Rolls-Royce & Bentley Pension Enters $1.1 Billion Annuity Buyout

The pension risk transfer with Standard Life will cover 6,000 employees. 



Standard Life
announced on Thursday that it finalized a deal to transfer 800 million pounds ($1.1 billion) of liabilities from the Rolls Royce & Bentley Pension in a full scheme buy-in transaction. The transfer will cover 6,000 beneficiaries of Bentley Motors Limited’s pension.

With corporate pension funding surplus at an all-time high, plan sponsors are seeking to derisk their pensions and offload their liabilities to annuity providers. In the U.S. and in the U.K., pension risk transfer transactions are at an all-time high. 

“The risk-transfer market remains busy and is showing no signs of slowing down following a record-breaking 2023, with 2024 volumes expected to exceed the £50bn mark,” Kieran Misty, director of defined benefits solutions at Standard Life in a statement. “Insurance remains the primary de-risking solution for many trustees and sponsors, with preparation and early engagement vital to successfully navigating the busy market.”

The Bentley transaction is one of many jumbo deals to be announced this year. Earlier this year, Shell closed a $4.9 billion PRT with insurer Prudential, and Entergy entered into a $1.2 billion annuity buyout with MetLife. 

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Fitch Ratings in January upgraded its outlook for the U.K. insurance sector, the average funded ratio of 5,050 corporate pension schemes in the U.K. tracked by the Pension Protection Fund increased to 149.9% at the end of May, according to the PPF 7800 index. Of the same pension schemes tracked by the index, 4,574 were in a surplus position.

Related Stories:

Pension Risk Transfer Growth Fuels UK Insurance Rating

Pension Risk Transfer Premiums Reach $14.6 Billion in Q1

Shell Closes $4.9B Pension Risk Transfer With Prudential

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Supreme Court Rules SEC In-House Judge Process Is Unconstitutional

Decision upholds defendants’ rights to a jury trial when civil penalties are imposed.



The Supreme Court ruled in favor of George Jarkesy in the case Securities and Exchange Commission v. Jarkesy on Thursday.

The court ruled, in a 6-3 decision, that “when the SEC seeks civil penalties against a defendant for securities fraud, the Seventh Amendment entitles the defendant to a jury trial.” The court decision continues that “while courts of equity could order a defendant to return unjustly obtained funds, only courts of law issued monetary penalties to punish culpable individuals.”

Jarkesy was a hedge fund manager who was charged by the SEC with violating securities laws for misrepresenting two private funds he managed. Jarkesy was fined almost $1 million in disgorgement and penalties. Jarkesy challenged the SEC’s in-house administrative law judge process, under which he was fined, and argued that it was unconstitutional under the Seventh Amendment to the Constitution, which requires a jury trial and an Article III Court for civil cases.

Jay Dubow, a partner with the Troutman Pepper law firm and a former enforcement attorney with the SEC, says that based on the way the court wrote the decision, it is limited to monetary penalties in civil cases and “one can argue its limited to civil fraud cases.”

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“The SEC could still seek disgorgement or equitable relief,” such as removing a board member, Dubow says, through the commission’s in-house judges.

Disgorgement is a fine that offsets unjust gains and is normally returned to impacted investors where possible, Dubow explains. Cases that seek disgorgement only “could still be brought administratively,” Dubow argues, though the SEC usually also seeks civil penalties as well but “if they seek both they would have to go to federal court.”

How this case affects other agencies is “really the big question here,” Dubow says, and this case certainly “invites challenges to other ALJs.” He names the FTC and CFTC as agencies that are likely to face new legal challenges that cite this case.

Other ALJs that do not issue civil penalties and adjudicate “public rights,” likely would also be untouched by this decision. Public rights, according to the decision, include disputes over benefits, immigration and customs, public lands, and relations with Native American tribes. During oral arguments in November, Justice Neil Gorsuch indicated that most ALJs work for the Social Security Administration and normally adjudicate disputes over benefits and so are not at issue in this case.

When it comes to the SEC’s ability to bring cases, “I don’t think it’s really going to impact it a whole lot,” Dubow says. “They have cut back on ALJs for a number of years” in favor of taking cases to court.” If the court had ruled in the SEC’s favor “I think it would have had a more profound effect,” because the SEC would likely pursue more cases administratively after the process was affirmed by the court.

 

 

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