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Uk charities' combined reserves fall by £6.5bn

written by Bella Palmer
uk-charities

The report found that the largest charities in England and Wales had combined reserves of £39.5bn as of March 2022, compared to £46bn in 2021

The combined reserves of the largest 40 charities in England and Wales that sponsor defined benefit (DB) pensions schemes fell by £6.5bn from 2021 to 2022, analysis from Hymans Robertson has found.

The report, DB pension funding in the charitable sector, found that the largest charities in England and Wales had combined reserves of £39.5bn as of March 2022, compared to £46bn in 2021.

However, the aggregate DB liabilities of the charities remained constant at around £9.5bn.

The average funding level of the biggest charities’ pension schemes was 91 per cent and 12 charities had a funding level over 100 per cent, although the report stated that there was ‘a fall in average funding level’, which it attributed to a drop in scheme assets.

The British Council had the best funding level at over 180 per cent, according to the analysis, followed by The British Red Cross’s Society’s scheme with a funding level of over 120 per cent.

Reflecting on the findings, Hymans Robertson head of pensions consulting for charities, Heather Allingham, suggested that the combined problems could put charities’ pensions schemes in a challenging position.

In light of this, Hymans Robertson urged charities' DB trustees to review their covenant interaction, consider the impact of Covid-19 on their scheme, as well as impact of high inflation, and review their approach to GMP equalisation.

Allingham stated: Ongoing communication on a few key things would help manage future pressures and maintain the delicate balance of a good level of charitable support and the ability to fund pension deficits.

First, starting an open dialogue about immediate challenges as well as longer-term risks will help charities and pension scheme trustees to build a shared understanding of the challenges to income, reserves and therefore the implication on covenant ratings and available cash, Allingham said.

Conversations about covenant leakage should also be included here, and although this is less of an issue for charities than for corporates, it will help to ensure the pensions scheme is treated equitably alongside other stakeholders, Allingham said. Additionally, looking at ways to increase scheme security, such as giving the pension scheme a charge over a charity asset or introducing a contingent contribution structure to support more investment risk or lower cash contributions, is one way to manage during this time.

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