Transfer values and cash lump sums: the impact of rising interest rates
Your pension in the Defined Benefit (DB) Section
The benefits you’ve built up in the DB Section depend on your Pensionable Service (the service you’ve completed with the Company as an Active member of the DB Section) and your Final Pensionable Earnings. After you leave service, your pension will increase each year, in line with the Scheme Rules until your Normal Retirement Date.
Your pension will then be payable to you for life and is a guaranteed income that doesn’t depend on the investment performance of the Scheme or financial market conditions.
However, there are other options available to you as a member of the DB Section. These include:
- Transferring the value of the benefits you’ve built up in the DB Section to another HM Revenue and Customs approved pension arrangement;
- Exchanging (‘commute’) up to 25% of the value of your pension for a one-off tax-free cash lump sum (referred to as a ‘pension commencement lump sum’); or
- Requesting to retire earlier or later than your Normal Retirement Date.
Each of these options involve placing a value on the benefits you’ve built up in the DB Section at the time you take that option, meaning financial market conditions would be relevant.
Calculating the value of the benefits you’ve built up in the DB Section
To make this calculation the Trustee must estimate how much money they’d need to set aside to:
- Pay your pension from the DB Section for the rest of your life; plus
- Pay to your Spouse, Civil Partner or other relevant surviving Dependant(s) any benefits payable to them.
To do this, the Trustee makes a number of assumptions about the future; including what investment returns the Scheme could expect on the assets it holds. The higher the expected returns are, the less money the Trustee would need to set aside now to pay the benefits you’ve built up. This value is often referred to as your Cash Equivalent Transfer Value (CETV).
The Scheme’s transfer value assumptions are set by the Trustee, based on the regulatory requirements and advice from the Scheme Actuary. They’re intended to be a best estimate of what the Trustee would need to set aside to pay the benefits a member has built up in the DB Section. The Trustee’s current policy is to update these assumptions monthly to take into account any changes in market conditions.
The impact of rising interest rates on CETVs
To provide a good match to future pension payments the Scheme invests extensively in bonds (and similar assets). When there is a rise in the yields (or long-term ‘interest rates’) available for these types of investments, the Trustee makes the assumption that the expected future investment returns on these assets also increase.
Prior to 2022, we went through a period of historically low interest rates, and CETVs over the period were therefore high relative to historical levels. During 2022 longer-term interest rates increased substantially, as illustrated in the chart below.
This increase in long-term interest rates means that the Trustee is now expecting to achieve higher returns on the assets that the Scheme holds. As a result, CETVs have fallen, in some cases, by as much as 50% when compared to a year ago. But it’s important to remember that the benefits you’ve built up in the DB Section remain the same, it’s simply that the estimated cost to provide these benefits is less.
The impact of interest rates on exchanging pension for a cash lump sum
Similar to calculating a CETV, to calculate how much cash you may receive for each £1 of pension you commute, the Trustee estimates how much it would cost to provide that £1 of pension each year for the remainder of your life. However, unlike the calculation of CETVs the calculation does not consider any pension payable after your death (as these will remain at the same level as had you not commuted any of your pension for a cash lump sum).
Therefore, just like transfer values, as long-term interest rates have risen over the past year, the lump sum payable in exchange for each £1 of your annual pension commuted, has fallen.
The impact of interest rates on taking your pension earlier or later than your Normal Retirement Date
If you request to take your pension at a date other than your Normal Retirement Date the Trustee needs to ensure that the value of your benefits remains broadly the same. As a result, early and late retirement pensions may also be affected by changes to long-term interest rates, albeit the impact will be less than is the case for transfer values or the cash lump sum. For example, whilst the cost to provide your pension at your Normal Retirement Date may have reduced, the cost to provide the relevant reduced pension at an earlier date will also have reduced (although not by exactly the same amount).
More information
If you have any questions regarding your DB Section benefits, please contact the DB Section Administrator
Note on Additional Voluntary Contributions (AVCs) and Transfers-in: the information above relates to defined benefit pensions in the DB Section. The benefits payable in respect of AVCs invested using the Commercial AVC arrangements or money purchase transfers-in do depend on performance in the investment markets.
The Trustee
March 2023