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Timestamp: 2019-08-24 20:38:38
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Matched Legal Cases: ['art 3', 'art 3', 'art 3', 'art 3', 'art 3', 'art 4', 'art 4', 'art 4', 'art 4', 'art 4', 'art 4', 'art 4', 'art 4', 'art 4', 'art 4', 'art 4', 'art 4', 'art 5', 'art 5', 'art 5', 'art 5', 'art 5', 'art 5', 'art 6', 'art 6', 'art 6', 'art 6', 'art 7', 'art 7', 'art 7', 'art 7', 'art 7', 'art 7', 'art 7', 'art 7', 'art 7', 'art 8', 'art 8', 'art 8', 'art 8', 'art 8', 'art 9', 'art 9', 'art 9', 'art 9', 'art 9', 'art 9', 'art 9', 'art 10', 'art 10', 'art 10', 'art 10', 'art 10', 'art 10', 'art 10', 'art 10', 'art 10', 'art 11', 'art 11', 'art 11', 'art 11', 'art 11', 'art 11', 'art 12', 'art 12', 'art 12', 'art 12', 'art 12', 'art 12', 'art 5']

The Purple Book DB PENSIONS UNIVERSE RISK PROFILE Pension Protection Fund - PDF
The Purple Book DB PENSIONS UNIVERSE RISK PROFILE Pension Protection Fund
Download "The Purple Book DB PENSIONS UNIVERSE RISK PROFILE 2012. Pension Protection Fund"
1 The Purple Book DB PENSIONS UNIVERSE RISK PROFILE 2012 Pension Protection Fund
2 2 the purple book 1 2 The Purple Books give the most comprehensive picture of the risks faced by the PPF-eligible defined benefit pension schemes.
3 Contents Chapter 1: Executive Summary 10 Chapter 2: The Data 22 Chapter 3: Scheme Demographics 26 Chapter 4: Scheme Funding 33 Chapter 5: Funding Sensitivities 45 Chapter 6: Insolvency Risk 52 Chapter 7: Asset Allocation 55 Chapter 8: Risk Developments 63 Chapter 9: Levy Payments 70 Chapter 10: Schemes in Assessment 77 Chapter 11: PPF Compensation 84 Chapter 12: Risk Reduction 90 Data tables: Chapter 3 96 Data tables: Chapter 4 99 Glossary the purple book 1 2
4 Charts and Tables Chapter 1: Table 1.1 UK economic and financial environment 11 Chapter 2: Table 2.1 Distribution of schemes excluding those in assessment by number of members as at 31 March Table 2.2 Distribution of s179 liabilities ( billion) excluding those of schemes in the assessment process by number of members as at 31 March Table 2.3 Purple datasets and universe estimates, including schemes in the PPF assessment process 24 Chapter 3: Chart Distribution of schemes by status 28 Table 3.1 Distribution of schemes by status 28 Table 3.2 Distribution of schemes by status (excluding hybrid schemes) 28 Chart 3.2 Scheme status by membership group 29 Chart 3.3 Percentage distribution of memberships by scheme status 29 Table 3.3 Distribution of membership by status 30 Table 3.4 Distribution of membership by status (excluding hybrid schemes) 30 Table 3.5 Membership by membership type and status, as at 31 March Chart 3.4 Distribution of membership types in the Purple 2012 dataset 31 Chart 3.5 Distribution of membership types by membership group in the Purple 2012 dataset 31 Chart 3.6 Proportion of schemes by industry classification 32 4 the purple book 1 2
5 Chapter 4: Table 4.1 Key funding statistics as at 31 March Table 4.2 Historical funding figures 35 Table 4.3 s179 funding levels by scheme size, as at 31 March Chart 4.1 Total assets and liabilities on a s179 basis as at 31 March Chart 4.2 Distribution of s179 funding levels by size of scheme membership as at 31 March Table 4.4 Estimated full buy-out levels by size of scheme membership as at 31 March Chart 4.3 Total assets and liabilities by size of scheme membership on an estimated full buy-out basis as at 31 March Chart 4.4 Distribution of buy-out funding levels by size of scheme membership as at 31 March Table 4.5 Analysis of s179 funding levels by scheme maturity as at 31 March Chart 4.5 Distribution of s179 assets and liabilities by scheme maturity as at 31 March Chart 4.6 Distribution of funding levels on a s179 basis by scheme maturity as at 31 March Table 4.6 Analysis of s179 funding levels by scheme status as at 31 March Chart 4.7 Distribution of s179 assets and liabilities by scheme status as at 31 March Chart 4.8 Distribution of schemes by s179 funding levels within scheme status groups as at 31 March Table 4.7 Analysis of estimated full buy-out funding levels by scheme status as at 31 March Chart 4.9 Distribution of estimated full buy-out assets and liabilities by status as at 31 March Chart 4.10 Distribution of estimated full buy-out funding levels by size of scheme membership as at 31 March Chart 4.11 s179 liabilities by active, deferred and pensioner members 43 Chart 4.12 s179 assets and liabilities by industry with overall funding level as at 31 March the purple book 1 2
6 Chapter 5: Chart 5.1 Estimated s179 aggregate balance (assets less liabilities) of pension schemes in the Purple 2012 dataset 46 Chart 5.2 Estimated s179 funding ratio (assets as a percentage of liabilities) of pension schemes in the Purple 2012 dataset 47 Chart 5.3 Movements in stock markets and gilt yields 47 Chart 5.4 Estimated aggregate assets less aggregate liabilities for schemes in deficit 48 Chart 5.5 Estimated number of schemes in deficit each month in the Purple 2012 dataset 48 Chart 5.6 Estimated movements in assets and s179 liabilities of schemes in the Purple 2012 dataset 49 Table 5.1 Impact of changes in gilt yields and equity prices on s179 funding levels from a base aggregate deficit of billion, as at 31 March Table 5.2 Impact of changes in gilt yields and equity prices on assets from a base of 100, as at 31 March Table 5.3 Impact of changes in gilt yields on s179 liabilities from a base of 100, as at 31 March Table 5.4 Impact of changes in gilt yields and equity prices on the s179 funding position from a base total deficit of billion, excluding schemes in surplus, as at 31 March Table 5.5 Impact of changes in the rate of RPI inflation on s179 liabilities (base = 1,231 billion), as at 31 March Table 5.6 Impact of changes in longevity assumptions on s179 liabilities ( 1,231 billion), as at 31 March Chapter 6: Chart 6.1 PPF and UK insolvency rates 53 Chart 6.2 Liability-weighted insolvency probability of the PPF s 500 largest scheme exposures 53 Chart 6.3 UK corporate insolvencies and GDP growth 54 Chart 6.4 Average one-year ahead insolvency probability by scheme size as measured by number of members, as at 31 March the purple book 1 2
