PLSA identifies practical solutions to make UK growth assets more investable for pension funds | PLSA
PLSA identifies practical solutions to make UK growth assets more investable for pension funds

PLSA identifies practical solutions to make UK growth assets more investable for pension funds

12 August 2024, Press Release

The PLSA has made recommendations to create the necessary investment conditions for pension schemes to allocate a greater portion of retirement savings to UK growth areas.

Since early 2023 there has been considerable debate about whether and how pension funds can be supported to allocate more to emerging – but higher risk – sectors that could drive UK economic growth. The PLSA set out six ways to achieve this in its report on Pensions & Growth last year (see background below). Today’s report follows up on how the UK needs to ensure there is a pipeline of investible opportunities.

Pensions & Growth: Creating a Pipeline of Investable UK Opportunities, identifies a funding gap amounting to tens of billions of pounds across four key areas which most require investment:

  • Climate change: In the UK, the Climate Change Committee’s sixth carbon budget estimated that reaching net zero will cost ~£50 billion a year.
  • Infrastructure: Analysis of the National Infrastructure and Construction Pipeline identifies a need for private investment in infrastructure between now and 2032/33. For example, energy sector investment of £33 billion.
  • Social and community growth funds: in social housing research shows the sector will require an average of £14.6 billion in capital grant from the Government each year between 2021-2031, to leverage enough private capital for a housebuilding programme worth a total of £46.2 billion per year on average.
  • Life sciences and AI: in these areas improvements to the investment ecosystem are required. With AI predicted to generate an additional £32 billion of revenue by 2030, there is substantial scope for expansion if the UK can incentivise it.

EXAMPLES OF REQUIRED ACTION BY SECTOR

Mobilising pension fund investment into UK productive finance has the potential to result in significant tangible real-world benefits for society. The table below reveals some of the actions needed to attract pension fund investment to key projects.

Sector

Potential benefits

How to make these assets more investable

Energy

Investment in wind, solar and nuclear power would support decarbonisation and lead to estimated operational savings of £50 billion by 2050.

  • } Planning reform
  • } Grid connection rule reforms
  • } Use of contracts for difference
  • } Revenue caps and floors
  • } Better location signalling of battery sites
  • } Smaller scale nuclear projects

Heat and buildings

Upgrading buildings to EPC C energy standards and scaling up the market for heat pumps could lead to cost reductions of £5 billion per year from increased efficiency.

  • } Revise incentive policy
  • } Develop skills to speed up heat pump installation

Later life housing and social care

Construction and improvement of necessary housing to address demands of a rapidly ageing population.

  • } Improve planning processes
  • } Incentivise developments that cater to senior housing requirements
  • } Provide certainty over state/private funding
  • } Stable, long-term policy

Social housing

Address the UK’s social housing shortfall

  • } Planning reform
  • } Capital allowances for private investors
  • } Lessons from US social housing tax incentive regime
  • } Introduce long-term CPI-linked rent ceilings

Transport

Rail, shipping and aviation improvements, as well as adoption of electric vehicles can result in cleaner, greener transport and economic growth in better connected regions.

  • } Issuance of appropriate inflation-linked bonds to finance projects
  • } Set a clear plan for improving local transport links
  • } Cross-party commitment to projects to give investors certainty

Artificial Intelligence (AI)

An acceleration in AI adoption and digital technology could add £520 billion to the UK economy by 2030.

  • } Develop investment eco-system
  • } Provide incentives to offset inherent risks of investing in early-stage technology, e.g. LIFTS initiative or Government accepting ‘first loss’ risk
  • } Facilitate blended finance solutions
  • } Investment consultants to work with industry and government to identify investment opportunities

NEXT STEPS

Crucially, pensions funds have a fiduciary duty and will only invest where the risk-return characteristics of potential investments meet the needs of their members. But with government, pension funds, investment managers, investee companies and consultants all playing their part, there is substantial potential to open the pipeline of assets to attract the investment of pension funds to support UK growth. This report makes specific recommendations for each of these groups (summary p. 12).

However, we highlight below our recommended actions for two of them: pension funds and the Government.

