UK corporate DB consolidation: TPT throws its hat in the ring

Nick Clapp

Trustees and employers overseeing the United Kingdom’s 5,000 corporate pension plans holding an estimated £1.2 trillion have another option to help manage the defined benefit assets.

TPT Retirement Solutions currently oversees around £11 billion in pension fund assets, and has launched a DB “superfund” that will invest on behalf of plans seeking to ‘run-on,’ UK pension industry parlance for well-funded schemes choosing to continue as they are, rather than opt for a so-called buy out, and sell to an insurance company.

TPT estimates assets under management in the new superfund could reach £3 billion in five years. Under its model, TPT would ultimately share investment profits with beneficiaries and would invest in growth assets, in line with the government’s ambitions to get pension funds to invest more in UK productive assets.

Currently, many of the UK’s DB funds, often in their end game as their corporate sponsor prepare to shift its liabilities off balance sheet, aren’t positioned to tie up assets in illiquid investments.

“There will be an emphasis on private markets and deploying capital in a manner that aligns with the UK government’s current thinking, we believe,” says Nicholas Clapp, chief commercial officer of TPT, speaking to Top1000funds.com. “Our structure means we will be able to have a long-term horizon and support illiquidity, and we will also be able to create an internal market from one client to another, and from one solution to another. This investment philosophy is already at the heart of what we want to do.”

He adds that the latest solution on offer from TPT reflects the organisation’s commitment to offer a range of consolidation options to the UK pension market.

Sponsored Content

“We believe this is another compelling option and will encourage UK pension funds to consider TPT as one of their consolidation options – we offer a different type of opportunity and skill set to deliver on behalf of DB pension schemes.”

Overtime, the superfund will achieve synergies and efficiencies by merging vintages of client DB funds”, Clapp continues. Schemes within the superfund will have access to seven different fund structures in a fund of fund vehicle enabling them to access numerous managers. From this they will be able to create an asset mix shaped by their maturity, risk appetite and investment objectives.

He says the fees will be specific to each deal, but notes TPT is experienced at running solutions that offer value for money and use scale to create operational efficiency. “We can do everything in house; we have the skill set, pipework and plumbing between different services like actuarial, administration and fiduciary management.”

TPT will submit its proposal to the pensions regulator for assessment in January. So far, only one other superfund, Clara Pensions, has passed regulatory scrutiny and Clapp believes the superfund market is large enough to accommodate different varieties of superfund, and not be homogenous. “When you look through the lens of risk, we present a different type of skills set to deliver DB pension schemes, and our track record speaks to itself.”

Still, he says that positive feedback has primarily come from consultants rather than corporate pension funds themselves.

Moreover, take up of superfunds by the DB pension community has been historically slow. The sharp rise in interest rates in 2022 improved the funding levels of many DB schemes and by 2024, many funds were close enough to 100 per cent funded to be sold to an insurer.

But TPT hopes it offers a compelling selling point. It will allow pension schemes in the superfund to use the surplus for member augmentations in an approach Clapp believes will be both “interesting and appealing” to a wide variety of funds.

However, this will only happen when TPT’s seed investor is repaid.

UK regulations require all DB funds entering the super fund are fully funded on a buy out basis whereby the pension scheme has enough assets to transfer all of its liabilities to an insurance company which then takes over paying members’ pensions. This meant TPT’s required finding a seed investor to take on the role of the sponsor, ensuring the pension funds are fully funded.

“Once our seed investor has earned their investment back, members should get the majority of the surplus,” he concludes. “Our strategy allows members to enhance benefits more than they would normally which will be an alternative to consider for ceding sponsors and trustees.”

Leave a Comment

Public equity manager challenges the case for private

Public equity manager challenges the case for private

Loomis Sayles’ Aziz Hamzaogullari has questioned whether asset allocators are giving private equity more credit than it is worth, saying the case for investing in PE rests on flawed return measurement, hidden risks and high fees and that public equities should be treated with the same “patience” that PE receives.

Sort content by

How to build portfolios if the recent ‘new normal’ isn’t normal at all

The key to constructing investment portfolios with resilience to rapid and unexpected changes is to remain humble, interrogate the data, and not be fooled into thinking the future can be predicted perfectly, according to head of multi-asset strategy APAC for Wellington, Nick Samouilhan.

Anchoring to traditional portfolios is the world’s biggest investment risk

Bridgewater has a house view that the world is moving into a period of macro-volatility and global conflict. But despite the myriad geopolitical and environmental risks facing investors investors’ unwillingness to break with the model portfolios of the past presents the greatest threat to institutional portfolios.  

A granular view of emerging markets will serve investors better

A market-weighted index isn’t necessarily the best indicator of where growth in Asia will come from in future. The Monetary Authority of Singapore's Bernard Wee told the Fiduciary Investors Symposium that investors must take a much closer look at the region and understand the nuances of trade and investment.

Investors urged to allocate more and get boots on the ground in Asia

The economic fundamentals of Asia dictate that asset owners should lift their allocations to the region, and a panel at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium - including chief of APG in the region - heard the best way to exploit the emerging opportunities is to have investment professionals on the ground.

China experts split on the nation’s financial policymaking capability 

The strength of China’s national leadership remains a central topic for avid China watchers around the world. As the nation heads into a structural reshuffle of its economy, investors, researchers and political scientists have different views on Chinese policymakers’ ability to work with the financial market from this point on.

Asian investors reveal home bias challenges

For investors based in Asia, a home bias can throw up some challenges that affect investors homed in other regions much less. Three Asia-based investors - Temasek, Brunei Investment Agency and Khazanah - outlined to the Fiduciary Investors Symposium in Singapore last week how they face into those challenges.

Previous