7 Chapter 7: Table 7.1 Distribution of schemes by asset allocation date 56 Table 7.2 Average asset allocation in total assets 56 Table 7.3 Asset allocation: simple averages 57 Table 7.4 Gilt and fixed interest splits 57 Table 7.5 Equity splits 57 Chart 7.1 Simple average asset allocation of schemes by asset size 58 Chart 7.2 Simple average of equities and fixed interest assets split by asset size 58 Chart 7.3 Weighted-average asset allocation by s179 funding level 59 Chart 7.4 Weighted-average asset allocation of schemes by current pensioner liabilities as a percentage of total liabilities 59 Chart 7.5 Weighted-average asset allocation of schemes by D&B failure score 60 Chart 7.6 Investment risk by s179 funding level 60 Chart 7.7 Investment risk by scheme asset size 61 Chart 7.8 Investment risk by levy band 61 Chart 7.9 Impact of stress testing on investment risk 62 Chapter 8: Chart 8.1 Cumulative deficits of schemes entering the PPF from 31 March Table 8.1 LTRM Projections of five-year claims on the PPF (s179 basis) from 2009 to Table 8.2 Modelled probability of the PPF meeting its funding objective, as at 31 March Table 8.3 Underfunding groups, as at 31 March Table 8.4 Levy bands, as at 31 March Table 8.5 Weighted deficit by levy band and underfunding group for schemes in deficit, as at 31 March Chart 8.2 Weighted deficit by industry for schemes in deficit, as at 31 March Chart 8.3 Average weighted deficit per scheme by industry (for underfunded schemes), as at 31 March Chart 8.4 Liabilities of schemes in deficit by levy band and underfunding group, as at 31 March Chart 8.5 One-year-forward expected claims of the PPF s 500 largest scheme exposures 69 7 the purple book 1 2
8 Chapter 9: Table 9.1 Levy Payments 71 Chart 9.1 Distribution of levy payments by largest levy payers in 2011/ Table 9.2 Schemes paying no risk-based levy by levy year 72 Table 9.3 Number of schemes with capped risk-based levies by levy band 72 Table 9.4 Number of schemes with capped risk-based levies by funding level 73 Chart 9.2 Levy distribution by levy band 73 Chart 9.3 Levy per member by levy band 74 Chart 9.4 Levy payments as a proportion of assets by levy band 74 Chart 9.5 Percentage of total levy that is scheme- and risk-based by levy band 75 Chart 9.6 Percentage of total levy that is scheme- and risk-based by funding level 75 Chart 9.7 Total levy by industry 76 Chapter 10: Chart 10.1 Number of schemes in assessment each year, as at 31 March 78 Table 10.1 Funding statistics for schemes in assessment each year, as at 31 March 78 Chart 10.2 Number of qualifying insolvency events by date of insolvency 79 Chart 10.3 Total s179 deficits for schemes entering an assessment period 79 Chart 10.4 Percentage of schemes and percentage of s179 liabilities by liability group for schemes in assessment, as at 31 March Chart 10.5 Proportion of schemes in assessment by membership size 80 Chart 10.6 Maturity of schemes in assessment by membership size 81 Chart 10.7 Total s179 deficit of schemes in assessment by liability size 81 Chart 10.8 Simple average asset allocations prior to assessment for schemes in assessment and the Purple 2012 dataset as at 31 March Chart 10.9 Distribution of schemes in assessment by industry classification 82 Chart Distribution of schemes entering an assessment period since 2005 by industry classification 83 Chart Proportion of claims since 2005 by membership size 83 8 the purple book 1 2
9 Chapter 11: Table 11.1 Total compensation and number of members 85 Chart 11.1 Distribution of pensioners by annualised compensation level 85 Chart 11.2 Distribution of deferred members by annualised compensation level 86 Chart 11.3 Gender composition of pensioners and deferred members 86 Table 11.2 Proportions of dependants and members within the PPF current pensioner population 87 Chart 11.4 Distribution of pensioner and deferred members by NRA of largest compensation tranche 87 Chart 11.5 Pensioner and deferred member annualised compensation by industrial sector 88 Chart 11.6 Pensioner and deferred member annualised compensation by UK region 88 Table 11.3 Pre- and post-april 1997 annualised compensation for pensioners and deferred members 89 Table 11.4 Value of liabilities attributable to pre and post April 1997 compensation for pensioners and deferred members 89 Chapter 12: Chart 12.1 Contingent assets by type 91 Chart 12.2 Special contributions 92 Table 12.1 Technical Provision (TP) and Recovery Plan (RP) lengths (unweighted) 92 Chart 12.3 Inflation and interest risk traded for liability hedging purposes 93 Chart 12.4 Average quarterly flow of liabilities being hedged 93 Chart 12.5 Value of risk transfer deals since Chart 12.6 Value of risk transfer deals in the year to Q the purple book 1 2