Trustees and pension funds should:

  • Develop investment strategies that consider how to allocate to private market assets appropriately to meet the needs of the scheme and future liabilities.
  • Be aware that training may be required to ensure there is an appropriate level of knowledge and understanding of social and climate issues and how to integrate these into investment decisions.
  • Encourage advisers and consultants to further consider growth assets in investment strategies put forward for DB and DC schemes, and consider any gaps in service provider expertise.
  • Understand the risks involved in different types of investments and how to effectively diversify their portfolio, including clarifying fiduciary duty so trustees are clear that climate considerations can be compatible with their fiduciary duty.
  • Ensure Statements of Investment Principles clearly articulate trustee views on which investment sectors to prioritise.
  • Consider what blended finance structures would make sectors more investable.

We call on the government to:

  • Provide policy and regulatory certainty to improve the UK’s appeal versus investment opportunities globally. This includes developing a long-term strategy for investment and growth, outlining the Government’s priority investment sectors, its approach to blended finance and how it will work with the pensions industry.
  • Offer targeted fiscal incentives to make UK growth assets more attractive than competing assets from other countries. Enhancing the tax treatment of domestic investments, as they do in France and Australia, merits further exploration. In addition, initiatives like LIFTS, which supports investment in UK start-ups and companies requiring late-stage growth capital, should also be considered.
  • Expand the area of focus beyond private equity and venture capital to encompass infrastructure, alternative assets and a variety of funding models.
  • Take control in bringing key industry groups together to develop solutions to growth challenges.
  • Produce a plan for the development of skills to achieve growth.
  • Lead and collaborate on AI and net zero at international scale.
  • Continue to work closely with regulators and others to get the right approach to investment risk, including DC, open DB and the LGPS, where this is in the interest of scheme members.
  • Deliver planning reform to enable crucial energy, infrastructure, social housing and later life care development

Nigel Peaple, Director Policy & Advocacy, PLSA, said: “The UK has considerable need of greater investment to achieve the Government’s goals on growth and the transition to net zero.

“Pension funds have an important part to play in achieving greater investment in the UK where this is consistent with achieving the right returns for pension savers. The PLSA has highlighted these issues in our conferences, supports the Mansion House Compact, provided input to the National Wealth Fund, and last year identified the policy and regulatory changes needed to achieve this goal.

“Our new report looks at how to create more investible opportunities in the UK by identifying the Pension Fund and Government actions needed and calls on all parties to work together to achieve these goals.”

Download the report from the PLSA website.

BACKGROUND

An estimated £1 trillion of pension fund capital is allocated to UK-domiciled assets, for structural reasons the majority is deployed in government debt, other fixed income assets and publicly listed companies.

Since early 2023 there has been considerable debate about whether and how pension funds can be encouraged to allocate more to emerging – and higher risk – opportunities that could drive UK economic growth.

In response, the PLSA identified six areas where either existing barriers could be removed or where pension funds might be incentivised or encouraged to allocate more to the domestic economy.

These actions included:

  • Pipeline of assets: Ensuring there is a stream of high-quality investment assets suitable for pension fund needs.
  • DB regulation: Introducing greater flexibility into the funding regime for private sector DB schemes, in particular for open DB schemes and those schemes with longer investment time horizons.
  • Taxation: Introducing fiscal incentives for pension funds so that investing in UK assets is more attractive than investing in similar assets of other countries.
  • Consolidation: Prioritising the passage through Parliament of a Bill to place DB superfunds on a statutory footing and carrying forward, in a pragmatic way, its current programme of measures related to DC Master Trusts and the LGPS.
  • Market for DC under automatic enrolment: Taking a range of actions to encourage more focus on performance and less on cost, for example, the greater use of Value for Money tests and setting the right regulatory regime for advice to employers and schemes.
  • Raising pensions contributions: Increasing the flow of assets into DC schemes by raising automatic enrolment contributions from 8% to 12% over the next decade.

Mark Smith, Head of Media Relations
020 7601 1726 | [email protected]

Cali Sullivan, PR Manager
020 7601 1761 | [email protected]

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