Royal London pension business affected by DB transfer drop

Royal London has seen a reduction in its individual pension business as a result of the industry-wide fall in defined benefit pension transfers.

Publishing its half year results, today, 12 August, it said that life and pension sales decreased 4 per cent in H1 2019 to £5,824m (H1 2018: £6,077m) primarily due to a reduced level of defined benefit transfers, partially offset by higher workplace pension sales from new entrants to existing schemes and new scheme wins.

However, new business contribution increased 6 per cent to £127m (H1 2018: £120m) as revenue margins improved due to reduced acquisition expenses. Workplace pension new business sales also increased by 6 per cent to £1,930m (H1 2018: £1,821m), due to new entrants into existing schemes and new scheme wins.

Individual pensions new business sales decreased by 10 per cent to £3,232m (H1 2018: £3,577m), which it put down to a reduction in DB transfer activity.

“We continue to grow the individual pensions business as customers reach retirement and seek greater flexibility in the provision of pension benefits,” it stated.

Commenting, Royal London chairman, Kevin Parry, said: "First half trading was robust. RLAM won new mandates on the back of strong investment performance across asset classes. New business in pensions was marginally lower reflecting the industry-wide reduction in defined benefit transfers, offset by higher workplace sales. Consumer and protection traded in line with expectations, making excellent progress in the Irish market.

"Royal London is well prepared for Brexit and will continue to monitor carefully any developments that might affect our business and customers. We will keep customers informed of significant developments relevant to their policies. We continue to maintain a robust capital foundation to allow us to invest in our future core products and propositions whilst also innovating to deliver better outcomes for customers in underserved markets.

"The board looks forward to welcoming Barry O'Dwyer as group chief executive on 23 September 2019."

Overall, net inflows were 31 per cent higher at £5.5bn, compared to H1 2018m, when net inflows reached £4.2bn. Gross inflows increased to £12.6bn (H1 2018: £9.6bn) driven by external institutional business wins and strong flows into Royal London Asset Management's (RLAM) wholesale range of credit and sustainable funds.

Royal London has assets under management of £130bn, up from £114bn at 31 December 2018, due to market growth of £10.5bn and net inflows of £5.5bn.

    Share Story:

Recent Stories


A time for fixed income
Francesca Fabrizi discusses fixed income trends and opportunities with Goldman Sachs Asset Management Head of UK Pensions Solutions, Fixed Income Portfolio Management, Henry Hughes, in our Pensions Age video interview

Purposeful run-on
Laura Blows discusses purposeful run-on for DB schemes with Isio director, actuarial and consulting, Matt Brown, in Pensions Age’s latest video interview
Find out more about Purposeful Run On

Keeping on track
In the latest Pensions Age podcast, Sophie Smith talks to Pensions Dashboards Programme (PDP) principal, Chris Curry, about the latest pensions dashboards developments, and the work still needed to stay on track
Building investments in a DC world
In the latest Pensions Age podcast, Sophie Smith talks to USS Investment Management’s head of investment product management, Naomi Clark, about the USS’ DC investments and its journey into private markets

Advertisement