Pension Insurance Corp. Serves as Lifeboat for Alliance Boots

Alliance Boots has outsourced part of its pension plan by offloading about £300 million of retirement fund liabilities to Pension Corporation.

(September 1, 2010) — Alliance Boots PLC, a European pharmacy and beauty products company, said it has insured itself against any further possible costs associated with a portion of its final salary pension scheme.

The deal, which the company said would “ensure long term security” for the members, represents a continued effort by employers to relieve a potential spike in the price of paying for its employees’ pensions as a result of lackluster investment returns and increases in life expectancy.

Alliance Boots insured part of its pension liabilities with specialist buyout fund Pension Insurance Corporation (PIC), which was created to assume the pension risks of companies drowning in deficits. The deal will see Pension Corporation assume control of the old defined-benefit pension scheme of Alliance Unichem, which merged with Boots to form Alliance Boots in 2006 – the scheme now has about 3,000 members with liabilities of about £300 million. According to The Guardian, parent company Alliance Boots is not considering outsourcing the management of its much larger Boots pension schemes.

The transaction, which could be announced this week, will reportedly take the value of the assets managed by Pension Corporation’s insurance arm to about £4.5 billion.

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To contact the <em>aiCIO</em> editor of this story: Paula Vasan at <a href='mailto:pvasan@assetinternational.com'>pvasan@assetinternational.com</a>; 646-308-2742

Aon's Investment Consulting Group Surpasses $1 Billion

The company's growth in assets under management for its US clients reflects its effort to expand into human resources consulting worldwide.

(September 1, 2010) — Aon Corp’s Implemented Investment Consulting group, which the company launched less than a year ago, now has more than $1 billion in assets under management for its US clients.

“We saw the opportunity to help clients develop a de-risking strategy to ensure the sustainability of their defined benefit plan, or for many sponsors, the termination of their plan to remove the risk from the corporate balance sheet,” said Aon Consulting’s CEO Kathryn Hayley in a statement. “In large part, the success of this group can be attributed to a differentiated approach, which not only includes risk mitigation, but also the development and execution of a pension plan exit strategy through a truly independent platform.”

The company, which offers insurance and other risk management services, is buying human resources specialist Hewitt Associates Inc. for $4.9 billion in cash and stock, according to a release. The deal, announced last month, will nearly triple the size of its consulting business and dramatically expand its global push into human resources consulting.

Aon is ranked as the world’s largest insurance broker. However, its consulting business follows rival Marsh & McLennan Co., whose subsidiaries include Mercer and Oliver Wyman Group.

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To contact the <em>aiCIO</em> editor of this story: Paula Vasan at <a href='mailto:pvasan@assetinternational.com'>pvasan@assetinternational.com</a>; 646-308-2742

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