10 1 Executive Summary This is the seventh edition of the Pensions Universe Risk Profile (The Purple Book), a joint annual publication by the Pension Protection Fund (the PPF) and the Pensions Regulator (the regulator) which focuses on the risks faced by Defined Benefit (DB) pension schemes, predominantly in the private sector. 1.1 Economic background and introduction The main focus in each year s Purple Book is the position at the end of March for the year in question, and a comparison of how risks have changed for this year. The economic and financial market environment deteriorated somewhat over the 12 months to March 2012, with little subsequent sign of improvement: UK GDP fell by 0.2 per cent year-on-year in the first quarter of Insolvency Service statistics showed that the number of company liquidations rose a little in the year to Q but other company insolvencies (receiverships, administrations, and company voluntary arrangements) edged lower. The Bank of England kept its policy rate unchanged at 0.5 per cent but increased Quantitative Easing to 325 billion from 200 billion. The FTSE all-share index fell by 2 per cent in the year to March 2012 after a 55 per cent increase between March 2009 and March year gilt yields declined to 2.2 per cent from 3.7 per cent while 10-year AA corporate bond yields fell to 3.7 per cent from 4.9 per cent. Scheme funding on a s179 1 basis deteriorated markedly between end-march 2011 and end-march 2012 the funding ratio (assets divided by liabilities) fell from per cent to 83 per cent. 1 The s179 basis is in broad terms what would have to be paid to an insurance company to take on payment of PPF levels of compensation. 2 This number is based upon the latest s179 valuation guidance, please refer to ons_guidance_va6_apr11.pdf 10 the purple book 1 2
11 Table 1.1 UK economic and financial environment End March UK GDP growth year-onyear Company liquidation rate 12 months prior Company liquidations UK corporate insolvency other** Company insolvency rate 12 months prior FTSE all share level 10-year gilt yield 10-year AA corporate bond yield Bank of England policy rate End September % 2.4% 2.2% -5.4% -0.2% 1.6% -0.2% 0.0% 0.7% 0.6% 0.6% 0.8% 0.8% 0.7% 0.7% 0.7%* 3,505 3,190 3,217 4,915 4,036 4,121 4,270 4,115* 868 1,158 1,783 1,343 1,314 1,290 1,310* 0.7% 0.7% 1.1% 0.9% 0.9% 0.9% 0.9%* 3,047 3,283 2,927 1,984 2,910 3,068 3,003 2, % 5.0% 4.4% 3.2% 3.9% 3.7% 2.2% 1.7% 4.9% 5.5% 5.6% 4.8% 4.9% 4.9% 3.7% 2.9% 4.50% 5.25% 5.25% 0.50% 0.50% 0.50% 0.50% 0.50% QE b 200b 200b 325b 375b Sources: Office for National Statistics, the Insolvency Service, Bank of England and Bloomberg *These relate to Q2 **Comprised of receiverships, administrations and company voluntary arrangements Since March 2012, conditions have remained difficult. Economic activity has been broadly unchanged in year-on-year terms (adjusting for the impact of the Jubilee bank holiday on Q2 GDP). Gilt yields fell below 2 per cent resulting in a further deterioration in universe s179 scheme funding to 77 per cent by end-september despite some pick up in equity markets. Company liquidations, however, fell back a little in the second quarter. 11 the purple book 1 2
12 Much of the analysis of the 2012 Purple Book ( Purple 2012 ) is based on new information from scheme returns issued in December 2011 and January 2012 and returned to the regulator by the end of March As in the previous two years, schemes in the PPF assessment period (300 in total, representing around 0.5 per cent of total universe liabilities) 3 have been removed so as to accurately capture the risk presented by DB schemes whose employers had not experienced an insolvency event by 31 March The Purple 2012 dataset covers 6,316 PPF-eligible DB schemes. This represents some 98 per cent of the estimated total number of schemes and over 99 per cent of estimated total liabilities. The 2012 dataset is similar in size to that used for the last four Purple Books and is significantly larger than the datasets used in the first two. The Purple Books have been based on the most comprehensive datasets extracted from the DB pensions universe to date, representing a step change in available information, particularly for small and medium-sized schemes. The publications have focused on the risk of scheme members not receiving promised benefits and of claims on the PPF. These in turn depend on two key elements, namely the risk of the sponsoring employer becoming insolvent and the extent of scheme underfunding. The main focus of this publication is risk at 31 March For the levy year, the PPF introduced a new formula for calculating the risk-based levy paid by each scheme 4. This has involved a number of changes: use of more current data; use of smoothed assets and liabilities in calculating underfunding risk (to reduce the impact of short-term financial market volatility); taking into account investment risk by calculating stressed assets; and the introduction of ten Levy Bands with each band having an associated Levy Rate (rather than mapping 100 failure scores onto insolvency probabilities). Purple 2012 includes analysis of some of the new scheme information needed for the New Levy Formula levy calculations, in particular that on the impact of investment risk. 3 This recognises all segregated parts of schemes as separate schemes. For analytical purposes, in Chapter 10, Schemes in Assessment, scheme sections and segregated parts have both been amalgamated into one scheme pdf 12 the purple book 1 2
13 1.2 The Data The main body of the analysis in Purple 2012 is based on new scheme returns for a dataset of 6,316 Defined Benefit (DB) schemes, covering 11.7 million memberships 5. This represents around 98 per cent of PPF-eligible schemes and over 99 per cent of universe liabilities. Complete information is not yet available for the remaining small schemes and, hence, these have been excluded from the sample. It is estimated that the eligible universe of schemes, excluding those in assessment at end-march 2012, was around 6,460, a reduction from 6,550 in March The dataset represents a similar proportion of total PPF-eligible schemes to those used in recent Purple Books (and much higher than that used in the first two Purple Books). The fact that the dataset accounts for such a large proportion of the universe means that results for the whole universe would be only slightly different from the results presented in Purple Scheme Demographics The proportion of open schemes has fallen by 2 percentage points to 14 per cent compared to the Purple 2011 dataset. The largest proportion of open schemes is found in the 10,000 and over scheme membership category. 