Pensions - Articles - BW FTSE 100 survey shows pension deficits increase by £5bn


Pension consultants Barnett Waddingham’s annual survey of pension disclosures made by FTSE100 companies has revealed that despite making significant contributions and seeing falling long-term inflation expectations over 2014, many schemes have made little progress towards reducing deficits.

 The overall deficit for the companies in the survey increased by nearly £5bn, as gains from contributions, asset returns and falling inflation expectations were more than offset by increases in liabilities caused by reductions in discount rates resulting from plummeting corporate bond yields.
  
 The survey, in its fourteenth year, focuses on the assumptions adopted by FTSE100 companies for determining the value of their pension liabilities for accounting purposes.
  
 Martin Hooper, Associate, Barnett Waddingham said:
 "In many cases, particularly where the scheme has significant holdings of gilts, bonds or other liability hedging strategies in place, the damage to the balance sheet will have been tempered by the strong performance on the asset side. Although many schemes have retained significant shortfalls, overall funding levels are broadly comparable with 2013."
  
 Results from the survey also show:
     
  1.   The average discount rate dropped by 0.9% to 3.6% p.a from 4.5% p.a in 2013
  2.  
  3.   Average IAS19 funding level has remained consistent with 2013 at 89%, despite a significant drop in discount rates
  4.  
  5.   The average RPI inflation assumption adopted by companies in the survey was 3.1% p.a. showing a decrease from 3.4% p.a. in 2013
  6.  
  7.   The average CPI assumption adopted as at 31 December 2014 was 2.1% p.a. (2013: 2.5% p.a.), around 1.0% p.a. lower than RPI – a slight increase on the 0.9% p.a. gap that was observed in 2013.
  8.  
  9.   The average real salary growth assumption was 0.1% p.a. in 2014, representing no overall change from 2013
  10.  
  11.   The average life expectancy assumption increased by 0.1 years in 2014 demonstrating a small increase in the average life expectancy in 2014 of 23.3 years compared to 23.2 years in 2013 (based on a male aged 65 years)
  
 The full survey can be viewed upon request.
  

Back to Index


Similar News to this Story

State pensioners to get above inflation triple lock boost
The Office for National Statistics has announced that the Consumer Prices Index (CPI) rose by 2.8% in the 12 months to February 2025, down from the 3.
Pensions for 9 in 10 DC savers invest in productive assets
TPR says larger schemes more likely to have the right governance standards and invest in a diversified portfolio. Smaller schemes seem less likely to
Transfer Activity index fell to record low in February 2025
XPS Group’s Transfer Activity Index has fallen to the lowest observed rate since the Index was established in 2018. In February 2025, there was an ann

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.