More Law & Regulation – Page 23
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Covid-hit fiduciary management market gains 70% in 5 years
Although the UK fiduciary management market has risen by 11 per cent a year over the past five years, its growth is still below the previous period’s figures, with Covid-19 having an impact on selection processes in 2021, according to a survey by IC Select.
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Ombudsman orders law firm to pay thousands in missing contributions
The Pensions Ombudsman has handed a £1,000 fine to a law firm and ordered it to repay thousands more in missing contributions, after it failed to engage either with the affected member or the ombudsman’s office.
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Ombudsman hits Teachers’ Pensions with maladministration fine
The Pensions Ombudsman has fined Teachers’ Pensions £500 for maladministration after it failed to adequately inform a member about the rules around breaks in pensionable service, but dismissed the member’s argument that the fine should be increased to the minimum required in cases of employment discrimination.
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FBU urges employment tribunal to protect member benefits
The Fire Brigades Union has said it will encourage and assist its members in taking claims before an employment tribunal to protect their pension benefits, while it continues to negotiate with the Home Office for a permanent solution.
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Union urges government to revisit NDA pension reforms
The Prospect union has called on the government to reconsider reforms to Nuclear Decommissioning Authority pensions that will move members from their final salary scheme into a career average revalued earnings equivalent.
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FCA extends DB transfer redress consultation deadline
On the go: The Financial Conduct Authority has extended the deadline for responses to its consultation looking at how it could change the way it calculates redress for those who were wrongly advised to transfer out of a defined benefit scheme.
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Activists target Federated Hermes at local government pensions summit
On the go: Climate campaigners have protested outside a local government pensions conference, specifically targeting one of the event’s headline sponsors, investment manager Federated Hermes.
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Government presses ahead with NHS scheme uplifts
The Department of Health and Social Care has expanded on its plans to change the way member contribution rates are calculated and decided in the NHS Pension Scheme, launching a new consultation laying out its proposed uplifts to contribution tier thresholds.
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Opperman: 12mn people are under-saving for retirement
Pensions minister Guy Opperman has told MPs that around 12mn people are under-saving for their retirement, accounting for 38 per cent of the nation’s working age population.
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Aten Global fined by ombudsman for employee pension distress
On the go: Renewable energy business Aten Global has been fined £1,000 by the Pensions Ombudsman and ordered to pay missing pension contributions to an employee.
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Derbyshire among funds at risk in £138mn solar farm scandal
The Derbyshire Pension Fund is among a number of public sector institutions with members’ money invested in a scandal-hit council investment project that has seen £138mn in public money go missing.
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PASA guidance tackles ‘concerns’ over administration transfers
On the go: The Pensions Administration Standards Association has released guidance to tackle “increasing” concerns about the transfer of administration services, citing delays, unreasonable charges and deteriorating performance during the notice period.
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LGA calls for mandatory national insurance data in dashboards
The Local Government Association has argued that making national insurance numbers optional data will lead to a “poor experience” for pensions dashboards users, and has called for the government to make it a mandatory feature.
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Rise of DC poses risks and challenges for future pensioners
Increasing reliance on defined contribution savings means the requirements of future pensioners will be markedly different from those of previous generations, placing a greater emphasis on the need for communication and support, as well as on the role of annuities, a report from the Pensions Policy Institute has revealed.
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Insurers publish first bulk annuity ‘best practice’ guide
On the go: UK insurers have collaborated to produce the industry’s first-ever “best practice” guide for schemes preparing for bulk annuity quotations, laying out principles by which trustees, advisers and administrators should abide.
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Chloe Smith appointed work and pensions secretary
On the go: Norwich North MP Chloe Smith has been named secretary of state for work and pensions amid Liz Truss’s cabinet reshuffle.
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TPR’s criminal powers ‘pose risks’ to universities
The Pensions Regulator’s new criminal powers could potentially pose risks to university sponsors of defined benefit schemes, especially in light of reforms at the Universities Superannuation Scheme, legal experts have said.
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Labour would scrap pensions tax cap to boost NHS staff
On the go: Labour’s shadow Health and Social Care secretary, Wes Streeting, has pledged to do away with the cap above which NHS workers incur additional tax burdens, in a bid to dissuade experienced staff from retiring.
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Triple lock, NHS and merging regulators on Liz Truss’s agenda
The new prime minister faces a host of economic problems, ranging from the cost of living crisis to the staffing crisis in the NHS as she enters Number 10, industry experts have said, with all eyes on the government’s forthcoming “fiscal event”.
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Opperman attacks industry efforts on midlife MOTs
Pensions minister Guy Opperman has hit out at the pensions industry’s apparent lack of involvement in the development of so-called “midlife MOTs”, and argued in favour of the service being offered to savers in their thirties.