Supreme Court ruling puts spotlight on death benefits for unmarried couples

A Supreme Court ruling could result in trustees having to review the way death benefits are awarded to surviving partners of unmarried couples.
In a judgement published on 8 February, the Supreme Court backed the claim of Denise Brewster who said she should receive the pension of her deceased partner, William Leonard McMullan. While the case...
More on Law and Regulation
Pension Schemes Bill gets final approval and waits for Royal Assent
The long-debated Pension Schemes Bill has received parliamentary approval, guaranteeing its place on the statute book.
FCA data reveals over £20bn of DB transfers between 2018 and 2020
Some £20.1bn of defined benefit (DB) pensions were advised to transfer between 2018 and 2020, while £10.2bn were recommended not to transfer, Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) data reveals.
Trustees will need to be corporate finance experts under new TPR powers
Pension trustees will have much more involvement in business discussions and corporates will need to think more about pensions when the watchdog’s increased powers come into force, LCP says.
Is mediation set to become the new normal for pension disputes?
Mediation has been under-utilised historically as a means of dispute resolution in this area. Mark Blyth and Geoff Egerton think this is going to change.
TPR response to funding code consultation reveals level of industry concern over twin-track regime
The Pensions Regulator (TPR) has published the interim response to its first defined benefit (DB) funding code consultation – highlighting the depth of industry concern around its proposed twin-track regime.