All Regulation articles – Page 63
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News
TPR to seize assets of rogue employers
The Pensions Regulator has said it will appoint High Court Enforcement Officers to seize assets of employers who do not pay a pension fine.
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Opinion
Expect as few as 15 mastertrusts within five years
The consensus in the pensions industry is that the mastertrust market is about to start shrinking – how quickly and to what extent is open to debate, but in the long run this can only be good for members.
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News
Salvus snaps up Complete in £7m mastertrust consolidation deal
Salvus Master Trust has unveiled plans to acquire the members and assets of the £7m Complete Master Trust, as the sector’s consolidation drive begins to gather pace.
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News
Regulator to prosecute brewery for failing to provide financial info
The Pensions Regulator is to prosecute Samuel Smith Old Brewery and company chairman Humphrey Smith for failing to provide information and documents required for an ongoing investigation.
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Opinion
Working for the future of savers and pensions
Pensions Expert readers know, better than most, just how complex pensions policy can be and just how much change there has been over the past five years.
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News
Pension questions raised after FirstGroup rejects takeover bid
FirstGroup’s rejection of a hostile takeover approach from US private equity group Apollo Management has sparked discussion on pensions.
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News
Select committee launches inquiry into DB white paper
The Work and Pensions Committee has launched an inquiry into the government's recent white paper on defined benefit security and sustainability, asking how the proposed measures are likely to be most effective and whether legislation should be fast-tracked.
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News
Trustees with fid man less likely to check quality of service
Trustees employing fiduciary managers are less engaged in assessing the quality of their provider than those with a traditional investment consultancy relationship, the latest report from the Competition and Markets Authority has found.
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News
Associated British Ports consults on accrual change
Associated British Ports has proposed to change the accrual rate for its defined benefit pension scheme, in a bid to cut costs and focus on fairness while keeping the scheme open to accrual.
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Opinion
What could we expect from the regulators’ joint pension strategy?
How could the Financial Conduct Authority and the Pensions Regulator’s joint strategy improve pensions regulation? Aegon’s Kate Smith discusses the regulators’ current responsibilities and the benefits of the watchdogs working together on certain issues.
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News
TPR fires warning shot over dividend to DRC balance
Defined benefit trustees and sponsoring employers should act sooner rather than later to secure members' pensions, the Pensions Regulator has said in its latest annual funding statement, and warned against prioritising dividends.
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News
Ofwat queried on water companies' DB closure plans
Chair of the Work and Pensions Committee Frank Field has written to Ofwat, the utilities regulator, about proposals by United Utilities and Anglia Water to close their defined benefit schemes to future accrual while continuing to pay out large amounts to shareholders.
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News
TPR raises bar with mastertrust code of practice
A new authorisation code requiring mastertrusts to demonstrate their financial sustainability may force a number of providers from the market, experts have speculated.
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News
Nortel reaches PPF-plus after nine years of 'scorched earth'
The UK Nortel Pension Scheme has retrieved enough assets from the insolvency of its communications giant parent to buy out benefits at a level above that guaranteed by the Pension Protection Fund.
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Opinion
DB white paper generates as many questions as answers
The political posturing of criminal sanctions for employers looks set to make bad law, argues Sackers’ Janet Brown, and a crucial question of resource still hangs over the white paper’s many sensible suggestions.
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News
Can schemes still justify active management?
The average active fund manager cannot outperform their benchmark net of fees, and according to the Competition and Markets Authority, the average investment consultant cannot reliably identify those managers who do. Can an average trustee board reasonably keep the faith in active management?
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Opinion
Superfund – shoot first
Editorial: The Department for Work and Pensions has kept its word with the publication of its highly anticipated white paper, even managing to deliver it ahead of its spring target.
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News
PwC probed on Carillion fees and conflicts
MPs have grilled PwC partners on fees and the safeguards the accountancy firm put in place to prevent conflicts of interest arising from its various roles regarding collapsed contractor Carillion.
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News
Government lowers mastertrust authorisation fees
The government has announced that proposed fees for mastertrust schemes seeking authorisation have been revised downwards.
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News
TPR and FCA seek input for joint strategy
The Pensions Regulator and the Financial Conduct Authority are jointly calling for input on regulating the pensions and retirement sector.