February 2021

Puerto Rico Government Plan-to-Private Plan Rollovers Allowed

On January 20, 2021, the Puerto Rico Department of the Treasury (Departamento de Hacienda, commonly known as “Hacienda”) issued Administrative Determination No. 21-01 (AD 21-01), which provides that lump-sum distributions from the retirement plan for Puerto Rico government employees are eligible for direct and indirect rollovers into Puerto Rico–qualified retirement plans maintained by private-sector employers. In practice, however, this determination is unlikely to have much of an impact on the operation of private-sector employer plans. Background Since the 1940s,...

Ireland. ISME looking for donations to argue for fairer pensions

Isme is calling on private sector workers across the country to donate money to support a campaign to create an equitable system for private sector pension savers. The Irish SME Association (Isme) is looking to raise €500,000 to support three plaintiffs who will challenge tax discrimination against private sector workers before the High Court, arguing that the pension system favours public sector workers. The funds raised will support the formation of a technical team giving tax guidance, pensions expertise,...

Kenya: Public Servants Take Salary Cut in New Pension Plan

Civil servants, teachers and security forces are having to re-organise their budgets after taking a two per cent cut on their January payslips. The deductions will go towards financing the State workers' newly introduced mandatory retirement savings plan, known as the Public Service Superannuation Scheme (PSSS). Retired public servants have been receiving lifetime pensions paid directly from the exchequer, but the new scheme will see them now shoulder a portion of the ballooning pension burden that hit Sh109 billion last year. The...

UK. Corporate bonds could offer ‘untapped potential’ for sustainable pension investments

Corporate bonds could offer “untapped potential” for improving the sustainability of investments, despite a "notable" absence of sustainable-labelled buy and maintain corporate bond strategies, analysis from LCP has found. The firm explained that with defined benefit (DB) pension schemes gradually maturing and de-risking, holdings of bonds are set to increase, with many companies using the corporate bond market to raise cash as an alternative to issuing new equity at the same time. This in turn has seen a “steady flow” of...

China to Widen Fight Against Monopolies to the Giant Gig Economy

China pledged to deepen antitrust enforcement across emergent sectors including on-demand internet services, broadening a campaign to rein in the growing power of private firms. China “resolutely” opposes monopolies and unfair competition and will step up regulation in sectors such as platform businesses, according to a plan released by the general offices of the powerful Communist Party Central Committee and the State Council, the cabinet. Contained within a broad set of guidelines intended to enforce “high standards” in Chinese finance and markets, the...

UK. Smart Pension commit to move away from fossil fuel investments

Smart Pension has today (February 1) committed to halving its scheme emissions before 2030.  The prominent UK master trust has signed up Make My Money Matter, a campaign which is fighting for a world where we all know where our pension money goes. There is currently over £3 trillion in UK pensions, and this money which is owned by all of us is invested to build our savings for the future. But many of us do not know where this money...

January 2021

Coronavirus throwing retirement systems into a deepening hole

By Douglas Appell, Paulina Pielichata Emerging markets policymakers' uphill battle to ensure a comfortable retirement for their fast-aging populations became considerably more daunting last year as the coronavirus ripped through the global economy. Read also Australia’s pension assets fall for first time since 2009- regulator Creative approaches to asset allocation and structural changes to keep retirement systems from morphing into rainy day funds are topics policymakers could find themselves grappling with as they look to move forward again after a year...

US. Pandemic Widens Retirement Planning Gender Gap

The pandemic has widened the gender gap for retirement planning, and women investors are less optimistic, more concerned and less prepared to protect assets than their male counterparts, according to a new survey. “Women are concerned about the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on their finances and the resulting uncertainty can make planning for the future — and their retirement — more difficult,” Ann Bair, senior vice president of marketing for Nationwide Financial, said in a statement about the...

Australia’s pension assets fall for first time since 2009- regulator

Australia’s pension assets decreased for the first time in a decade in the financial year ending June 2020, as workers withdrew on their savings to weather the coronavirus crisis, the sector regulator said in a report on Friday. Total assets in superannuation funds, as retirement funds are called in Australia, were A$2.9 trillion ($2.2 trillion) at June 30, down 0.41%, after growing every year since 2009 from A$1 billion, the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) said. Lump sum payments...

UK. Pension Minister Urges Treasury For Retirement Changes But The Self-Employed May Miss Out | Personal Finance | Finance

Pension holders, particularly outlined contribution (DC) members, may utilise a pensions recommendation allowance which is meant to permit members and beneficiaries of DC pension schemes and hybrid pension preparations with money steadiness advantages or different cash buy advantages to take £500 from their scheme to redeem towards the price of retirement monetary recommendation, with out incurring an unauthorised fee tax cost. Yesterday, Guy Opperman, the Pensions Minister, referred to as for the treasury to extend the allowance additional. During...