The Pensions Regulator (TPR) used its formal powers 50,068 times in just 12 months to ensure high levels of compliance with the auto-enrolment regime.
This week's top stories include Now Pensions voluntarily withdrawing from the regulator's master trust assurance list as it battles with historic contribution issuers.
Disclosure of investment costs can be achieved without necessarily finding out the true value of implicit costs, Kempen Capital Management argues.
The European pensions regulator has set out plans to standardise and streamline occupational pension schemes data provided by national regulators.
TPR has been criticised for being 'draconian' and not responding in a proportionate way to risks. Nicola Parish disagrees.
Now Pensions has voluntarily withdrawn from the master trust assurance list for auto-enrolment providers as it battles to deal with historic contribution issues.
The regulator has promised to toughen its approach against those who withhold information it needs for investigation, James Phillips writes.
Robin Ellison says the regulator now sees trustees as 'inefficient and lazy' people who need 'prodding and punishing' into compliance.
The Pensions Regulator's (TPR) determinations panel has seen a significant rise in casework, making a record 41 determinations in the last financial year.
The Pensions Regulator (TPR) has convicted an office manager after she failed to provide information it needed for an investigation into a suspected £13.8m scam.