Pensions - Articles - Pension cold calling ban is good but more needs to be done


The government has stepped up its measures to prevent pension scams by including emails and text messages in its impending cold-calling ban. Stuart Price, Partner and Actuary at pension adviser Quantum Advisory, welcomes this decision and thinks it’s about time firm action was taken.

 Stuart says: “Pension scams are generally unregulated investments offering ‘guaranteed returns’. These include exotic sounding investments like hotels, vineyards or other overseas ventures. As well as losing their pension savings, individuals could also get a huge tax bill. In March this year alone a record £8 million of pension savings were lost, and now the government finally looks set to do something about it.

 “There is an estimated 250 million cold calls made each year offering members of the public free pensions review or incentives to release pension funds early, but the fraudsters don’t stop there. They send emails and texts which are just as convincing and dupe innocent people out of their retirement funds.

 “This blanket ban on all cold calls, texts and emails will send out a clear message to the public that no legitimate organisation will contact them about their pensions, so if they are contacted, they’ll know it’s a scam. The heavy fines - up to £500,000 - for companies that flout the ban should also reduce the amount of fraud too. However, there is still much more the government needs to do.

 “A government review into the restrictions on pension transfers needs to be carried out and it needs to be made easier to block a transfer if it is suspected that a fraudulent scheme is involved.

 “The government also has the ability to cut the fraudsters off before they’ve begun by making it more difficult to establish fraudulent pension schemes.”
  

Back to Index


Similar News to this Story

2025 is a key year for pensions to consider their endgame
Aon has said that 2025 is a key year for UK pension schemes and has formed the UK Endgame Strategy team to help schemes with the decision-making proce
How pension tweak could save employers thousands
National Living Wage increased this month from £11.44 to £12.21 per hour. Employer National Insurance (NI) has also risen and the threshold at which e
2024 pension contributions surge but gender gap widens
New analysis from PensionBee highlights a sharp increase in pension contributions in 2024, despite ongoing pressures on household budgets.

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.