Royal Mail Finally Launches Britain’s 1st CDC Pension Plan

The debut comes nearly a decade after collective defined contribution pension plans were first proposed in the U.K.



U.K. postal services provider Royal Mail Group Ltd. has
launched Britain’s first collective defined contribution pension plan nearly 10 years after the hybrid retirement plan was first proposed in the country in 2015. The plan is available, as of Monday, to all Royal Mail employees who have worked with the company for at least 12 months.

According to the Royal Mail, the CDC plan benefits include an automatic income for life and a cash lump sum, with employees paying 6% of pensionable pay into the collective pot each payday, while Royal Mail contributes 13.6%.

WTW, an adviser to Royal Mail in designing and implementing the CDC plan, has been named as the Royal Mail Collective Pension Plan’s actuary. According to Royal Mail, the “vast majority” of its employees will join the CDC automatically.

In a CDC plan, both the employer and employees contribute to a collective fund that provides an income in retirement. However, unlike defined benefit plans, the employer does not guarantee the benefits paid by the plan. Instead, CDC plans provide a target pension, and if the plan is underfunded or overfunded, the funds it pays out can decrease or increase accordingly.

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The concept of a CDC was first introduced in U.K. regulation by the Pension Schemes Act 2015, which included a provision for the government to allow companies to create the new plans. However, the provisions under the act never came into force. When Royal Mail decided to close its defined benefit plan in 2018, the postal service company and the Communication Workers Union agreed to introduce a CDC plan; however, CDC regulation did not exist at the time.

After concluding that the provisions in the Pension Schemes Act 2015 Act were not sufficient, the necessary legislation was eventually provided in the Pension Schemes Act 2021, and CDC regulations came into force in August 2022. Royal Mail’s plan was authorized by The Pension Regulator in April 2023.

The introduction of CDCs has been met with mixed expectations.

A 2018 report from the Centre for Policy Studies, a U.K. think tank, termed CDCs risky and untested, with the potential to undermine personal pension freedoms introduced in 2015.

“The system risks creating irreversible intergenerational injustice by overpaying pensioners at the expense of current and future employees,” the report stated. “It is also unclear whether what is promised to workers is actually deliverable.”

However, a report from Aon, updated in 2020, found that CDC plans were a better alternative for pension participants than a traditional defined contribution plan in that they offer “higher, more stable pension outcomes.”

“By sharing risk between members we achieve higher, more stable pension outcomes for members, than by using an individual DC pension arrangement,” the Aon report stated. However, citing Voltaire’s quote that “the best is the enemy of the good,” the report also acknowledged drawbacks to CDC plans.

“Collective DC may not be the perfect pensions system—but there again, most other pensions systems have been shown to have significant flaws,” the report stated. “It has always been relatively easy to criticize CDC and to spot potential flaws. But CDC has many powerful, good aspects that should improve retirement outcomes for many U.K. workers.”

CDC pensions differ from large defined contribution master trusts, like the U.K’s Nest. CDC pensions are designed to provide lifelong income that stops with a participant’s death. In contrast, the DC pensions provided through master trusts provide a pot of money, but any part of an individual pension account that has not been spent by a participant is property of the participant’s estate at their death, according to information from fintech provider firm Dunstan Thomas.

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After Years of Planning, UK Finally Authorizes First CDC Pension Plan

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Stanford Investment Vehicle Returns 8.4%

In fiscal 2024, assets of the Stanford merged pool, about 75% of which come from the university’s endowment, rose to $42.8 billion.



The primary investment vehicle of Stanford University returned 8.4% in fiscal 2024, the university
announced on Thursday. Equities propelled the returns of Stanford’s merged pool, managed by the Stanford Management Co.  

Performance across the fund’s private markets portfolio was muted in 2024, as in 2023, when the management company reported a 4.4% return.  

“As was the case last year, strong results in publicly traded securities were diluted by weaker performance in non-marketable asset classes, including private equity,” said Robert Wallace, the Stanford Management Co.’s CEO, in a statement. “While private asset classes have detracted from recent performance, they have enhanced our results over longer periods and are likely to continue to do so in the coming decade.” 

As of the university’s 2022 fiscal year, the merged pool had an asset allocation policy of 37% to private equity, 18% to absolute return strategies, 17% to international equity, 11% to real assets, 9% to fixed income and cash, and 8% to domestic equity.  

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While Stanford did not publicize its current benchmarks or asset allocation, the university noted that the fiscal 2024 performance of the merged pool trailed the median return of higher education endowments in the U.S., which stood at 10.1%, according to Cambridge Associates. A 70/30 portfolio returned 13.5% during the period, Stanford noted.  

Stanford’s five- and 10-year investment performance (9.9% and 8.6%, respectively) exceeded the median return of U.S. higher education endowments (9% and 7%, respectively). 

Stanford’s endowment makes up about 75% of the merged pool, which also includes the capital reserves of Stanford Health Care and Stanford Medicine Children’s Health and other long-term funds. The endowment also holds other assets, such as real estate, outside of the merged pool. Assets of the merged pool stood at $42.8 billion as of June 30, while assets of the endowment stood at $37.6 billion as of August 31, up from $36.5 billion on August 31, 2023.  

In the fiscal year, the endowment distributed $1.8 billion to support academic programs at the university and for financial aid. The endowment funded more than 21% of Stanford’s operating expenses for the fiscal year and is budgeted to distribute $1.9 billion in fiscal 2025. 

Related Stories: 

Brown University Endowment Returns 11.3% in Fiscal 2024 

Columbia Endowment Achieves 11.5% Return in Fiscal 2024 

Dartmouth Endowment Returns 8.4% in Fiscal 2024 

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