By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
logo logo
  • Finance
  • Funding
  • Fintech
  • Wealth Management
  • Corporate Finance
  • Banking
  • Financial Crime
  • Commodities
  • Economy and Policy
  • More
    • International Markets
    • Real Estate
    • Regulations and Compliance
    • Startups and Innovation
    • Sustainable Finance
    • Swiss-German
    • Support Links
  • Press Releases
Reading: UK pensions bill pushes more investment in private markets
Swiss Finance NewsSwiss Finance News
Aa
Search
  • Finance
  • Funding
  • Fintech
  • Wealth Management
  • Corporate Finance
  • Banking
  • Financial Crime
  • Commodities
  • Economy and Policy
  • More
    • International Markets
    • Real Estate
    • Regulations and Compliance
    • Startups and Innovation
    • Sustainable Finance
    • Swiss-German
    • Support Links
  • Press Releases
Follow US
© Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Swiss Finance News > News > Wealth Management > UK pensions bill pushes more investment in private markets
Wealth Management

UK pensions bill pushes more investment in private markets

gelikuwa
Last updated: 2025/06/05 at 8:20 PM
By gelikuwa 4 Min Read
Share
SHARE
swiss

Stay informed with free updates

Simply sign up to the Workplace pensions myFT Digest — delivered directly to your inbox.

A contentious change in UK legislation around pensions will push more defined contribution workplace schemes to boost investment in British private markets, pension experts have said. 

The Pensions Schemes Bill, published on Thursday, sets a framework to allow regulators to force the default funds of workplace DC schemes to invest in specific assets including private equity, private debt, venture capital or property. 

reputation

The power, which would be enforced by the Financial Conduct Authority and the Pensions Regulator, comes alongside a new requirement for multi-employer DC schemes to have assets of at least £25bn by 2030, or 2035 provided that they can demonstrate they are on track to hit the target by that point.

Michael Jones, partner at law firm Eversheds Sutherland, said: “Tying asset allocation to the scale requirements is a clever way of doing it . . . by giving the regulators the power to approve or not approve a sub-scale provider depending on if they are investing in the way the government wants.”

Gareth Henty, head of UK pensions at consultancy PwC, said the threat of mandation would “fire the starting gun” for large multi-employer schemes to invest more in private markets before they were forced to do so, at which might point “what’s left might not be as attractive as what’s sourced early”.

The provision in the bill comes after 17 of the UK’s largest DC workplace pension providers pledged to invest at least 5 per cent of their assets in UK private markets by 2030 under the Mansion House Accord signed last month. 

Truth

The government hopes the voluntary commitment — alongside the creation of DC “megafunds” of £25bn — will push £50bn of investment into UK scale-up companies, infrastructure and property.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves last week confirmed she would create a “backstop” power to force large pension funds to back British assets, despite pushback from some City figures.

The proposed reserve power for regulators to set asset allocation requirements will apply only to the default funds of large multi-employer DC schemes. 

“There was a genuine concern that it would apply across the book, including defined benefit and non-commercial schemes,” Jones said. 

The power to direct investments also comes with a sunset clause of December 2035, after which it will expire if not used already.  

“The introduction of a reserve power to allow government to direct how defined contribution schemes invest will require very close scrutiny,” said the Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association.

The trade group added that it was “particularly concerned that the sunset clause extends beyond the current parliament . . . and contains very broad discretions for the secretary of state to direct investments or set targets”.

Sir Steve Webb, a former pensions minister and now a partner at consultancy LCP, said: “[Ministers] have put in the statute book a power that someone else can pick up . . . nobody should have this power . . . it creates instability and uncertainty for pension schemes”. 

Source link

DON’T MISS ANY NEWS

Get all the latest news straight to your inbox

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

You’ve been successfully subscribed to our newsletter!

investigation

You Might Also Like

how much do European asset managers stand to gain?

Battle over Jimmy Buffett estate highlights risks of family trusts

BlackRock and alternative investments

BlackRock sets $400bn fundraising target to take on private capital giants

Dollar weakness is turning all fund managers into currency traders

TAGGED: Bill, investment, markets, Pensions, private, pushes
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Email Copy Link Print
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Weather
Your API key is not activated yet. Within the next couple of hours, it will be activated and ready to use.
Or
Invalid API key. Please see http://openweathermap.org/faq#error401 for more info.
Weather from OpenWeatherMap

You Might Also Like

Wealth Management

how much do European asset managers stand to gain?

By gelikuwa 7 Min Read
Wealth Management

Battle over Jimmy Buffett estate highlights risks of family trusts

By gelikuwa 12 Min Read
Wealth Management

BlackRock and alternative investments

By gelikuwa 8 Min Read
- Advertisement -
Ad image

Popular Articles

Banking

Citigroup lays off 3,500 tech staff in China

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in…

7 June 2025
Swiss-German

Erfolg für Stablecoins, aber Krypto schwächelt

Der Stablecoin-Anbieter Circle hat beim IPO eine schwindelerregend hohe Bewertung erreicht. Offenbar wollen künftig neben X…

8 June 2025
Swiss-German

Fixe Ablaufdaten bei Bond-ETF: Vorteile für Privatanleger

Bei diesen Bond-ETF gibt es keine bösen Überraschungen: Investoren wissen gleich zu Beginn, wie viel Rendite…

7 June 2025
Swiss-German

Banken bremsen den Traum vom Eigenheim

Die Leitzinsen in der Schweiz sind wieder nahe bei null. Doch wer eine Hypothek sucht, merkt…

10 June 2025

About Us

Swiss Finance News delivers the latest updates and insights on the dynamic world of finance in Switzerland. Stay informed with comprehensive coverage of Fiance, Banking, Investments and market trends.  From regulatory developments to innovative fintech solutions, Swiss Finance News is your go-to source for staying ahead in the competitive realm of Swiss finance.

Categories

  • Real Estate
  • Regulations and Compliance
  • Startups and Innovation
  • Sustainable Finance
  • Wealth Management

Quick Links

  • Contact
  • Support Links
  • Impressum
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

© 2023 Swissfinancenews.ch – All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?