Pensions - Articles - Transport Authority completes first Local Pension buy-in


 • £272 million buy-in of pensioner liabilities insured by Prudential
 • Deal marks start of local authority involvement in UK’s buy-in market
 
 West Midlands Integrated Transport Authority (WMITA) has completed the buy-in of its pensioners with Prudential and the assistance of Mercer and Squire Saunders. This is the first such transaction for any local government pension fund. With a premium in the region of £272 million, this is the largest such transaction to date in 2012.
 
 According to Geik Drever, Director of Pensions at the West Midlands Pension Fund, “This transaction forms an important part of the WMITA Fund’s risk management strategy and has insured c50% of the Fund’s liabilities. It has protected the Fund and the sponsor against the volatility of investment markets and any unanticipated increases in life expectancy of the pensioners. Risk management is a very important part of Local Authority governance for both the Main Fund and the WMITA Fund, and as such this is a welcome outcome given the policies in place for the Funds as well as the Authority.”
 
 According to Clifford Sims, partner at Squire Saunders, the law firm which advised the Authority and West Midlands Pensions Fund on the legal issues surrounding the transaction: “As in all local government contracts, the public sector procurement process, which requires great depth of transparency and objectivity, had to be followed. This transaction is the first time that these procedures have been entwined in the processes surrounding a bulk annuity transaction. Another feature was that the price was determined by an electronic auction process enabling the price to be settled in a matter of hours.”
 
 Paul Middleman, Fund Actuary and Head of Public Sector Consulting, said: "Whilst we have seen this in the private sector this is breaking new ground in the sector in terms of local authority pension fund risk management for a sponsoring employer and ultimately the taxpayer. The transaction required a team with specialist knowledge and experience when determining whether it was the right option. Now one Fund has taken the plunge we could see this becoming a viable option for Funds when dealing with legacy liabilities as part of the governance around their risk management strategy."
 
 Akash Rooprai, a Principal at Mercer and broker for the transaction, commented: “By liaising closely with the insurers, we helped them understand the public procurement requirements, and using our experience of the private sector ensured there was good competition for this business.”
  

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.