28 per cent of memberships in the dataset are in open schemes. 8 per cent of the memberships are in the 26 per cent of schemes closed to future accrual. 18 per cent of memberships in the sample are active. 5 A membership is one individual s participation in one scheme. One individual can have multiple memberships. Hence the number of memberships exceeds the number of individuals. 6 This point is illustrated in Annex A of Purple The summary statistics differed little between the sample and the extended 2008 datasets. The high coverage suggests a similar outcome in relation to the 2012 sample. 13 the purple book 1 2
14 1.4 Scheme Funding Dataset assets total 1,026.8 billion at 31 March data set s179 liabilities as at 31 March 2012 total 1,231 billion on a s179 basis and 1,702.6 billion on a full buy out basis. The aggregate s179 funding position of the schemes in the Purple 2012 dataset as at 31 March 2012 was a deficit of billion. The deficit one year earlier was 1.2 billion and the s179 funding ratio fell from 100 per cent 7 to 83 per cent between 2011 and The aggregate full buy out position is a deficit of billion. The deficit one year earlier was billion and the estimated full buy out funding position has fallen from 67 per cent to 60 per cent. The full buy-out funding ratio is 60 per cent. The total deficit on a s179 basis, for all those schemes in deficit is billion as at 31 March This compare with a total deficit of 78.3 billion a year earlier. The total deficit on an estimated full buy-out basis, for all of those schemes in deficit is billion. This compares with a deficit of billion a year earlier. 39 per cent of s179 liabilities relate to pensioner members with the remaining liabilities split evenly between active and deferred memberships. 1.5 Funding Sensitivities This summary was updated on the 26 November 2012 based on revisions made to Charts (excluding Chart 5.3); please see Chapter 5 for further details. All the model-based funding sensitivities in this chapter are on a s179 basis, taking the funding position as at 31 March as the base and using the Purple 2012 dataset. The sensitivities do not take into account the use of derivative instruments to hedge changes in interest rates, inflation, equity levels or longevity. Changes in market conditions and financial and demographic assumptions since January 2003 have caused the monthly aggregate funding ratio of pension schemes to vary by 48 percentage points. The highest funding ratio was in June 2007 at 124 per cent and the lowest ratio of 76 per cent was in May the purple book This is based on the latest s179 valuation guidance as opposed to the 106 per cent reported in Chapter 5. For further details please follow the link below: ons_guidance_va6_apr11.pdf 8 Using the latest s179 valuation guidance as in Chapter 4
15 The aggregate balance has varied by around 478 billion (with the greatest surplus in June 2007 at 161 billion and the greatest deficit in May 2012 at 317 billion). The assumptions were changed on 31 March 2008, 31 October 2009 and 1 April The first two changes improved scheme funding by around 45 billion and 75 billion respectively, while the third worsened scheme funding by around 45 billion 9. The estimated number of schemes in deficit on a s179 basis was at its lowest point in June 2007 at 1,513 schemes (24 per cent of the dataset) and peaked in May 2012 at 5,433 (85 per cent). Since end-march 2012, aggregate scheme funding has fallen from 83 per cent to 82 per cent in September A 0.1 percentage point (10 basis point) reduction in gilt yields raises aggregate scheme liabilities by 1.9 per cent and raises aggregate scheme assets by 0.5 per cent. A 2.5 per cent rise in equity markets raises scheme assets by 0.9 per cent. A 0.1 percentage point (10 basis point) rise in gilt yields decreases the end-march 2012 aggregate deficit by 19.4 billion from billion to billion while a 2.5 per cent rise in equity prices would reduce the aggregate deficit by 9.1 billion. 1.6 Insolvency Risk The insolvency rate of sponsoring employers of PPF-eligible Defined Benefit (DB) schemes broadly shadows the changes in the insolvency rates of all employers in the UK. However, during the recession the PPF s four-quarter moving average did not rise to the same extent as the UK s. Also, since the first quarter of 2011 the PPF s universe has exhibited a greater fall in insolvency rates compared to the UK average. Over the first eight months of 2012, the liability weighted insolvency probability of the 500 schemes to which the PPF has the largest exposure (in terms of scheme underfunding adjusted for the volatility of its assets) has remained broadly unchanged, increasing only slightly from 0.66 per cent to 0.70 per cent. The UK economy came out of recession in the third quarter of GDP rose strongly until the third quarter of Since then growth has been fairly modest up until the third quarter of 2012 when zero annual growth was reported. The 2008/09 recession resulted in a large rise in the total level of corporate liquidations in England and Wales up from 3,241 in the first quarter of 2008 to a peak of 5,041 in the second quarter of 2009, an increase of 56 per cent. In the second quarter of 2012, a total of 4,115 liquidations were recorded. (There are around 2.9 million companies in the UK 10, compared to around 18,000 in the PPF universe). 9 For more information see PPF 7800 January 2009, November 2009 and May ry%2009.pdf 09.pdf 15 the purple book As registered by Companies House.
