Pensions - Articles - Collective DC The Power of Pooling


Aon’s research on Collective DC (CDC) in decumulation. Entitled, ‘The Power of Pooling’, the research covers how CDC - as a decumulation option - looks set to transform the pensions industry.

 A retiree at 65 can, on average, expect to live to the age of 86. However, they face a 50 percent chance of their actual lifespan lying somewhere between age 80 and age 93. Regardless of the size of their pension pot at retirement, this means they have a very real challenge when deciding how to budget for this uncertainty, namely in trying to balance the pace at which they spend their retirement savings against how long they might live.
 
 Chintan Gandhi, partner & head of Collective DC at Aon, said: “This is where CDC can help, as it can provide what the majority of pension savers want in retirement: a target, inflation-linked income, which is payable for life and does not require them to make complex financial and investment decisions.”
 
 Madalena Cain, associate partner and Collective DC specialist at Aon, said: “Aon’s research shows how retirement outcomes might look like from a CDC decumulation solution, as compared with annuity purchase and, in particular, income drawdown. We conclude that CDC provides, on average, higher outcomes in retirement than annuity purchase, while also providing the certainty of an income for life that drawdown cannot.
 
 “We also note that we may see demand for CDC to become a default decumulation option – which is something that does not currently exist at an industry level in DC. However, the value of a decumulation default is widely recognised in a culture where pension savers currently have to become financial and longevity ‘experts’ at the time they retire.”
 
 Chintan Gandhi added: “Unlike annuity purchase and income drawdown, CDC does not need to be an ‘all or nothing’ option at retirement. Perhaps the greatest value CDC brings as a decumulation solution, is when it is used alongside existing options at retirement – in particular alongside income drawdown. For example, the introduction of CDC could see a retiree splitting their pension pot by taking 25 percent as a tax-free cash lump sum and using 60 percent to buy a CDC pension, with the remaining 15 percent being put into drawdown which provides flexibility and/or potential inheritance benefits for their partner and/or children.
 
 “For this sample retiree, it may strike a sensible balance between cash up front, flexibility during retirement, and the comfort of knowing they will have an income that supplements their state pension and lasts until the day they die – and without having to make complex decisions in retirement. Their combined lifetime income in retirement can then be used to budget and to enjoy the retirement they have worked so hard towards.”
  

 Collective DC The Power of Pooling

Back to Index


Similar News to this Story

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
Almost 300 buyin transactions completed in 2024 a new record
299 defined benefit (DB) pension scheme buy-ins were completed in 2024 – the largest ever number of transactions completed in a single year, according

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.