Hampshire County Council Hampshire Pension Fund Panel and Board Meeting

Dec. 10, 2021, 10 a.m.

AD DH AC JT KT AJ DD DM JG MK RM TD TT CT LB DA SM NW LG CD CC CH

This is a meeting of the Hampshire Pension Fund Panel and Board of Hampshire County Council held on the 10th Dec 2021.

The last meeting of the Hampshire Pension Fund Panel and Board was on the 28th Mar 2024, and the next meeting will be 19th Jul 2024.

Meeting Status

Confirmed

Agenda Published

Yes

Decisions Published

No

Minutes Published

Yes

Meeting Location

Ashburton Hall, EII Court, Winchester

Meeting Recordings

We know of no meeting recordings. If you know of one, let us know.

Agenda

Item Title Minutes
1 Apologies for Absence

Councillors Dowden, Corkery, Harwood, and Joy and Mrs Manchester sent their apologies.

2 Declarations of Interest

Members were mindful that where they believed they had a Disclosable Pecuniary Interest in any matter considered at the meeting they must declare that interest at the time of the relevant debate and, having regard to the circumstances described in Part 3 Paragraph 1.5 of the County Council's Members' Code of Conduct, leave the meeting while the matter was discussed, save for exercising any right to speak in accordance with Paragraph 1.6 of the Code. Furthermore Members were mindful that where they believed they had a Personal interest in a matter being considered at the meeting they considered whether such interest should be declared, and having regard to Part 5, Paragraph 4 of the Code, considered whether it was appropriate to leave the meeting whilst the matter was discussed, save for exercising any right to speak in accordance with the Code.

 

 

3 Confirmation of Minutes (Non-Exempt) 2021-09-28 PFPB public minutes

The minutes of the previous meeting held on 28 September 2021 were confirmed.

4 Deputations

The Panel and Board received a deputation from Mr Tony Langridge a deferred member, speaking on agenda item 9, the Pension Fund’s Business Plan, representing the Dirty Money Campaign.

 

Mr Langridge stressed that we are all living in a climate emergency and individuals often feel powerless, however the Pension Fund has power that individuals lack, and therefore it would be wonderful if it showed leadership in this area rather than appearing to be reluctant to seriously consider divestment. The Dirty Money Campaign would like the Fund’s investments to help meet, not undermine, the world’s goal to limit global heating to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

 

Mr Langridge highlighted that it had been reported that the Pension Fund has an estimated £136m directly invested in the fossil fuels industry. He described these investments as dirty money and asserted that these could soon become stranded assets. He highlighted examples of sustainable investments that had achieved strong recent returns.

 

Mr Langridge stated that the Pension Fund’s Business Plan reflects a lack of urgency in this whole area, and despite this, the last Annual Report identified climate change as ‘a systemic risk and thus a material long term financial risk’ but he couldn’t see in the Business Plan any direction to urgently address this risk. He suggested that the Fund’s investment managers should not be just required to consider Environmental, Social and Governmental factors but directed to reduce all investment in companies with carbon intensive operations.

 

Mr Langridge highlighted the good practice of a number of investors having formally adopted the 1.5 degrees C alignment as a core commitment and are the members of the Net-Zero Asset Owner Alliance; these investors were hailed at COP26 as a gold standard of what financial institutions of all sizes should be doing. Mr Langridge stated that it would be good to see an ambition from Hampshire to be the best in this area, such as joining the Institutional Investor Group on Climate Change’s Net Zero Investment Framework. This group has 360 members including a number of local authority pension funds including West Midlands, West Yorkshire, Tayside, Lothian, Islington, Newham and more locally Wiltshire.

 

Mr Langridge noted the potential risks of Climate Change, for example large areas of Hampshire are at risk of rising sea levels and coastal flooding by 2030. Mark Carney has said investors should stay with polluting companies and support them to transition, however Mr Langridge believes this is a dangerous approach as it ignores that for most companies profit maximisation comes before the future of the planet, and so the Pension Fund needs to look for commitment from those companies it invests the members money in; the Fund needs companies and investment funds that demonstrably commit to guarding the 1.5 degree C goal.

 

Mr Langridge concluded by pointing to the Glasgow Climate Pact which showed the goal of a 1.5 degrees C limit written clearly for all to see and asked if the Pension Fund would;

·         acknowledge it,

·         act on it without further delay, and

·         take a leading rather than passive approach.

