Agenda, decisions and minutes
Venue: Remote attendance meeting
Contact: Janet Kelly 01352 702301 Email: janet.kelly@flintshire.gov.uk
Media
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Declarations of Interest (Including Conflicts of Interest) To receive any Declarations and advise Members accordingly. Additional documents: Decision: The Chairman confirmed he had family members as members of the Pension Fund and he has applied to become a member of the Fund. Cllr Swash also confirmed he is a member of the Fund, Hawarden Community Council and University and College Union. Cllr Shallcross confirmed he is a member of the Fund and Saltney Town Council. Cllr Wren confirmed he has applied to become a member of the Fund and Connah’s Quay Town Council. Cllr Wren and the Chairman are members of Flintshire County Council’s Constitution Committee, which was highlighted during item 6. There were no other declarations of interest.
Minutes: The Chairman confirmed he had family members as members of the Pension Fund and he has applied to become a member of the Fund. Cllr Swash also confirmed he is a member of the Fund, Hawarden Community Council and University and College Union. Cllr Shallcross confirmed he is a member of the Fund and Saltney Town Council. Cllr Wren confirmed he has applied to become a member of the Fund and Connah’s Quay Town Council. Cllr Wren and the Chairman are members of Flintshire County Council’s Constitution Committee, which was highlighted during item 6. There were no other declarations of interest.
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To confirm as a correct record the minutes of the last meeting held on the 15 June 2022.
Additional documents: Decision: The minutes of 15 June 2022 were received, approved and will be signed by the Chairman once the updates are made. Minutes: Mr Hibbert asked whether his correction note for the previous Committee minutes was accepted. Mrs Fielder and Mrs McWilliam said this was being updated. The minutes of the meeting of the Committee held on 15 June 2022 were agreed. RESOLVED: The minutes of 15 June 2022 were received, approved and will be signed by the Chairman once the updates are made. |
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Clwyd Pension Fund Annual Report 2021/22 PDF 87 KB To provide Committee Members with the Clwyd Pension Fund’s draft Annual Report and Accounts for 2021/22, for consideration and to make Members aware of the response to the 2021/22 Audit Enquiries letter Additional documents:
Decision: (a) The Committee considered the Fund’s draft Annual Report for 2021/22 including the draft Statement of Accounts. (b) Members noted the Audit Enquiries letter and response Minutes: Mrs Fielder confirmed that the 2021/22 annual report was due to be published before 1 December 2022 which included the audited accounts. She thanked Mercer for their support in the production of the Annual Report due to the departure of the Fund Accountant in April 2022. Mrs Fielder explained that Mr Ferguson, the Fund’s Section 151 Officer had reviewed the accounts and any comments from him had been taken into account. She also confirmed that the Fund complied with the CIPFA guidance produced in 2019 called “ Preparing the Annual report” as much as was able. Mrs Fielder went through the annual reporting highlighting a number of areas including the following key points: - The Independent Adviser’s report and Pension Board report highlighted the approval of the cyber policy, excellent progress on the Fund’s responsible investment priorities and targets as well as the continued improvement in administration despite the rise in case numbers. - The administration report in appendix 4 reflected that, since the pandemic, employees continued to work from home during 2021/22. Productivity remained high and the number of cases completed exceeded 31,000 during the year. The registration for the member self-service increased from 36.1% to 48.4%. 52 of the 54 employers in the Fund now used iConnect. - At 31 March 2022, the Fund had maintained a fully funded position as per pages 83 to 86 in the Funding and Flightpath item. As the Fund was in a valuation year, the funding position would be formally reviewed, and the risk management framework would monitor the impact of rising inflation and interest rates which continued after the accounting year end, and these will be considered as part of the assumptions setting. - The Fund performed well in the year as outlined on pages 85 to 103 as the Fund achieved an investment return for the year of 13.3% against the Fund benchmark of 9.1%. The local authority average for this figure was 8.6%. This placed the Fund second in the universe of peer LGPS Funds. - Highlights were the best ideas portfolio which achieved 20.3% and the private markets portfolio which returned 26.4% in aggregate, of which private equity returned 36.0% and the local impact portfolio returned 40.3%. In contrast, global and emerging market equities returned 2.3%, which was a reversal of the previous year’s return of 42.2% when private markets only managed to return 4.6%. - The Fund continued to make commitments to private market assets favouring those with a sustainable impact or local remit. - During the year, more assets were transitioned to the WPP, namely emerging market equities. The 10% strategic allocation was now managed by Russell Investments which brought the Fund’s total investments in the WPP to 32%. - The fund accounts were shown on pages 104 to 139. The main areas to note were that: o Assets which included cash but excluded net assets increased from £2.2 billion to £2.5 billion. o Contributions from employees and employers increased by £3.4 million. o Transfers ... view the full minutes text for item 14. |