16 1.7 Asset Allocation Purple 2012 data show a continuation of most of the trends seen in recent years: a falling equity allocation and a rising proportion in hedge funds; within equities a rising overseas share and falling UK share; and within bonds a rising corporate bond allocation and falling government allocation. From 2012/13, the calculation of the levy 11 takes into account the investment risk of the schemes. A consequence of this change is that schemes have provided more accurate asset allocations. Purple 2012 data indicates a significant drop in reported insurance policy holdings, which reflects a reclassification by several schemes of their insurance policy allocation following discussion with the PPF. This affected mainly small schemes. The equity allocation fell to 38.5 per cent from 41.1 per cent in The proportion of gilts and fixed interest rose to 43.2 per cent from 40.1 per cent in The proportion of hedge funds increased from 2.4 per cent to 4.5 per cent. The overseas proportion of total equity holdings rose from 57.2 per cent in 2011 to 60.0 per cent in 2012 with the UK proportion falling from 38.0 per cent to 33.9 per cent. The balance of holdings in unquoted equities increased from 4.8 per cent in 2011 to 6.1 per cent in Within total gilts and fixed interest, the corporate fixed interest securities allocation rose from 44.3 per cent in 2011 to 44.8 per cent in Meanwhile, the proportion of government fixed interest fell from 19.6 per cent to 17.7 per cent. The balance of holdings in index-linked rose to 37.5 per cent from 36.1 per cent in Smaller schemes tend to have a higher allocation to UK equities and a smaller allocation to overseas equities. Within fixed interest, smaller schemes tend to have a higher allocation to government fixed interest and a smaller allocation to index-linked securities. Looking at simple averages 12, the allocation to UK equities is still bigger (49.9 per cent) than that for overseas equities (48.5 per cent), although the gap between the two has continued to narrow. Considering gilts and fixed interest on a simple-average 12 basis, the allocation to government fixed interest fell from 31.2 per cent to 28.2 per cent while the allocation to corporate fixed interest securities rose from 47.1 per cent to 49.4 per cent. The average allocation to index-linked securities rose from 21.7 per cent to 22.4 per cent. As in the earlier Purple Books, more mature schemes tend to invest more heavily in gilts and fixed interest and less in equities. 11 See the 2012/13 Pension Protection Levy Consultation Document for further details: ument.pdf 12 Simple averages are defined as the mean without weighting for scheme size. 16 the purple book 1 2
17 1.8 Overall Risk Developments The Long-Term Risk Model (LTRM) is the key tool that the Board of the Pension Protection Fund (PPF) uses to understand and quantify the risks it faces over the long term. It helps the Board of the PPF assess the level of resources required to meet potential future claims. There was a clear increase in long-term risk to the Fund between end-march 2011 and end-march 2012, which was largely attributable to a worsening of pension scheme funding in the 12-month period. The PPF published its long-term funding strategy in August As part of this strategy, the PPF aims to be self-sufficient by 2030 (i.e. fully funded, with zero exposure to market, inflation and interest-rate risk and some protection against claims and longevity risk). The funding strategy is reviewed annually to check whether the funding objective remains appropriate and whether the PPF is on track to achieve it. LTRM projections with a calculation date of 31 March 2012, suggest that the PPF has an 84 per cent probability of meeting this objective compared with 87 per cent one year earlier 13. Looking at shorter-term risk measures, the total weighted deficit (scheme sponsor one-year-ahead insolvency probability multiplied by scheme deficit) for deficit schemes stood at 1.8 billion at end-march 2012, up from 0.3 billion at end- March Schemes with sponsors in the manufacturing sector have the largest weighted deficit at around 44 per cent of the total. 1.9 Levy Payments For six years, the PPF has collected a levy determined mainly by the risk schemes pose to the PPF. Over this period it has collected a total of 3.3 billion. For the 2011/12 levy year, the PPF expected to collect 596 million from 6,439 schemes, down from 663 million in 2010/11. The dataset used in this chapter is based on 6,167 schemes who have paid 580 million in total. This is somewhat smaller than the 596 million expected to be collected. For 2011/12, total levies amounted to 0.08 per cent of total scheme assets, a slight decrease on the 0.09 per cent in the previous year. The number of schemes paying no risk-based levy in 2011/12 was 296, up from 195 in the previous year. In 2011/12, the number of schemes paying no risk-based levy represented 5 per cent of total schemes and 3 per cent of total liabilities, compared to 3 and 1 per cent respectively for 2010/ This probability is sensitive to a range of modelling assumptions. For a description of the modelling methodology and assumptions employed, see _Document.pdf 17 the purple book 1 2
18 In 2011/12, 626 schemes had their risk-based levy capped at 0.75 per cent of liabilities. This is 10.2 per cent of the total number of schemes. The liabilities of capped schemes equalled 15 billion or 1.6 per cent of total liabilities. The top 100 levy payers accounted for 227 million or 39.1 per cent of the total levy, but 45.8 per cent of liabilities. The distribution of levy by industry was broadly similar in 2011/12 to that in 2010/11. Manufacturing, Services, and Finance, insurance and real estate services accounted for approximately 72 per cent of the eligible DB universe, but also paid a similar proportion of the total PPF levy. The Manufacturing industry represents the largest portion of the Defined Benefit (DB) universe and thus pays the largest proportion of the total levy. For full details of the 2011/12 levy determination, please visit Schemes in Assessment Before transferring into the PPF, all schemes go through an assessment period to determine their ability to pay PPF levels of compensation 14. The PPF aims to complete the assessment period for most schemes within two years. The PPF s Annual Report and Accounts 2011/12 show that there were 300 schemes in assessment at 31 March 2012 compared with 369 at 31 March Of the 300 figure, 251 were recognised in provisions on the PPF balance sheet, down from 314 at 31 March In these figures, all segregated parts of schemes have been counted as separate schemes. In this chapter, for analytical purposes, scheme sections and segregated parts are amalgamated at scheme level; after this amalgamation there were 211 schemes (with 125,000 members) in a PPF assessment period as at 31 March 2012, compared with 268 schemes (with 225,000 members) a year earlier. As a result, the number of schemes in assessment in this chapter is less than reported in the 2011/12 Annual Report and Accounts. The fall over the year reflects 68 new schemes entering and remaining in assessment, 107 schemes transferring into the PPF and 18 being rescued, rejected or withdrawn. On a s179 basis, as at 31 March 2012, the aggregate assets of schemes in assessment totalled 6.5 billion and their liabilities 7.9 billion. Liabilities averaged 37.4 million per scheme and assets averaged 30.6 million. Schemes with liabilities below 5 million account for 36.0 per cent of schemes in assessment but only 2.1 per cent of the scheme liabilities in assessment, while schemes with liabilities of over 100 million account for 5.2 per cent of schemes in assessment but 54.6 per cent of liabilities in assessment. 