 

Cllr Kemp-Gee thanked Mr Langridge for his deputation.

 

 

5 Chairman's Announcements

The Chairman thanked the Members who attended the ACCESS virtual investor day, which he commended as a very useful event for Members and invited Members to report back on any other training events they had attended:

 

·         Dr Bartle, Cllrs Taylor and Hiscock – all reported that they had attended the LGPS Fundamentals course and that they felt it was beneficial. 

 

·         Ms Gowland recommended the Public and Private Pensions Summit as one of the best events she had attended.

 

6 ACCESS Joint Committee Minutes - 6 September 2021 ACCESS Minutes of the meeting held on 6 September 2021

The minutes of the Access Joint Committee held on 6 September 2021 were received.

7 Governance - Internal Audit Progress Report 2021-12-10 Pension Fund Panel and Board - Internal Audit Progress Report
2021-12-10 Pension Fund Panel and Board - Internal Audit Progress Report November 2021 (Appendix 1) - draft

The Panel and Board noted a report of the Director of Corporate Operations (item 7 in the Minute Book) updating the Pension Fund Panel and Board on the progress of the Internal Auditors’ work programme for 2021/22. An audit has been completed on the administration of new members of the Pension Fund, showing substantial assurance in the controls in place. Further work is in progress for reviewing members leaving the Pension Fund, pensions payroll and benefit calculations, UPM (the pension administration software) and the Fund’s governance.

8 Governance - Pension Fund Administration Update 2021-12-10 PFPB Governance Admin Update

The Panel and Board noted a report of the Director of Corporate Operations (item 8 in the Minute Book) updating the Pension Fund Panel and Board on administration performance in the first six months of 2021/22 and other administrative issues.

 

Administration performance against key service standards is measured each month and in the first six months of 2021/22 Pension Services have delivered a 100% success rate against all standards and administration work has continued to be unaffected by the Covid-19 pandemic.

 

Employer year end returns are submitted to Pension Services and the data is then used to update pension records and produce annual benefit statements. Employers are measured for timeliness, financial control and data quality and any who are highlighted as a concern or who receive a red rating for data quality are required to complete a data validation exercise. Overall there has been a continued improvement in Employer performance for the Annual Returns process.

 

The Pension Regulator (TPR) requires schemes to complete an annual return providing details of the contributing employers and governance arrangements. Pension Services have demonstrated an improvement in both the common and conditional data scores which are reported annually to The Pension Regulator.

 

The McCloud remedy project work has continued in 2021/22. Data is required from all of the Pension Fund’s 337 employers, of which 24 remain outstanding and excellent progress has been made in contacting all outstanding employers with the result being that all employers are now engaged and are aware of what they need to provide. The actual McCloud remedy and the accompanying legislation has yet to be confirmed. It is anticipated that significant further work will be required once the remedy and accompanying legislation are in place.

 

 

9 Governance - Pension Fund Business Plan 2021-12-10 PFPB Business Plan
2021-12-10 PFPB - Pension-Fund-Business-Plan-33pp-v4

The Panel and Board received a report of the Director of Corporate Operations (item 9 in the Minute Book) presenting the proposed business plan and budget for 2022/23 to 2024/25. Following a review of the Pension Fund’s approach to reporting its Business Plan, the report has been expanded to include a number of other reports, such as the training plan and risk register, to produce a more consolidated document that links the Pension Fund’s activities to its budget. The Business Plan has also been expanded to importantly reflect that the majority of the Fund’s activity is its business-as-usual, as well the more one- off, project-based activities that are captured in the traditional business plan.

 

The budget for 2022/23 to 2024/25 has been prepared to reflect the costs of delivering the Pension Fund’s statutory responsibilities for the administration of the scheme and management of investments. The resources contained within the budget are sufficient to meet the Fund’s regulatory requirements and deliver at the standards for administration that are reported to the Panel and Board.

 

            RESOLVED:

 

a)    That the business plan and budget for 2022/23 to 2024/25 are approved.

 

10 Governance - Good Governance Review Update 2021-12-10 PFPB - good governance Statutory Statements

The Pension Fund Panel and Board received a report of the Director of Corporate Operations (item 10 in the Minute Book) providing an update on progress against the recommendations of the Scheme Advisory Board’s (SAB) Good Governance Review including the Fund’s documents for review that fulfil the requirements of the Good Governance review.

