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The
UK’s defined benefit (DB) pension schemes have improved their
estimated funding positions by £9.2bn, to a deficit of £179.3bn
at end-May 2009 according to the Pension Protection Fund’s (PPF)
latest PPF7800 index.
The total deficit of all schemes which themselves are in deficit in
May 2009 has improved from £204.8bn to £196.8bn. In May
2008 this figure stood at £45.0bn.
There was also an improvement in the total surpluses of all schemes
in surplus, from £16.4bn at the end of April 2009 to £17.5bn
at the end of May 2009. Scheme liabilities dropped by 0.3 per cent
over the month, from a previous £960.7bn in April 2009. Assets
across the sample of schemes also increased by 0.9 per cent due to
rising equities.
Watson Wyatt commented that although assets have increased over the
month, they are still down by nine per cent over the year and that
the latest PPF numbers shows how schemes have paid a heavy price for
not acting fast enough to changing conditions.
Rash Bhabra, head of corporate consulting at Watson Wyatt, explained:
“The last year shows how quickly opportunities can disappear
if pension schemes do not act quickly to lock in favourable funding
positions when they have the chance. If markets remain volatile, it
will pay to have a plan for selling risky assets that can be executed
as soon as the time is right.”
Bhabra also said that the index backed up the financial consultant’s
belief that more employers would close their DB schemes to existing
members over the next few months.
- Pensions Age
June 2009
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