Qualifying Recognised Overseas Pension Scheme

Lords continues check of Pension Schemes Bill

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, July 15, 2020

No changes to the wording of the bill have been suggested ahead of third reading.

Key Points: 
  • No changes to the wording of the bill have been suggested ahead of third reading.
  • Members may also discuss the progress of the bill through the House at its conclusion of Lords stages.
  • Members discussed a range of subjects including the financial contribution of an employer to the running costs of a pension scheme and the requirement of pension schemes to make available information on the diversity of the trustee board.
  • A final vote was held on a change (amendment 71) which would ensure thatopen and active schemes which receive receiving regular, significant cash contributions are treated differently toclosed schemes.

Pension scheme investments – climate change risk

Retrieved on: 
Saturday, June 27, 2020

This short briefing paper aims to provide context for provisions in clause 124 of the Pension Schemes Bill 2019/21 that would require occupational pension schemes to manage the effects of climate change effectively as a financial risk to their investments and to report publicly on how they have done so.

Key Points: 
  • This short briefing paper aims to provide context for provisions in clause 124 of the Pension Schemes Bill 2019/21 that would require occupational pension schemes to manage the effects of climate change effectively as a financial risk to their investments and to report publicly on how they have done so.
  • In June 2018, the Government said it would update the law to require pension scheme trustees to consider the impacts of their investments from a changing environment, corporate governance and social trends.
  • In April 2020, Pensions Minister Guy Oppermanlaunched a consultation onaligning your pension scheme with the Taskforce on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) recommendationsand explained that the Government was proposing to take powers in the Pension Schemes Bill to require climate-change risk governance and TCFD reporting.
  • Clause 124 of the Pension Schemes Bill 2019-21, currently before Parliament, would:

Pension transfer advice

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, May 6, 2020

It therefore introduced a mandatory financial advice requirement for those wishing to transfer or convert a DB pension with a transfer value worth more than 30,000 into a DC pension.

Key Points: 
  • It therefore introduced a mandatory financial advice requirement for those wishing to transfer or convert a DB pension with a transfer value worth more than 30,000 into a DC pension.
  • The Financial Conduct Authoritys (FCA) supervisory work in this area dates from 1 October 2015 and resulted in some firms exiting the pension transfer advice market (FCA letter to Frank Field, January 2018).
  • Despite its guidance that advisers should start from a position of assuming that a transfer will not be suitable unless they can demonstrate a transfer would be in a consumers best interests, almost seven in ten (69%) of those advising on a transfer between April 2015 and September 2018 recommended a transfer (DB pension transfers: market wide data results, FCA, July 2019).
  • Its 2020/21 Business Plan commits to continuing to assess the suitability of DB to DC transfer advice.

Pension freedoms: transfers from defined benefit pension schemes

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, May 6, 2020

DB transfer rights

Key Points: 
  • DB transfer rights

    The pension freedoms were not aimed at members of defined benefit (DB) pension schemes (which provide benefits based on salary and length of service) for the majority of whom, it was likely to be in their best financial interests to remain in their DB scheme.

  • The Government recognised that the pension freedoms might make transfers from DB to DC schemes more attractive.
  • The issues around DB pension transfer advice are discussed in a separate note Pension transfer advice (CBP 8488, May 2020).
  • Public sector pension schemes

    When it introduced the pension freedoms, the Coalition Government decided to prohibit members of the main public service pension schemes, except for the Local Government Pension Scheme (LGPS) from transferring out to a DC scheme.

Defined ambition pension schemes

Retrieved on: 
Monday, October 28, 2019

House of Commons Library

Key Points: 
  • House of Commons Library

    Looks the Coalition Government's legislation for a new type of workplace pension ('defined ambition' or shared risk) and to enable schemes to provide collective benefits.

  • Implementation was put on hold by the current government which is legislating in the Pension Schemes Bill 2019/20 for an alternative framework for collective defined contribution schemes

    This note looks at the Coalition Governments legislation for a new category of pension scheme shared risk, or defined ambition and its framework to enable schemes to provide collective benefits.

  • It legislated in the Pension Schemes Act 2015 for a new category of shared risk pension scheme and a framework for schemes to provide collective benefits.
  • Following consultation, it decided to legislate for a new framework for CDC schemes in the Pension Schemes Bill [HL] 2019-20.

Brexit - implications for private pensions

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, December 4, 2018

Tuesday, December 4, 2018Looks at the emerging discussion about the potential implications of Brexit for EU pensions

Key Points: 


House of Commons Library

Brexit - implications for private pensions


    Looks at the emerging discussion about the potential implications of Brexit for EU pensions

What is the legal framework?