 

Since 2019, there have been three phases of the review, leading to the production of a series of recommendations.  Phase 3 of the reporting was agreed in February 2021 and built on the recommendations agreed in 2019 with further input from a range of scheme stakeholders and an action plan for the SAB and MHCLG (as was). The recommendations to date have not yet been translated into statutory guidance by Government, however the Pension Fund has taken the opportunity to continue to review its current governance arrangements in line with the outcome of the Good Governance review.

 

The Good Governance Review has introduced the concept of a Senior Responsible Officer for each LGPS fund. The Senior Responsible Officer is responsible for the delivery of the LGPS function in its entirety,  and be close enough to the running of the fund to have sight of all aspects of its business and be able to identify the necessary resources to deliver the business to the required standard. Following the changes to the Council’s senior management structure, the Deputy Chief Finance Officer to the Pension Fund will be the Senior Responsible Officer for the Pension Fund. This role does not change the responsibilities of the CFO of the Pension Fund, which remains with the Director of Corporate Operations.

 

The Pension Fund’s framework of governance documents now includes a Conflicts Policy following the best practice recommendations of the Good Governance Review. The proposed draft policy will require Pension Fund Panel and Board members and officers to complete a declaration of interest form each year.

 

Under the existing Funding Strategy Statement (FSS) and Employer Policy, 24 closed employers are on the Ongoing Orphan Funding Target (OOFT). These employers will leave orphan liabilities in the Fund when their last active member leaves as there is no ongoing employer to pay for those liabilities in the future. The Funding Strategy Statement, Investment Strategy Statement and Employer Policy have all been amended to reflect the review of the Fund’s Actuary, Aon, who have reviewed funding target for employers on the OOFT.

 

RESOLVED:

 

The Pension Fund Panel and Board noted the Fund’s progress against the SAB’s Good Governance review in the Shadow Governance Compliance Statement and approved the following documents that form the Fund’s Governance Framework:

·         Conflicts of Interest Policy

·         Funding Strategy Statement

·         Employer Policy

·         Administration Strategy Statement – including Decision Matrix

·         Business Plan, including the Fund’s Budget, Risk Register and Training Plan (included in item 9)

·         Investment Strategy Statement

·         Representation Policy

·         Communication Policy Statement

·         Governance Policy and Compliance Statement

 

 

11 Investment - Pension Fund Cash Monitoring Report and Annual Cash Investment Strategy 2022/2023 2021-12-10 PFPB Cash report

The Panel and Board considered a report of the Director of Corporate Operations (Item 11 in the Minute Book) on the Pension Fund’s cash balances and the Annual Cash Investment Strategy for those balances in 2022/23. The Annual Cash Investment Strategy has been prepared taking advice from the County Council’s treasury management advisors Arlingclose into account.

 

As agreed by the Pension Fund Panel and Board on 12 February 2021, the Director of Corporate Operations reviews the Pension Fund’s asset allocation to Protection assets on a quarterly basis, which is made up of Index-linked Gilts and cash. If the value of Index-linked Gilts is outside of the long-term strategic allocation of 22% by 5% (i.e. above 27% or below 17% of the total value of the Fund), the Pension Fund rebalances by adding to maintain the asset allocation to Protection assets. Since this change to the approach was agreed the actual allocation to Index Linked Gilts has remained above 17% of the Fund.

 

Officers recently approached Hymans Robertson for updated advice regarding this policy. As the Fund is approaching another actuarial valuation in 2022, there will be an opportunity at that time to review funding and investment plans. Hymans are of the opinion that taking potential actions now could potentially reduce the expected level of returns on the Fund’s assets ahead of the valuation and any strategic review. Therefore, Hymans have recommended to suspend the rebalancing on index-linked gilts until the 2022 Actuarial Valuation has been completed or there is a marked improvement in long term inflation pricing.

 

            RESOLVED:

 

(a)  The Annual Cash Investment Strategy for 2022/23 was approved.

(b)  The Annual Cash Investment Strategy for 2022/23 will be implemented from the date of this meeting for the remainder of 2021/22.

(c)  The Director of Corporate Operations is authorised to manage the Fund’s cash balance in accordance with the policy set out in the report.

(d)  That the current policy on rebalancing Index-linked gilts be suspended.

