Pensions - Articles - Energy cost deal not enough for pension scheme sponsors


The Energy Bill Relief Scheme (the six-month cap on energy prices announced by the Government and starting on 1 October 2022) won’t address the wider pressures being experienced by businesses. In the most serious cases, repercussions from the mini-budget could lead to requests for contribution deferrals from scheme sponsors.

 This measure, and the scrapping of a planned increase in corporation tax, has been designed to help ease the cost pressures that businesses are currently facing. LCP believes that while these will be welcomed, the energy price cap is time limited and there appears to be no coherent plan to address the other fundamental challenges facing businesses, which include higher financing costs because of increasing interest rates, subdued demand as a recession looms and cost inflation (exacerbated by a rapidly weakening sterling).

 LCP is warning that these factors mean that scheme sponsors may soon face some tough decisions between investing in their business or paying pensions contributions, and in a lot of cases such decisions will be needed just to keep the businesses afloat.

 Fran Bailey, Partner at LCP, commented: “While the Energy Bill Relief Scheme and the scrapping of planned corporation tax rises may help companies through a challenging winter, it is unlikely to fully ease the pressure on many pension scheme sponsors. Businesses set strategies over longer time frames and may be hesitant to commit to investment plans without clarity over what the fall-out from the mini-budget will mean for interest rates and the wider economic environment in the UK.”

 “Whilst pension funding levels are improving significantly, many schemes aren’t yet at their final destination, and remain reliant on their sponsor to varying extents. Trustees really need to be mindful of how the current macroeconomic environment may impact on their covenant – now and over the timeframe that their scheme is reliant on this support.”

 
  

Back to Index


Similar News to this Story

Funding for DB schemes makes more progress at start of 2026
Fully hedged scheme sees small funding level increase over January50% hedged scheme also improves position over the monthEncouraging start to 2026 fol
Older retirees lose out falling into best/worst income gap
Older retirees have most to lose by falling into the best/worst income gap, Just Group analysis reveals·Gap between the best and worst annuity rates i
Beazley agree £8bn Zurich buyout as Iran tensions dominate
FTSE 100 scales fresh heights as its defensive qualities shine. Energy stocks and miners benefit as Middle East tensions rise. Insurer Beazley agrees

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.