14 See Chapter 3, Scheme Demographics for description of the eligibility test. 18 the purple book 1 2
19 The aggregate funding level (total assets divided by total liabilities) of the schemes in assessment as at 31 March 2012 was 82.0 per cent, below the aggregate funding levels of the schemes in the Purple 2012 dataset (83.4 per cent) and also slightly below the aggregate funding level of the schemes in assessment a year earlier (86.8 per cent). According to the latest scheme-return data prior to their entering assessment, schemes invested most heavily in equities (42.0 per cent of total assets) and gilts and fixed interest (28.0 per cent). In the Purple 2012 dataset equities account for 43.7 per cent and gilts and fixed interest account for 36.1 per cent. The balance was held in insurance policies, cash, property and other investments. Where the industry is known, 41.3 per cent of the companies sponsoring schemes in assessment operated within the Manufacturing sector. The Finance, insurance and real estate sector accounts for 15.9 per cent of sponsors of schemes in assessment and the Services sector, 15.4 per cent PPF Compensation When an eligible Defined Benefit (DB) scheme transfers into the PPF, the PPF generally pays a starting level of compensation of 90 per cent of scheme pension (subject to a compensation cap) to members who were yet to reach their normal retirement age (NRA) at the date the scheme entered assessment. The PPF will generally pay a starting level of compensation equivalent to 100 per cent of scheme pension to those who were already over their NRA at the start of the assessment period 15. In 2011/12, the PPF made compensation payments of million compared to million in 2010/11. At 31 March 2012, 57,506 members were in receipt of PPF compensation, up from 33,069 in the previous year. Average compensation in payment stood at 4, a year. The number of members with compensation not yet in payment (deferred members) as at 31 March 2012 totalled 70,608. For these members, the average accrued periodic compensation (before any prospective application of the compensation cap at NRA) was 3,289 a year. As at 31 March 2012, males constituted 66 per cent of pensioner and deferred members 17. Spouses and dependants account for 15 per cent of those currently in receipt of compensation. They receive 9 per cent of the total compensation in payment. Around 57 per cent of compensation is attributable to former employees of the manufacturing sector, down from 68 per cent the year before. 15 For full details of the conditions and processes governing the payment of PPF compensation, please visit 16 The annualised average rate of compensation is calculated by scaling up compensation over one month to reflect one year. This measure, which excludes lump sum payments, is used in order to accurately represent periodic compensation in payment at 31 March Unless otherwise stated, totals and averages relating to pensioners include dependants. 19 the purple book 1 2
20 The West-Midlands region has the largest receipt of compensation, currently at 17 per cent of total pensioner compensation. As at 31 March 2012, only 221 pensioners were affected by the compensation cap 15. The vast majority of members are in receipt of (or have accrued) compensation of less than 25 per cent of the compensation cap. The majority of compensation (and liabilities) was accrued in relation to service before 6 April 1997 and is therefore not subject to indexation. Compensation accrued on or after 6 April 1997 is increased each year in line with Consumer Price Inflation (CPI) capped at 2.5 per cent with a floor of 0 per cent Risk Reduction The total number of recognised Contingent Assets (CAs) in place for the 2012/13 levy year was around 900, virtually unchanged from the previous year. Firmer standards of validation introduced by the PPF have limited the increase in the number of recognised CAs. Schemes in the Purple 2012 dataset had by 10 April 2012 certified approximately 36.3 billion of Deficit Reduction Contributions (DRCs) 18 to reduce deficits for the 2012/13 levy year. This was higher than the 28.0 billion certified for the previous levy year. The DRCs were not only paid by companies sponsoring the largest schemes; around 44.1 per cent of the 36.3 billion was paid by employers sponsoring schemes with fewer than 10,000 members (97 per cent of the 2012 dataset). Data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) covering 350 large pension schemes, including 100 local authorities, show that employers made 16.0 billion in special contributions in 2011 (i.e. those in excess of regular annual contributions), the same as in In the first quarter of 2012 they were running at an annual rate of 18.8 billion. Analysis of the Pension Regulator s latest technical provisions and recovery plan data shows that in Tranche 5 19, the average recovery plan length shortened to 8.1 years, the average funding ratio as measured by assets divided by technical provisions increased to 78.8 per cent, and technical provisions as a percentage of s179 liabilities rose to per cent. 18 The certificates cover deficit reduction contributions made since the last scheme valuation. 19 Tranche 5 covers schemes with valuation dates between 22 September 2009 and 21 September the purple book 1 2
21 Quarterly F&C Asset Management surveys of volumes traded by investment banks suggest that: o o 53.3 billion of liabilities were hedged using interest rate derivatives in the year to the second quarter of 2012, up 21 per cent from billion of liabilities were hedged using inflation derivatives in the year to the first quarter of Inflation hedging activity totalled 18.5 billion in the second quarter of 2012, exceeding 2009 record levels. Total risk transfer business covering buy-outs, buy-ins and longevity hedges amounted to around 40 billion between the end of 2006 and the first quarter of Most of the total reflected longevity hedges, 23 per cent reflected buy-ins and 21 per cent buy-outs. 7 billion of longevity hedges were put in place in the second half of 2011, up from 3 billion traded in the purple book 1 2