 

 

12 Exclusion of the Press and Public

RESOLVED:

 

            That the public be excluded from the meeting during the following items of business, as it is likely, in view of the nature of the business to be transacted or the nature of the proceedings, that if members of the public were present during these items there would be disclosure to them of exempt information within Paragraphs 3 of Part 1 of Schedule 12A to the Local Government Act 1972, and further that in all the circumstances of the case, the public interest in maintaining the exemption outweighs the public interest in disclosing the information, for the reasons set out in the reports. 

13 Confirmation of the Exempt Minutes of the Meeting held on 28 September 2021 2021-09-28 PFPB - Minutes - exempt
14 Governance - Cyber Security and Business Continuity 2021-12-10 PFPB Governance Cyber Security (EXEMPT)
2021-12-10 PFPB Governance Cyber Security Appendix 1
2021-12-10 PFPB Governance Cyber Security Appendix 2
2021-12-10 PFPB Governance Cyber Security Appendix 3
2021-12-10 PFPB - Minutes - exempt 48
15 Investment - Investment Update 2021-12-10 PFPandB investment performance v1
2021-12-10 PFPB - Minutes - exempt 49

Meeting Attendees

Councillor Alan Dowden photo
Committee Member
Councillor Alan Dowden

Liberal Democrat

Apologies

Profile
Councillor Dominic Hiscock photo
Committee Member
Councillor Dominic Hiscock

Liberal Democrat

Present, as expected

Profile
Councillor Alex Crawford photo
Committee Member
Councillor Alex Crawford

Labour

Present, as expected

Profile
Councillor Jacky Tustain photo
Labour Deputy
Councillor Jacky Tustain

Labour

Not required

Profile
Councillor Kim Taylor photo
Labour Deputy
Councillor Kim Taylor

Labour

Not required

Profile
Councillor Andrew Joy photo
Committee Member
Councillor Andrew Joy

Conservative

Apologies

Profile
Councillor David Drew photo
Conservative Deputy
Councillor David Drew

Conservative

Present, as substitute

Profile
Councillor Derek Mellor photo
Committee Member
Councillor Derek Mellor

Conservative

Present, as expected

Profile
Councillor Jonathan Glen photo
Committee Member
Councillor Jonathan Glen

Conservative

Present, as expected

Profile
Councillor Mark Kemp-Gee photo
Chairman
Councillor Mark Kemp-Gee

Conservative

Present, as expected

Profile
Councillor Rob Mocatta photo
Committee Member
Councillor Rob Mocatta

Conservative

Present, as expected

Profile
Councillor Tim Davies photo
Conservative Deputy
Councillor Tim Davies

Conservative

In attendance

Profile
Councillor Tom Thacker photo
Vice-Chairman
Councillor Tom Thacker

Conservative

Present, as expected

Profile
Co-opted Member
Cllr Paul Taylor

None

Absent

Co-opted Member
Liz Bartle

None

Present, as expected

Co-opted Member
Dr Clifford Allen

None

Present, as expected

Co-opted Member
Sarah Manchester

None

Apologies

Co-opted Member
Neil Wood

None

Present, as expected

Co-opted Member
Lindsay Gowland

None

Present, as expected

Monitor
Carolan Dobson

None

Copy docmts only

Co-opted Member
Cllr Cal Corkery

None

Apologies

Co-opted Member
Cllr Rob Harwood

None

Apologies

Previous Committee Meetings

Placeholder

28th Mar 2024 Hampshire Pension Fund Panel and Board

Placeholder

12th Dec 2023 Hampshire Pension Fund Panel and Board

Placeholder

29th Sep 2023 Hampshire Pension Fund Panel and Board

Placeholder

28th Jul 2023 Hampshire Pension Fund Panel and Board

Placeholder

24th Mar 2023 Hampshire Pension Fund Panel and Board

Placeholder

16th Dec 2022 Hampshire Pension Fund Panel and Board

Placeholder

30th Sep 2022 Hampshire Pension Fund Panel and Board

Placeholder

28th Jul 2022 Hampshire Pension Fund Panel and Board

Placeholder

25th Mar 2022 Hampshire Pension Fund Panel and Board

Placeholder

10th Dec 2021 Hampshire Pension Fund Panel and Board

Future Committee Meetings

Placeholder

19th Jul 2024 Hampshire Pension Fund Panel and Board

Placeholder

27th Sep 2024 Hampshire Pension Fund Panel and Board

Placeholder

13th Dec 2024 Hampshire Pension Fund Panel and Board

Placeholder

21st Mar 2025 Hampshire Pension Fund Panel and Board

Source

This meeting detail is from Hampshire County Council website