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The Pensions Time Bomb

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In the private sector it is the key relationship governing how the pensions time ... Employer commitment to scheme under pressure. Cost assumptions not borne out ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Pensions Time Bomb


1
The Pensions Time Bomb
  • The Relationship between
  • Employer and Trustee
  • UCD Commercial Law Centre

Peter Fahy Eversheds ODonnell Sweeney 9
September 2009
2
The Relationship between Employer and Trustee
  • Why is it important?
  • In the private sector it is the key relationship
    governing how the pensions time bomb will be
    dealt with
  • My focus will be on defined benefit schemes,
    because that is where the current problems are
  • The timebomb problems with defined contribution
    schemes are in the future comment at end.

3
Overview of Legal Framework
  • Solvent Employers
  • Limited statutory regulation of sponsoring
    employer obligations to schemes
  • S58A Obligation to remit employee contributions
    deducted from wages to trustees within 21 days of
    month end
  • S87 Pensions Board can seek High Court order
    directing payment of contribution arrears
  • Limestone Construction case (2008)

4
Overview of Legal Framework
  • Solvent Employers (cont.)
  • Trust Deed primarily governs relationship
  • Notifications or announcements may vary Trust
    deed if estoppel by convention arises, or trust
    deed allows it
  • Insolvent Employers
  • Social insurance fund will cover unpaid employer
    contributions payable in the 12 months preceding
    insolvency, up to the value of the scheme deficit
  • If contribution not demanded prior to insolvency,
    no claim arises

5
Overview of Legal Framework
  • Other State supports are limited
  • Pension Insolvency Minimum Guarantee Scheme
  • 300 million over 3 years maximum
  • Very low thresholds of protection
  • 12,000/annum (Pensioners)
  • 6,000/annum (Actives/Deferreds)
  • Pension Insolvency Protection Scheme
  • Provision of annuities by State, but supposed
    to be cost neutral no 100 underwriting

6
Legal Position of the Sponsoring Employer
  • The employer is the settlor of the pension scheme
    trust but with many ongoing obligations
  • Employers obligation to contribute is defined by
    the Trust Deed commonly balance of cost
  • Key Characteristics
  • Obligation is given under seal
  • Enforceable as a covenant
  • 12 year limitation period for enforcement

7
Legal Position of the Sponsoring Employer
  • But note Terms of the Trust Deed usually qualify
    obligation, e.g. rate of contribution to be
    agreed by employer, or contribution rate to be
    certified by actuary in consultation with
    employer
  • Contribution rate is also determined by changing
    circumstances of scheme
  • Per Alitalia
  • Construe the rule in a way which makes good
    commercial sense both when the Scheme is
    operating on an ongoing basis, with no financial
    worries, and when a winding up is either in
    prospect or imminent

8
Legal Position of the Sponsoring Employer
  • It is clear that an immediate deficit
    contribution can be demanded of the employer in
    appropriate circumstances, once they have power
    to do so under the Trust Deed
  • Once a demand is validly made, the employer is
    bound by his covenant under the Deed
  • It is a preferential claim against an Irish
    corporate employer, ranking ahead of floating
    charge holders

9
Legal Position of Employer (cont.)
  • Duty of Good Faith
  • Trust Deed is subject to limitation that the
    rights and powers of the employers can only be
    exercised in accordance with implied obligation
    of good faith not to act so as to destroy or
    seriously damage employer/employee relationship
  • Per Imperial Tobacco, approved in Boliden Tara
    Mines (2007)
  • Part of Irish law, but how far does it bite when
    an employer has genuine issues with funding
    scheme?

10
Legal Position of Trustees
  • Nature of Trustees Fiduciary Duty
  • Trustees duty is to fulfil purposes of the
    Scheme - provide for the payment of relevant
    benefits in accordance with Trust Deed
  • In doing so, act in best interests of
    beneficiaries
  • Current employees
  • Former employees and pensioners
  • Contingent beneficiaries including employer
  • Trustees must have equal regard to the interests
    of different classes of beneficiaries

11
Legal Position of Trustees (cont.)
  • What Trustees not responsible for
  • Primary duty is to administer the Trust as
    constituted, not to restructure or amend it
  • Rarely responsible for the sustainability of
    the scheme under the Trust Deed
  • Trustees have particular difficulties with
    benefits already accrued under scheme rules
  • May be prohibition on amendment
  • Even if not, altering accrued benefits must be
    justified by other factors

12
Legal Position of Trustees (cont.)
  • Key statutory duties
  • Ensure contributions payable are received
  • Provide for the payments of scheme benefits as
    they become due
  • Submit funding proposal, if MFS deficit
  • Exoneration and Indemnity
  • Usually have an indemnity from employer for
    liability (absent wilful default, misconduct,
    fraud) can be used tactically

13
Employer Trustee legal relationship
  • A Volatile Situation?
  • Employer
  • Employer liability largely regulated by Trust
    Deed, not statute
  • Employer commitment to scheme under pressure
  • Cost assumptions not borne out
  • Life cycles of companies and employees shortening
  • Increased risk of opportunistic or adversarial
    behaviour particularly if scheme obligations
    owed to ex-employees or non-core employees

14
Employee Trustee legal relationship
  • Trustees
  • Have statutory duty to deal with funding deficit
  • Must balance enforcement of legal rights against
    ongoing relationship with employer
  • Trust law points to protection of accrued
    benefits
  • Availability of S.50 an opportunity or dilemma?