22 2 The Data 2.1 Summary The main body of the analysis in Purple 2012 is based on new scheme returns for a dataset of 6,316 Defined Benefit (DB) schemes, covering 11.7 million memberships 20. This represents around 98 per cent of PPF-eligible schemes and over 99 per cent of universe liabilities. Complete information is not yet available for the remaining small schemes and, hence, these have been excluded from the sample. From Purple 2010, schemes in assessment have been excluded from the dataset so as to capture accurately the risk presented by DB schemes whose employers had not experienced an insolvency event. Before Purple Book 2010, schemes were excluded only when they transferred into the PPF. As at end-march 2012, there were schemes in assessment with total assets of 6.5 billion and total s179 liabilities of 7.9 billion. These represent around 0.6 per cent of total assets and liabilities of the Purple 2012 universe (1.0 per cent in 2011). Given their relatively small size, the implications of their removal for yearon-year comparisons are limited. It is estimated that the eligible universe of schemes, excluding those in assessment at end-march 2012, was around 6,460, a reduction from 6,550 in March The dataset represents a similar proportion of total PPF-eligible schemes to those used in recent Purple Books (and much higher than that used in the first two Purple Books). The fact that the dataset accounts for such a large proportion of the universe means that results for the whole universe would be only slightly different from the results presented in Purple As in previous Purple Books, the bulk of the analysis uses funding on a s179 basis. This is broadly speaking what would have to be paid to an insurance company to take on the payment of PPF levels of compensation. 20 A membership is one individual s participation in one scheme. One individual can have multiple memberships. Hence the number of memberships exceeds the number of individuals. 21 Treating all segregated parts of schemes as separate schemes. 22 This point is illustrated in Annex A of Purple The summary statistics differed little between the sample and extended 2008 datasets. The high coverage suggests a similar outcome in relation to the 2012 sample. 22 the purple book 1 2
23 2.2 Introduction The PPF covers certain DB occupational schemes and DB elements of hybrid schemes. Some DB schemes will be exempt from the PPF, including: unfunded public sector schemes; some funded public sector schemes, for example, those providing pensions to local government employees; schemes to which a Minister of the Crown has given a guarantee; and schemes which began to wind up, or were completely wound up, prior to 6 April For a more comprehensive list see eligible schemes on the PPF s website at: The information used in Chapters 3 to 8 of this publication comes from three primary sources, as described below. Scheme returns provided to the Pensions Regulator Most of the analysis in this year s publication is based on new scheme returns issued in December 2011 and January 2012 and returned by 31 March Voluntary form reporting Electronic forms are available on the Pensions Regulator s website for pension schemes to provide data regarding Contingent Assets (CAs), valuation results on a s179 basis, Deficit Reduction Contributions (DRCs) and the s179 valuation results following block transfers. More information on DRCs and CAs is given in Chapter 12, Risk Reduction. Sponsor failure scores supplied by Dun & Bradstreet (D&B) The D&B failure scores (ranging from 1 to 100), which cover all the scheme sponsors of PPF-eligible DB schemes, are designed to predict the likelihood that a sponsor will cease operations without paying all creditors over the next 12 months. Each score corresponds to a probability of insolvency, which is used in the PPF s risk-based levy calculations. A score of 1 represents the businesses with the highest probability of insolvency and 100 the lowest. The data used in Chapters 9 (Levy Payments), 10 (Schemes in Assessment) and 11 (PPF Compensation) are derived from the PPF s business operations. 23 the purple book 1 2
24 2.3 The PPF-eligible DB universe 23 The Purple 2012 sample covers around 98 per cent of the estimated number of PPF-eligible schemes; the bulk of missing schemes have under 1,000 members. Table 2.1 Distribution of schemes excluding those in assessment by number of members as at 31 March 2012 Number of members Fewer than ,000 4,999 5,000 9,999 10,000+ Total Schemes Estimated Purple 2012 universe 2,338 2, ,460 Purple 2012 dataset 2,260 2, ,316 Purple 2012 dataset as % of 2012 PPFeligible DB universe 96.7% 98.0% 99.2% 100.0% 100.0% 97.8% Table 2.2 Distribution of s179 liabilities ( billion) excluding those of schemes in the assessment process by number of members as at 31 March 2012 The Purple 2012 sample covers almost all scheme liabilities. Number of members Fewer than ,000 4,999 5,000 9,999 10,000+ Total Liabilities Estimated Purple 2012 universe ,235.7 Purple 2012 dataset ,231.0 Purple 2012 dataset as a % of 2012 PPFeligible universe 96.7% 98.0% 99.2% 100.0% 100.0% 97.8% *Note: The percentages displayed in this table may not be the same as the actual percentages because of rounding. The declining universe reflects schemes winding up, scheme mergers, schemes transferring into the PPF and block transfers. Table 2.3 Purple datasets and universe estimates, including schemes in the PPF assessment process Year Estimated eligible DB universe 7,500 7,300 7,200 7,000 6,920 6,760 Purple dataset (as a 5,892 6,898 6,885 6,972 6,801 6,616 percentage of final (79.6%) (94.5%) (95.6%) (99.6%) (98.3%) (97.8%) universe) 23 The universe estimates are based on an assessment of the number of additional schemes for which full data will become available. 24 the purple book 1 2
