Ian Chapman-Curry
Legal Director
PSL legal director
Balados
11
This podcast provides an overview of conflicts of interest in respect of pensions.
Trustees of pension schemes cannot act lawfully when unduly influenced by a conflict of interest. There are some inherent conflicts in being a trustee which can be managed as long as they do not infect the decision making process. Conflicts of interest are likely to be of two main types:
Conflicts of interest may be classified as either real conflicts or potential conflicts.
The impact of conflict of interests can be considered as follows:
The Pensions Regulator has issued Guidance to provide educational support to trustees with a view to sharing good practice and raising standards around conflicts of interest. The Pensions Regulator Guidance sets out the key principles which govern sound conflict management and governance. The key principles are:
Trustees must:
It is the trustee or trustee director's responsibility to:
Introducing a process for identifying conflicts is pivotal to the management process. For example by maintaining an up to date register of each trustee's interests and have a means of recording conflicts that have arisen or are likely to arise.
Trustees who take the time to identify any conflicts are better placed to manage conflict situations that arise.
When a conflict has been identified, trustees should manage the conflict of interest by:
Trustees need to ensure that adviser conflicts are managed. Trustees should:
It is good practice for trustees to adopt a conflicts of interest policy for identifying, monitoring and managing all conflicts of interest. The Pensions Regulator now expects to see a conflicts policy in place and any trustees without one in place would potentially find themselves in difficulty with The Pensions Regulator if this were to ever be investigated.
A conflicts policy assists trustees so that when a conflict potentially or actually does arise there is an agreed set of procedures in place to manage them.
The conflicts policy needs to be regularly updated and monitored. It needs to be considered and reviewed to ensure that it is still relevant to the circumstances of the trustees. The trustees must ensure they are conversant with the procedures it contains.
A conflict of interest can arise when a trustee has information relevant to the pension scheme that conflicts with his duty to share the information with his fellow trustees because of a duty of confidentiality to somebody else. This is typically seen when a trustee is also an employee of the employer and owes a confidentiality duty to the employer. For example, confidentiality issues may arise in relation to a corporate transaction or a proposal to close the pension scheme.
Confidentiality conflicts are particularly difficult to manage. This is because withdrawing from discussions and decision making does not necessarily absolve the trustee from their duty to disclose information to their fellow trustees.
The easiest method to address a confidentiality conflict is for the employer to waiver the confidentiality requirement, although the employer may not always be willing to do so. Alternatively the trustees may be able to enter into a deed of amendment to waive the trustee from their duty to disclose information to the rest of the trustees. In other circumstances a confidentiality agreement may be appropriate.
As this is notoriously a difficult area, trustees should seek legal advice to ensure confidentiality issues are appropriately managed.
The Companies Act 2006 has separate additional requirements for directors of corporate trustees. This is set out in section 175 Companies Act 2006 which requires directors of a company to:
"avoid a situation in which they have, or can have a direct or indirect interest that conflicts, or possibly may conflict, with the interests of the company".
Any director of a corporate trustee needs to consider the Companies Act 2006 requirements together with the obligations set out in this note.
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