April 2017

Democrats ask Trump to veto measure repealing city retirement plan rule

In a last-ditch effort, five US Senate Democrats are urging President Donald Trump to veto a resolution that would repeal a Labor Department rule designed to help cities launch retirement savings plans for low-income private-sector workers by exempting such programs from strict federal pension protection laws. In an April 5 letter that Reuters saw on Thursday, the lawmakers told Trump, a Republican, that killing the rule could harm more than 2 million Americans who would otherwise benefit from city-run retirement...

Retirement planning can cut gender wage gap

Equal Pay Day, which was April 4 this year, highlights the gap between women’s and men’s paychecks, calling attention to the fact that women must keep working for more than three additional months in order to earn the same amount of pay that men collected by the end of the previous year. Full Content: Benefits & Pro Remember to subscribe to our free weekly newsletter for more news or subscribe to our service to get unlimited access.

US Pension Plans Look to the Canadian Model

Given the rising Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) premiums and persistently low interest rates, many US pension plans have been adapting some of the practices of what Cerulli Associates call The Canadian Model. The Model is centered around three attributes, according to Cerulli: cost mitigation, a well-diversified investment portfolio across several asset classes and geographies, and a large appetite for illiquid investments. While the Canadian pension market is considerably smaller than the US pension market—$1.2 trillion in assets compared to $6...

UK Government consults on early exit charges and pension commission regulations

The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has launched a consultation on draft regulations regarding the cap on early exit charges for occupational pension schemes and restrictions on member-borne commission payments. The consultation, which will run until 31 May 2017, seeks views on the draft Occupation Pension Schemes (Charges and Governance) (Amendment) Regulations 2017. These regulations would restrict early exit charges for members of workplace pension schemes to enable eligible members over the age of 55 to take advantage of the...

Rising Risks for Retirement Savers

As America’s population ages, opportunities for a secure retirement should increase. But the opposite is happening. And things are likely to get worse in the Trump years. A measure passed recently by congressional Republicans and awaiting President Trump’s all-but-certain signature will reverse a rule, passed in the last year of the Obama administration, allowing cities and counties to organize savings plans for private-sector workers who have no employer-provided retirement coverage. Another measure, blocking states from sponsoring similar retirement savings plans,...

Biggest Pension Fund Faces Yen Risk as Trump Rally Fades

The world’s biggest pension may find that when it comes to returns on its $1.3 trillion in assets, Donald Trump giveth and taketh away. What started as a rally in stocks on his presidential victory five months ago turned into a slump this year, making it harder for Japan’s Government Pension Investment Fund to beat its record $92 billion gain in the fourth quarter, according to SMBC Nikko Securities Inc. and BNP Paribas Securities Ltd. in Tokyo. GPIF may announce...

Greece Said to Near Bailout Compromise on Pensions, Taxes

Greece and its creditors are closing in on a deal over the reforms needed to unlock fresh loans for the country, even as Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras warned that a summit of euro-area leaders may be required if an agreement isn’t reached by Friday. In a proposed compromise discussed on Tuesday, Greece would reduce its pension outlays by 1 percent of gross domestic product in 2019 and lower its tax-free threshold in 2020 by a similar amount, according to three...

Here’s what the US could learn from Singapore’s plan for aging workers

At Chatters, a small café in the lobby of a hospital, the staff frothing cappuccinos and managing the register aren't your typical young baristas. That's because every employee must be at least 55. "It keeps my mind moving," said Sally Chung, 72, a retired accountant, who manages the café and does the books. The café's age requirement reflects a demographic trend this city-state of 5.6 million people is trying to confront: the population is getting old — fast. In 2015, one in...

Lifetime Isa chaos: Fees could leave savers £60k worse off than pensions

The Government's Lifetime Isa scheme is in chaos as not a single high street bank is offering the accounts, amid fears it could result in a mis-selling scandal. Despite officially launching on April 6 just three providers have agreed to offer the accounts, one of which was last night accused of ripping off savers by charging "disturbingly" high fees. Daily Telegraph calculations reveal that the Share Centre's Lifetime Isa will leave savers as much as £60,000 worse off than they would...

President Trump’s Directive Just Cost Investors $181 Million This Year

A US regulation requiring retirement advisers to put their clients’ best interests before their own profits when advising clients was slated to go into effect next Tuesday, but President Trump’s Labor Department on Tuesday announced a decision delaying the fiduciary rule by 60 days amid pressures from the financial industry. The problem is that even the 60-day delay —let alone any further decision to scale back the rule or rescind it outright —will impact working people’s retirement accounts. Even the...