25 2.4 Funding Schemes As in previous Purple Books, the bulk of the analysis uses funding estimates on a section 179 (s179) basis. This is, broadly speaking, what would have to be paid to an insurance company to take on the payment of PPF levels of compensation. The PPF uses estimates of scheme funding on a s179 basis in the calculation of scheme-based levies. The analysis in Chapter 4, Scheme Funding, uses data that, as far as possible, reflects the position at 31 March 2012 with the s179 assumptions that came into effect on 1 April As in previous years, actuaries at the PPF and the Pensions Regulator have also produced full buy-out estimates of the funding position for the Purple 2011 dataset. 2.5 Information on investment risk The PPF s new levy framework 24 was introduced for the 2012/13 levy year. One of the aims was to make the individual levies more stable and predictable over a three year time period. Key changes to the way the levy is calculated for 2012/13 are: Use of more current data. Smoothing of assets and liabilities over five years. In previous years, asset and liability values were simply assessed at a set date and could be significantly impacted by peaks or troughs in the markets. Stressing of assets and liabilities. From 2012/13 the PPF will take scheme investment risk into account when calculating the levy. This is done for each scheme by adjusting the asset and liability values used to calculate the underfunding risk. Schemes with liabilities of 1.5 billion or more were required to carry out a bespoke stress calculation showing the impact of investment risk on the value of their assets. Other schemes could provide the bespoke stress calculation if they wished. In calculating insolvency risk, the PPF continues to use D&B insolvency scores. However, the failure score used is now the average of failure scores at the end of each month between April 2011 and March 2012, where available. This replaces the use of a single failure score at the end of March and is designed to reduce the impact of short term changes. The average failure score (1-100) has been used to place each employer into one of ten levy bands. Each band has an associated Levy Rate. The Levy Rate not only takes account of the likelihood of insolvency of employers but also incorporates a risk margin that factors in the impact of worse than expected scenarios. 24 The PPF s new levy framework is outlined within the following booklet: 3.pdf 25 the purple book 1 2
26 3 Scheme Demographics 3.1 Summary The proportion of open schemes has fallen by 2 percentage points to 14 per cent compared to the Purple 2011 dataset. The largest proportion of open schemes is found in the 10,000 and over scheme membership category. 28 per cent of memberships in the dataset are in open schemes. 8 per cent of the memberships are in the 26 per cent of schemes closed to future accrual. 18 per cent of memberships in the sample are active. 3.2 Introduction In this chapter the composition of the dataset used for this year s Purple Book is described. Figures for the total numbers of schemes and total scheme membership are included, with breakdowns by size, maturity, scheme status and industrial classification. For each edition of the Purple Book, a dataset is collated including all appropriate schemes where scheme return information has been processed and cleaned. In subsequent months, more scheme returns are processed and cleaned and in 2006 and 2007 these were incorporated into the existing dataset to produce an extended dataset. For 2006 and 2007, the increased coverage produced significantly different results to the original datasets. However, since then datasets were much larger and the increased coverage made only a small difference. Accordingly, comparisons are made with previous publications as follows: Purple 2006 and extended dataset Purple 2008 to original dataset 26 the purple book 1 2
27 3.3 Scheme Status Scheme status in this Purple Book is split between: open schemes, where new members can join the DB section of the scheme and accrue benefits; schemes closed to new members, in which existing members continue to accrue benefits; schemes closed to future accruals, where existing members can no longer accrue new years of service; and schemes that are winding up. Because many larger employers have adopted the strategy of migrating their pension provision towards Defined Contribution (DC) by opening a DC section in an existing DB scheme, many hybrid schemes may accept new members but no longer allow new (or existing) members to accrue defined benefits. This has been handled differently across different editions of the Purple Book. In Purple 2006, 40 per cent of memberships were in the open category and 25 per cent were categorised as part open. It was noted that the part open category included a significant number of hybrids for which the DB element was closed. In Purple 2007, the part open category was removed and the percentage of schemes classified as open increased in comparison with Purple Many hybrid schemes which had previously identified themselves as part open now identified themselves as open. In Purple 2008 and Purple 2009, we analysed the largest 100 schemes (by membership) in the hybrid category separately so as to adjust the information provided in the scheme return and remove potential misinterpretation caused by hybrid schemes with closed DB sections declaring themselves as open. Improved levels of information on hybrid schemes are now available from the scheme returns and since Purple 2010 we are able to adjust hybrid statuses to closed where DB provision is not available to new members. A total of 504 open hybrids had their status adjusted to closed in 2010 covering approximately 1.7 million members. The changes to the information available and consequent developing approach across the various editions of the Purple Book should be taken into account when comparing figures from different editions. 27 the purple book 1 2
28 The proportion of schemes that are closed only to new members has fallen slightly with an increase in the proportion of schemes closed to future accrual. Chart Distribution of schemes by status Table 3.1 Distribution of schemes by status The proportion of open schemes has fallen by 2 percentage points compared to the 2011 dataset. Percentage of schemes Extended Purple 2007 Purple 2008 Purple 2009 Purple 2010 Purple 2011 Purple 2012 Open 36% 31% 27% 18% 16% 14% Closed to new members 45% 50% 52% 58% 58% 57% Closed to future accruals 16% 17% 19% 21% 24% 26% Winding up 2% 2% 2% 2% 2% 2% Total 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% Table 3.2 Distribution of schemes by status (excluding hybrid schemes) Percentage of schemes Extended Purple 2007 Purple 2008 Purple 2009 Purple 2010 Purple 2011 Purple 2012 Open 33% 26% 22% 21% 18% 17% Closed to new members 49% 52% 55% 54% 54% 53% Closed to future accruals 17% 19% 20% 23% 26% 29% Winding up 1% 3% 3% 2% 2% 2% Total 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% Note that the status figures for an individual year may not sum to 100 per cent because of rounding. 28 the purple book 1 2
Consultation Document The 2016/17 Pension Protection Levy Consultation Document September 2015 Foreword One of our key aims when we set the levy and the levy rules is to provide schemes and their employers
A guide to the Pension Protection Levy 2015/16
A guide to the Pension Protection Levy 2015/16 About this booklet This booklet is designed to help you understand your pension protection levy invoice and tells you what to do if you have any questions.