Reforming The Law On Trustees’ Investment Duties - Time For Action?

Background: The increase in investment products and asset classes coupled with the growth in specialist investment advisers is a strong market trend, yet the law on "investment duties" remains largely historic and static. The legal framework for pension trustees (Pensions Act 1995, supplemented by the 2005 Investment Regulations and Court cases from the 19th century onwards) is arguably falling behind modern developments.

Reform

The Government commissioned report by Professor Kay, published in 2012, suggested the Law Commission should review the concept of "fiduciary duty" in relation to investment matters. This was, as Professor Kay put it, "To address the uncertainties and misunderstandings on the part of the trustees and their advisors".

Law Commission's Report

The Law Commission has recently published its Consultation (October 2013) and seeks responses by 22 February 2014. If readers have comments on trustees' investment duties we would be pleased to hear them. Alternatively, comments can be sent direct to the Law Commission: fiduciary.duties@lawcommission.gsi.gov.uk. The Law Commission's full Report is available on their website, as is their pre-prepared response form: http://lawcommission.justice.gov.uk/consultations/fiduciary_duties.htm.

What is a "fiduciary "?

The Commission's definition of a fiduciary is:

"Someone who is obliged to act in the interests of others" the core duty being the obligation of loyalty.

Besides considering the legal meaning of fiduciary, the Law Commission review how far existing law requires those operating in the investment market to act in the best long-term interests of their clients and beneficiaries. Operators in the market include investment advisers, fund managers and custodians.

The Law Commission conclude there is legal uncertainty over how far fiduciary duties apply to persons in the investment chain other than trustees. They suggest that regulation may need strengthening in some areas particularly for investment intermediaries and custodians.

Of particular concern are the legal duties/regulation of investment in the context of contract (non-trust) based defined contribution arrangements. Contract based DC funds will increase vastly over the next few years due to auto-enrolment.

Practical issues for DB schemes

There are particular challenges for trustees of DB schemes evaluating whether to implement "fiduciary investment management".

Historically, trustees have kept a close handle on scheme...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT