All Regulation articles – Page 60
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Opinion
Building relationships to protect savers
The Pensions Regulator’s new supervision approach is a milestone for pension regulation, says Lesley Titcomb, the watchdog’s chief executive.
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Features
Trustees pour cold water on wild consolidator claims
The Edi Truell-backed Pension SuperFund has been no stranger to controversy in its short lifespan.
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Opinion
DC mastertrust consolidation: The long-term outcome
CMS’s Jennifer Bell and Daniel Shaw discuss mastertrust authorisation and the future of defined contribution consolidation.
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Opinion
Advertising transfer values: trustee duty or danger to members?
When trustees at the Rexam Pension Plan noticed a substantial spike in defined benefit transfers out of the scheme last year, it seemed like good news.
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Podcasts
Podcast: How should trustees be monitoring their employer covenant?
Podcast: Over the last few years, headlines highlighting several high-profile defined benefit pension cases have hammered home the importance of having a strong covenant. Mark Evans, director at Independent Trustee Services, and Adolfo Aponte, director at covenant specialists Lincoln Pensions, explain how trustees can keep tabs on their employer.
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Opinion
New guidelines provide carrot and stick on DC administration
From the blog: As a trustee, I welcome with open arms the new DC Administration Governance Guidance issued earlier this summer by the Pension Administration Standards Association.
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Opinion
Regulation must adapt to protect members in consolidation deals
Darren Redmayne from Lincoln Pensions outlines the regulatory and guidance framework that could help facilitate safe transfers to commercial consolidators, and the steps defined benefit trustees might take in the interim.
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News
TPR to introduce one-to-one supervision for 25 biggest schemes
On the go: The Pensions Regulator has introduced a new supervision regime, which includes one-to-one supervision of 25 of the largest schemes in the UK, and will aim to monitor all schemes more closely.
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News
DB governance: Small schemes fail to keep pace
Small defined benefit schemes are still lagging behind their larger counterparts when it comes to governance standards, new research from the Pensions Regulator has shown.
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Opinion
Mastertrust sector still concerned about new regime
The Pensions Management Institute’s working group on mastertrusts has revealed that while the industry welcomes authorisation with open arms, particpants remain unclear on what form the new regulatory regime will take, writes PMI president Lesley Carline.
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News
PLSA pitch for light-touch tender rules raises eyebrows
The Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association has called for mandatory fiduciary management tenders mandates to be closed processes with no minimum number of applicants, but some experts have questioned whether the move would do anything to change the status quo.
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News
Regulator calls for schemes to consider lowering transfer values
On the go: The Pensions Regulator has asked the trustees of several defined benefit schemes to contemplate cutting transfer values for workers opting out of schemes.
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News
Renishaw in recovery plan discussion with regulator
British engineering company Renishaw has been in discussions with the Pensions Regulator after the watchdog questioned its recovery plan, potentially leading to a £45m cash contribution to the scheme if the current recovery plan is terminated.
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News
Aegon not interested in scooping up failed mastertrusts
Pensions provider Aegon has declared itself uninterested in buying mastertrusts that drop out of the market as a result of authorisation, aiming instead at the more lucrative single-trust defined contribution market.
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News
Industry slams lack of detail on regulator's new powers
Plans to reinforce the regulation of defined benefit schemes in the UK lack depth and may not have been able to prevent the pensions scandals that have rocked the industry in recent years, according to industry experts.
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Opinion
New regulator powers will only accelerate DB disappearance
From the blog: The government has floated well-intentioned reforms intended to strengthen the arm of regulators against dodgy bosses, but the proposed changes risk undermining trustees and making further scheme closures more likely.
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Opinion
Combating pension scams – It’s good to talk
From the blog: In perhaps an ironic twist last month, Northumbria Police was found guilty of not doing enough to protect one of its officers from the risk of becoming the victim of a pension scam.
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News
FRC review threatens to impact actuarial profession
An advisory group to the government review of the Financial Reporting Council is to explore the extent to which actuaries should be subject to formal regulation in response to the pensions-related nature of recent corporate failures.
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News
Scam victims lose £91,000 on average
On the go: The Pensions Regulator and the Financial Conduct Authority have launched a joint media campaign to combat pension scams, amid the revelation that average losses from fraudulent and inappropriate inducements eclipsed the size of the average pension pot in the UK.
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Opinion
What the regulator’s corporate plan means for pensions administration
Trafalgar House’s Michael de Souza explains what the Pensions Regulator’s corporate plan for 2018-2021 means for pensions administration.