- Pension Schemes Bill - Ping
Pong on Monday will try to ensure Government pensions power grab
does not become law
- House of Lords expected to stand
firm against Mandation
- Government has watered down the
powers, but it still clearly intends to force reluctant pension
funds to invest in high-risk private assets
House of Lords will vote on Pension Schemes Bill Ping
Pong on Monday night: After passing important amendments
to the Pension Schemes Bill, which would have better protected
people's pensions, the Commons has thrown out every single one of
them. The Lords will try to reinsert some of the most important
changes on Monday evening, when we discuss the Pension Schemes
Bill again.
Government has watered down its attempted power grab, so
it fits better with the voluntary Mansion House Accord, but
pension dangers remain: The Government still seems
determined to force reluctant pension managers to invest in
private assets, even if pension managers in future decide that
these investments are not appropriate for their members. The
House of Lords is expected to stand firm against this power grab.
It is certainly welcome to see the Government's amendment which
changes the apparent unlimited powers with intentions to ‘only'
stick to the Mansion House Accord limits. But this still means
Ministers can force schemes to invest as Government dictates. Any
providers who do not invest at least 10% of their workplace
default funds in high-risk unlisted assets (such as private
equity, private credit, venture capital and interests in land),
with at least half in the UK, will be banned from auto-enrolment.
Ministers insist these are just ‘backstop' powers which won't be
needed, but that is no reassurance. They will be used to force
schemes who decide that investing so much of their funds in these
high-risk private assets is not appropriate, to do so anyway.
That is how Mandation works.
The Mansion House Accord requires Government itself to
make several changes, but the new amendment would override these
requirements: The voluntary investment commitments in
the Mansion House Accord depend on Government ensuring pension
funds have a good pipeline of investible projects, switching
value for money emphasis away from just low-cost, to allow for
the higher costs of managing private assets. In practice,
however, even if the Government does not deliver its commitments,
the new legislation could just force the funds to invest in those
assets anyway, even if the pension trustees would not do so on
purely economic or financial grounds.
Government does not know best when it comes to managing
pension assets: Serious concerns remain that forcing
schemes to invest in illiquid private assets could create asset
bubbles and put pension outcomes at risk. It is true that such
assets can deliver higher long-term returns, but the risks
associated with these and the timing of the investment, also
require sound judgment. Forcing investment at the wrong time,
perhaps in overvalued private equity and private credit, could
mean lower returns and lower pensions in future for millions of
workers, even though the Government believes returns should be
higher over time. Investing in a limited pool of UK or even
overseas projects could drive up asset prices, creating market
bubbles and exacerbating risk. Another worrying element is that
the Government intends to ban the use of listed, closed-ended
investment trusts or REITs, thus restricting the investment
options even further, with associated market distortions, again
damaging members' pension prospects.
Banning investment trusts and REITs shows Government
cannot be trusted to mandate investment allocations:
Ministers have specifically stated, without any coherent
justification, that pension funds cannot use closed-ended, listed
investment companies, such as investment trusts or REITs, even if
they hold private assets of exactly the type which Government
wants pension funds to support. It intends to close off this
option, so pension managers can only use either unlisted
Long-Term Asset Funds (which are open-ended structures) or direct
investments in the relevant assets. Closed-ended listed
investment companies are potentially the most suitable means for
some pension funds to invest in private assets. These companies
have long-standing experience in managing private and real or
illiquid growth assets, and therefore offer pension funds without
such expertise, the option to invest in ready-made, expertly
managed diversified portfolios of the relevant assets.
Specifically excluding the use of these more suitable
closed-ended listed companies, shows that Government cannot be
trusted to decide which assets pension funds must invest in.
The Pension Schemes Bill needs to be amended to protect
ordinary workers' pensions.