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July 2024
 

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How structural changes in UK asset management will impact the industry and economy

Our Markets and Financing Research Retreat offers a wide range of academic expertise and timely market insights.
 


A structural shift in the United Kingdom’s asset backed defined benefit (DB) pension system means the long-term trend of DB’s declining share of institutional assets under management (AUM) will accelerate and become more impactful on asset managers.

DB pension liabilities have fallen below asset values since 2020, making pension “buyout” – where an insurance company buys the assets of a scheme from its corporate sponsor and takes over the management of the fund and responsibility for paying its members – more widely affordable than in previous years.

According to independent analyst and Financial Times contributing editor Toby Nangle – speaking at our Research Retreat in London last month – this will be good for investors in UK businesses because corporate sponsors will be paying less money into pension funds and spending more on business investment and share buybacks.

But it also means that money will no longer be going to asset managers. The new insurer owners of the schemes will invest less as these closed schemes wind down. And many of them will have asset management businesses that they will favor for managing the schemes’ remaining assets.

The majority of managers who will not benefit from this transfer of pension assets will have to increasingly look to the defined contribution (DC) market for new business.

“DC contributions have finally, just in the last few years, grown larger than DB,” said Nangle. “DB schemes are the largest buyers of gilts [UK government bonds] but DC means a change in asset composition towards more equities and growth assets.”

The DC administration market is also in the process of consolidating around a smaller number of providers, largely with quasi-independent “master trust” structures, that put most of their money into default funds composed of other funds.

So getting into default strategies, or marketing funds on DC scheme platforms to members looking outside the default options, will be an increasingly important area of asset managers’ distribution strategies.

The other impact of the DB scheme AUM share declining more rapidly over the next decade will be on gilt yields.

As the biggest buyers of gilts, if new buyers of similar volumes of the asset class can’t be found to replace shrinking DB schemes, this will depress prices and push up yields commensurately, leaving the UK “more reliant on the kindness of strangers” for an important component of its government income, according to Nangle.
 

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