Trustees should take practical steps now to prepare for the
Pension Schemes Bill and ensure they continue to provide quality
services, The Pensions Regulator (TPR) said today.
In a speech, TPR's
Interim Director of Policy and Public Affairs Patrick Coyne said
the regulator will seek to bridge the gap between the
introduction of new duties from the Pensions Schemes Bill and the
‘here and now' need to govern schemes well and provide high
quality services.
Mr Coyne told the Professional Pensions DC conference there are
four themes that run across the various strands of the Bill
focused on the DC system.
For each of these themes, he said, there are steps that scheme
trustees should take now to get ready:
- Be saver outcome focused: Consider their investment strategy
and challenge advisors to provide suitable insights and
commentary on performance.
- Build scale: Consider value proposition and work through the
practical steps they might need to take to consolidate if needed
in the interests of savers. If they have scale consider new
investment opportunities, like LTAFs, now available.
- Be data-led and accountable: Consider investment in digital
infrastructure to ensure high data quality and administration
standards in the run up to pensions dashboards, and engage with
administrators to understand what they can offer with different
price points
- Innovate at retirement: start discussions at trustee boards
around decumulation products and services and come to TPR's
innovation support services for discussions on early
ideas.
Mr Coyne said: “The Pension Schemes Bill will fundamentally
reshape the DC market. There are a number of steps that schemes
can take now to get ready. So I urge trustees to look now at how
they are outcome-focused, building scale, are data-led and
supporting savers into retirement.”
Notes for editors
- Read Patrick Coyne's
speech.
- TPR is the regulator of work-based pension schemes in the UK.
Our statutory objectives are to:
- protect members' benefits
- reduce the risk of calls on the Pension Protection Fund
- promote, and improve understanding of, the good
administration of work-based pension schemes
- maximise employer compliance with automatic enrolment
duties
- minimise any adverse impact on the sustainable growth of
an employer (in relation to the exercise of the regulator's
functions under Part 3 of the Pensions Act 2004 only)