All Regulation articles – Page 17
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News
FCA to consult on British Steel redress scheme
On the go: The Financial Conduct Authority will be consulting on a redress scheme for members of the British Steel Pension Scheme who transferred out after receiving bad advice.
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News
Fairs: Diversity should make for difficult trustee board discussions
On the go: Increasing diversity and making trustee boards more inclusive will produce longer and more difficult discussions — and that is a good thing, according to David Fairs, executive director of regulatory policy, analysis and advice at the Pensions Regulator.
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News
Nest and UBS divest from ‘unresponsive’ energy companies
On the go: Asset manager UBS has jettisoned “unresponsive” energy companies from its suite of climate-aware funds, including one it manages on behalf of Nest.
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News
PASA looks to avoid statements season ‘capacity crunch’
On the go: The Pensions Administration and Standards Association has published supplemental material on the forthcoming statements season, making a number of recommendations around format and implementation that reflect “considerable concern” in the industry.
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Podcasts
Podcast: Fiduciary trumps politics if divesting from ‘illegal Israeli settlements’
Podcast: Local Government Pension Schemes looking to divest from Israel should do so on grounds of sustainability and fiduciary responsibility, not because of politics and personal morality, says Richard Butcher, managing director of PTL. He is joined by Ian Neale, Aries Insight co-founder, to discuss divestment, defined benefit funding and ageing populations.
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News
GAD lists recommendations for LGPS 2022 valuation
The Government Actuary’s Department has published its statutory review of the Local Government Pension Scheme, listing a number of recommendations for the imminent 2022 valuations.
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News
McCloud rebellion grows as six unions file for judicial review
Six trade unions want to take the government to court in a bid to stop it imposing the cost of the McCloud remedy on their members, with one considering strike action.
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News
New Judicial Pension Scheme progresses despite concerns
The Ministry of Justice has confirmed it will move forward with the creation of a new pension scheme for judges, despite concerns from some judges and legal associations that it will be less generous than the existing arrangements
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Opinion
The rise of the trusteeship career
Independent Trustee Services’ executive chair Chris Martin analyses the recent changes in the pension scheme industry and how being a trustee can now be considered a career.
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News
DWP begins engagement over multi-employer CDC schemes
Pensions minister Guy Opperman has confirmed that preliminary work has begun on the creation of multi-employer collective defined contribution schemes, as the Department for Work and Pensions publishes its response to the consultation on single-employer arrangements.
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News
TPR urges trustees to ensure climate advisers have the right skills
On the go: The Pensions Regulator has warned that trustees must ensure their climate advisers are appropriately skilled and provide relevant and helpful advice.
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News
TPR’s DB funding code consultation delayed until ‘late summer’ 2022
The second consultation into the Pensions Regulator’s new defined benefit funding code will be delayed until “late summer” 2022.
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News
DB funding code’s bespoke route could reduce schemes’ costs
Forty per cent of FTSE 350 defined benefit schemes will not be sufficiently well funded to opt for the ‘fast-track’ route in the Pensions Regulator’s forthcoming DB funding code, but the bespoke route offers significant cost savings.
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News
Aston Martin faces strike action over DB scheme closure
Workers at carmaker Aston Martin have threatened industrial action following news that it plans to close its defined benefit pension scheme in January 2022.
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News
Scottish pensions agency proposes raft of LGPS amendments
The Scottish Public Pensions Agency has launched a consultation into a host of changes to the Local Government Pension Scheme in Scotland, covering early payment of pensions, survivor benefits and the cost cap.
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News
PLSA calls for ‘major review’ of Fraud Compensation Fund
On the go: The Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association has called for a “major review” of the Fraud Compensation Fund, branding the current arrangement “not fit for purpose”.
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News
Regulators’ value for money paper branded ‘utopian’ by SPP
On the go: The Society of Pension Professionals has criticised the “utopian” value for money discussion paper published by the Pensions Regulator and the Financial Conduct Authority, arguing that there is “no practical way” of achieving the goals set out.
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News
Industry concerns remain over anti-scam transfer restrictions
Almost half of schemes have more work to do to comply with new anti-scams transfer guidance, while nearly 10 per cent have “lots of work” to do, an XPS Pensions Group webinar has heard.
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News
Govt consults on NHS scheme McCloud remedy
On the go: The Department of Health and Social Care has published a consultation into changes to be made to the NHS Pension Schemes to accommodate the McCloud remedy.
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News
Ageing a bigger problem for pensions than Covid-19
The impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic on pensions could be relatively short-lived should the global economy continue to recover, but an ageing population presents long-term challenges with no simple solutions, according to a new report from the OECD.