  • The design of pension systems is largely the responsibility of Member States. The regulatory framework at EU level covers:
    • establishing an internal market for funded occupational pension schemes and the minimum standards to protect scheme members;
    • minimum guarantees concerning accrued rights in occupational pension schemes in case of the insolvency of the sponsoring employer; and
    • anti-discrimination rules. (European Commission Memo 10/302 Green Paper on Pensions and Green Paper. Towards adequate sustainable and safe European pension systems, July 2010, SEC(2010)830)
  • The Pension and Lifetime Savings Association (PLSA) explains that UK workplace pension schemes tend to operate on a national basis but want access to investment opportunities and service providers in the EU:
    1. Workplace pension schemes in the UK are not generally looking to provide pensions to workers in other Member States. So, in this respect, there is little interest in taking up the opportunities that might - in theory at least – be provided by an effective EU-wide Single Market.
    2. However, workplace pension schemes do want ready access to investment opportunities and service providers in EU and across the world, and this is where a strong Single Market has a role to play. Having ready access to the widest possible range of service providers helps schemes to invest their assets and administer their schemes with a minimum of cost in order to provide the best value to their members. (PLSA Response to balance of competences review, January 2013).
  • EU legislation has an impact on them:
    • directly, through pensions-specific EU legislation such as the Directive on Institutions for Occupational Retirement Provision (‘IORP Directive’) that have been transposed into UK law; through the regulatory activities of EIOPA; and through EU employment law, such as the Equal Treatment Directive; and
    • indirectly, because the costs of complying with the EU’s investment markets legislation (such as EMIR, MIFID, the draft Money Market Funds Regulation and the potential Financial Transaction Tax) are passed to pension fund clients by asset managers, brokers and banks. (Ibid)

What will Brexit mean for this?

  • The PLSA said pension schemes need a strong economy, the right regulation and strong financial services.
  • They did not want major regulatory upheaval: UK pensions law is extensively intertwined with EU law, regulations and court rulings.
  • However, it would be important to protect them from any EU legislation on a solvency-based funding regime for pension schemes that might be introduced in the longer term (Ibid).
  • The ABI has set out 'five key asks' for UK insurers: securing an appropriate regulatory environment; retaining the ability to passport out of and into the UK; closely mirroring the EU data protection regime; an improved future migration policy that enables the employment of high-skilled professionals from both within and outside the EU; a strong focus on regulatory dialogue and interantional agreements on financial services markets (ABI press release, 12 December 2016).

What about market changes?

  • (Market volatility following the EU referendum: guidance statement from TPR, July 2016).
  • The PLSA has produced a Brexit to-do-list for trustees, setting out ten actions to ensure their scheme is well-placed to deal with Brexit, including reviewing the employer covenant funding status and investment strategy.

What does the pensions industry want?

  • According to the PLSA, the UK has the larges pensions sector in Europe, providing pensions for 20 million people and with over £1 trillion of assets under management. It argues that a successful outcome from the Brexit negotiations would include the following:
    • For a strong economy: replication of both the current UK-EU framework for free trade in goods and existing EU free trade agreements with third countries. Also, a new immigration policy that continues to allow flows of talent and labour from the EU for the good of the wider economy in general and pension schemes in particular;
    • For the right regulation: the maximum possible access to the Single Market in services – while also exempting pension schemes that operate only in the UK from damaging EU pensions regulation, such as a potential solvency-based regime for pension funds;
    • For strong financial services: continuation of the passporting regime so that pension funds can invest efficiently. (PLSA, Brexit and Pension Schemes: Getting the right deal for Britain’s savers, January 2017).
  • The ABI has called on the Government to “make a clear commitment that it will seek an early agreement with our European partners on a high level transitional implementation period which will help avoid economic shocks to both the UK and the EU”. It has also set out ‘five key asks’ for UK insurers:
    • Securing a regulatory environment that is appropriate for the UK market.
    • Retaining the ability to passport out of and into the UK.
    • Closely mirroring the EU data protection regime to avoid a quagmire of complexity around how personal and non-personal data is protected.
    • An improved future migration policy that enables the employment of high-skilled professionals from both within and outside the EU. (ABI calls for ‘clear commitment’ to a transitional implementation period following Brexit, December 2016).

Some potential areas of impact...

  • When the UK leaves the EU, those relying on a passport, which at that point falls away, may be in breach of local law.
  • There are a range of possible solutions to those ranging from leaving firms to sort it out themselves, to mutually agreed and enacted solutions.