Pensions - Articles - BoE scenario shows improved resilience of pension funds


The Pension Regulator (TPR) has welcomed the conclusions of the Bank of England System-Wide Exploratory Scenario (SWES) which demonstrates that pension funds have significantly improved their resilience with respect to Liability Driven Investment (LDI) over the past two years.

 The SWES represents the first system-wide exploratory scenario exercise that includes Non-Bank Financial Institutions. TPR played a key role in analysing the results of the SWES particularly in relation to the impact on LDI and the collateralisation processes of such investments. TPR welcomes the next steps outlined in the report.

 Nausicaa Delfas, Chief Executive of The Pensions Regulator said: "This report shows that pension schemes are now more resilient to extreme market movements. “We recognise the important role pensions play in the wider financial eco-system and continue to guard against systemic risks by understanding how schemes act during stressed market conditions, as well as exploring improvements to our data collection to make sure we keep savers safe.”

 
 Read the Bank’s report.
 To support the Bank’s work, TPR leads an external risk panel, which includes asset managers, pension schemes and senior consultants in industry and TPR’s own financial risk team.
 In April 2023, TPR issued new guidance setting out further practical steps trustees should take to manage risks when using leveraged liability driven investments (LDI).
 Evidence from TPR’s own market engagement shows pension schemes are using TPR’s guidance to strengthen their on-going resilience.
 TPR is the regulator of work-based pension schemes in the UK. Its statutory objectives are to:
 protect members’ benefits
 reduce the risk of calls on the Pension Protection Fund (PPF)
 promote, and to 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) 

Back to Index


Similar News to this Story

DC Pension Tracker Q3 2025
The Aon UK DC Pension Tracker fell over the quarter, with the younger savers seeing decreases in their expected outcomes, while the older members’ exp
Employers must take lead in retirement adequacy crisis
Employers will end up taking most of the responsibility for helping to solve the retirement adequacy problem if we are to see real and impactful chang
Two thirds of Administrators involved in pension strategy
With forthcoming legislation, from Inheritance Tax on unused pension pots to the 2025 Pension Schemes Bill set to have considerable implications for p

Site Search

Exact   Any  

Latest Actuarial Jobs

Actuarial Login

Email
Password
 Jobseeker    Client
Reminder Logon

APA Sponsors

Actuarial Jobs & News Feeds

Jobs RSS News RSS

WikiActuary

Be the first to contribute to our definitive actuarial reference forum. Built by actuaries for actuaries.