15
Practical implications Obligation to Fund the
Scheme
  • Under most schemes, the primary obligation falls
    on the employer to meet the balance of the
    funding cost. If the scheme fails the Pensions
    Act funding standard, a funding plan or
    proposal is required.
  • 2000-2008 Funding work out periods extended 3
    years, 10 years, working life time
  • Mixed results over-optimistic assumptions
    employer terminations
  • Current phase
  • Moves by some trustees to fix employer with
    debtor liability pre-emptive issue of
    contribution demands

16
Obligation to Fund the Scheme (cont.)
  • In parallel, some employers have acted on ability
    to terminate contribution obligations
  • Many legal issues have resulted
  • Ability of trustees to change basis of
    contribution rate
  • Ability of employer to terminate without notice
    (Capital Cranfield)
  • Several potential arbitrations, no court cases as
    yet

17
Obligation to Fund the Scheme (cont.)
  • Other employers and trustees inching towards
    solutions, based
  • on respective bargaining power under trust deed
  • Funding proposals turned into binding funding
    agreements
  • If employer seeks to terminate, acceleration of
    remaining contribution payments
  • More realistic investment assumptions
  • Benefit freezes or reductions
  • Employer terminations, followed by negotiations
    on replacement arrangements. Attempts to agree
    funding plan for a frozen scheme, or to inject
    funds into DC replacement, or simply avoid demand
    for buy out cost.

18
Obligation to Fund the Scheme (cont.)
  • Trustee contribution demand, followed by
    compromise of debt due
  • Section 59 and Re Brogden requirements
  • Pursuing demands always has risk factors
    litigation risk, credit risk etc.
  • Use of S.50 procedure
  • S.50 is starting to be used
  • Even if not, informs basis of other compromises

19
Practical ImplicationsLiability for
Continuation of Scheme
  • Schemes can only continue if financially viable,
    just like companies
  • Pension Board guidance in this area is very
    frank
  • the fundamental issue is what can be afforded,
    and any rethink must avoid overpromising.
    Overpromising does not achieve anything in the
    long run for scheme members
  • No policy incentive to continue DB or DC schemes
    this is a concern
  • Certain employers have incentive to continue DB
    schemes e.g. large financial institutions,
    organisations competing with public sector,
    semi-States.
  • Initial phase saw move to hybrid schemes for
    future benefits

20
Liability for Continuation of Scheme (cont.)
  • Reductions in future accrual of benefits becoming
    more common
  • Caps on pensionable salary increases some
    debate on legal effect
  • Restructuring wind ups used in some cases
  • Now some employers seeking accrued rights
    reductions
  • e.g. reduction in pension increases in payment
  • Trustees have looked at justifications around
    what active members contribute to the scheme, or
    greater sustainability for remaining rights
  • S.50 often not attractive for such employers

21
Practical Implications Liability for Solvency of
Scheme
  • Employers have no statutory liability in Ireland
  • Policy has not gone in this direction
  • Speculate on reasons for this PPF?
  • This places significant burden on Trustees
  • State supports for solvency are limited
  • S.50 is a mechanism to reduce liabilities, rather
    than increase funding.
  • Is there a policy imperative to push schemes with
    weak employer covenants into S.50 (Robins-proof
    them)?

22
Solvency is Section 50 the panacea?
  • Pensions Board may direct the Trustees of a
    scheme to reduce the benefits payable to current
    employees or deferred members and to reduce
    future increases to pension benefits
  • Effectively triggered on application by Trustees
    where they cannot agree a funding proposal under
    existing benefit structure employer co-signs
    where appropriate
  • Purpose of benefit reduction is to return scheme
    to solvency immediately or over period of a
    funding proposal

23
Section 50 Key constraints
  • Trustees must have considered all options to
    address deficit and be of view that application
    is in best interests of members how to
    demonstrate this?
  • Must also conduct fundamental review of
    scheme, covering benefits, investment strategy,
    future contributions and risk management

24
Key Constraints (cont.)
  • Key question is how much the Trustees de-risk the
    investments -Pensions Board require scheme to be
    costed based on long term gilt yields
  • If investment strategy too de-risked, funding
    proposal may be too expensive
  • but employers likely to resist open-ended
    commitments to contingency funding, as an
    alternative
  • These factors may make S.50 unattractive to many
    employers but difficult for trustees to
    initiate S.50 without them so possibility of
    stalemate ensuing.

25
Conclusions
  • Even without UK policy interference, Irish DB
    pensions provision will shrink over time.
  • What might be a DC alternative?
  • Mandatory
  • Cash balance (joint contributions) or combined
    10
  • New tax relief structure to apply
  • Centralised investment
  • State to act as annuity provider on retirement
    (or global contract with major provider)

26
Thank you
Peter Fahy Eversheds ODonnell Sweeney One
Earlsfort Centre Earlsfort Terrace Dublin
2 Tel 353 1 6644 206 Email
pfahy_at_eversheds.ie
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