called the education sector ‘a disaster’ in pension terms.
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Third of adults miss most obvious scams
Close to a third of adults missed the most obvious pension scams in a survey testing people's understanding of fraudsters' tricks, and 79 per cent said stricter rules and checks are needed to protect savers.
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Carillion divestor considered lawsuit over reporting
Shareholders of the failed outsourcer Carillion had concerns about the business’ strength as early as 2015, according to a select committee inquiry into its collapse, raising questions about the transparency of the group’s financial reporting.
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Field: Carillion directors ‘contemptuous’ of pension obligations
Letters from trustees of the main Carillion pension schemes to the Pensions Regulator suggest that directors of Carillion were “contemptuous” of their pension obligations, according to chair of the Work and Pensions Committee, Frank Field.