All articles by Lisa Botter – Page 2
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News
Tesco chooses cash flow matching over strategic asset allocation
Tesco Pension Fund has moved away from strategic asset allocations towards a risk-based investment strategy, which allows the scheme to get the right mix of assets to meet future cash flows.
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Opinion
Active managers dealt another blow, but schemes still loyal
A survey released this week found passive funds outperformed active funds by 4.7 per cent over the past five years, adding fuel to the fire of the active versus passive management debate.
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News
Corporate schemes catching public sector on infra
Corporate schemes are catching up with their public sector counterparts in accessing the illiquidity premium of infrastructure investments, taking an increasing share of a growing asset class.
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Opinion
Why UK schemes lose out to nimble overseas competitors on infrastructure
Infrastructure has been a hot topic among UK schemes over the past couple of years. With its long-term matching characteristics, it seems like a perfect fit for schemes looking to match liabilities, but inflows have been muted.
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Opinion
Fid man take-up stubbornly slow: five key charts
Fiduciary management in the UK has long been marketed/talked about, with the promise of taking the responsibility for ever more complicated everyday investment decisions off the hands of trustees seeming almost too good to be true.
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News
The Pensions Trust takes names off ballot to reduce bias
The Pensions Trust has anonymised its trustee board elections in a controversial attempt to create a more diverse board, as schemes work to improve representation on male-dominated governance bodies.
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Opinion
What you need to know from the pension schemes bill second reading
This week the new pensions bill had a second reading in the House of Commons, the first opportunity for members of parliament to debate its main principles.
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Opinion
The rise and rise of cash in lieu for FTSE 100 execs
It seems we have reached a tipping point where defined benefit is no longer the most common pension arrangement of FTSE 100 companies.
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Opinion
Does your trustee board have a women problem?
Any other business: The prime minister is not the only one facing questions over diversity. A quick glance around the pensions industry shows white, middle-aged men make up the majority of trustee boards.
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Opinion
On Desmond Tutu and the struggle for responsible investment
Responsible investment has been something with which many trustees have struggled. Although trustees are under fiduciary duty to provide the highest investment returns for members, the impact of investments on wider society and the environment has become increasingly important.
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News
How the PPF's contingent asset shift could affect your scheme
The Pension Protection Fund will publish in October the conclusion of its consultation on making the certification of contingent assets more transparent, after around half a sample of type A contingent assets failed a stress test.
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Opinion
Last DB schemes standing: A snapshot of FTSE 100 benefits
Consultancy LCP yesterday released its Accounting for Pensions 2014 report giving an insight into the pension arrangements of some of the country's biggest companies. The report at times paints a bleak picture for defined benefit schemes.
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Opinion
Is your scheme Carney-proof? Investors shore up porfolios with floating-rate assets and linkers
Schemes are seemingly shoring up their portfolios in preparation for expected twin risks of inflation and interest rate rises.
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Opinion
Which process provides the best trustees: election or selection?
Low voter turnout has plagued many elections. As the famous apocryphal quote from US politics runs, “A low voter turnout is an indication of fewer people going to the polls”.
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Opinion
Smooth sailing for the pensions lifeboat? The PPF’s annual report in numbers
The gradual economic recovery is welcome news for the Pension Protection Fund, with buoyant equity markets and stronger companies outweighing some losses in its liability-driven investment strategy.
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Opinion
Picking through the guidance guarantee small print
Finally some details on the guidance guarantee. Soon-to-be pensioners will receive independent guidance from April 2015, as the government clarifies the guidance guarantee announced in this year’s Budget.
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Opinion
Editorial: Longevity, BT, and our print break
Longevity risk has been on everyone’s mind since telecoms giant BT announced a behemoth deal to hedge 25 per cent of its total exposure to longevity improvements.
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Opinion
Longevity risk: Is the 1000-year-old man (or woman) a member of your scheme?
Advances in biomedical sciences have dramatically increased lifespans, which poses a real risk to a lot of schemes, with many now looking at the best ways to reduce such a risk.
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Opinion
Let's make friends: Industry pushes for AE data standard
Data have been a sticking point for many schemes and employers. Who can blame them? Of all the areas of pensions, data isn’t the most inspiring and engaging to newcomers.
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Opinion
The challenges facing Canada and UK's target benefit scheme
Last month, governments in London and Ottawa moved closer to implementing collective pension schemes, which share risk among members in the hope of proving better outcomes for savers.