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Stewardship Code Submission PDF 127 KB To provide Committee Members with the draft
Stewardship Code submission for consideration and to delegate
approval of the final version to the Head of Clwyd Pension
Fund. Additional documents: Decision: (a) The Committee considered the contents of the draft submission. (b) The Committee delegated responsibility for approving the final submission to the Head of Clwyd Pension Fund. Minutes: Mr Latham introduced this report and highlighted the two recommendations on page 185. The appendix included the draft Stewardship Report which would need to be submitted by the end of October, ahead of the next Committee in November, hence the reason the Committee were being asked to consider it at this meeting and delegate responsibility to make any final changes to the Head of Clwyd Pension Fund. He added the following key points: - The drafting of the Stewardship Report had been supported by Mercer and contained matters the Fund already does, had done in the past, or planned to do in the future. - The Fund were part of the WPP which had already successfully submitted a report for the Stewardship Code earlier this year. - Two thirds of the Fund’s assets were held outside the WPP, so Mr Latham believed it was right for the Fund to also become a signatory of the Code. - After submission, the Financial reporting Council (FRC) would make comments and suggestions for improvements, regardless of whether the submission was successful or not. If it is successful, the Fund would need to demonstrate ongoing development and improvements, as they are required to reapply annually to retain signatory status. - Mr Latham highlighted that principle 1 included a definition of what stewardship is - “Signatories’ purpose, investment beliefs, strategy, and culture enable stewardship that creates long-term value for clients and beneficiaries leading to sustainable benefits for the economy, the environment and society”. - Paragraph 1.07 highlighted the four main sections and the 12 underlying principles. - Paragraph 1.09 to 1.12 highlighted the main areas and how they were addressed through the Fund or the WPP. - Paragraph 1.13 onwards gave key points to note as part of the submission. Mr Latham believed a particularly strong area of the Funds submission was in relation to the private markets portfolios where the Fund has a sustainable focus.
RESOLVED:
(a) The Committee considered the contents of the draft submission. (b) The Committee delegated responsibility for approving the final submission to the Head of Clwyd Pension Fund. |
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To provide Committee Members with an update on
governance related matters. To ask the Committee to consider and
recommend to Council proposed changes to the Council’s
Constitution and Pension Board Protocol, and to consider and
approve an updated Scheme of Delegation. Additional documents:
Decision: (a) The Committee considered and noted the update. (b) The Committee considered the proposed changes to the Council’s Constitution and Pension Board Protocol, relating to pension fund related responsibilities and recommended the proposed changes for consideration by Constitution and Democratic Services Committee and then approval by the Council. (c) The Committee approved the proposed changes to the Delegations of Functions to Officers Schedule.
Minutes: Mr Latham highlighted the recommendations and the following key points to the Committee: - The outcome of the Pension Board effectiveness survey was summarised in appendix 3. - The recommendations included proposed changes to the Constitution and Pension Board Protocol as outlined in paragraphs 1.04 to 1.09. The key changes proposed moving responsibilities from the previous Chief Executive to the Head of Clwyd Pension Fund. They also added the Corporate Manager for Human Resources and Organisational Development to the Advisory Panel, replacing the Chief Executive. The Monitoring Officer had considered the changes and supported them. The next steps would be consideration by the Council’s Constitution and Democratic Services Committee, before going to Flintshire County Council for approval. At this point the Chair and Councillor Wren highlighted that they were members of the Constitution and Democratic Services Committee but Mr Lathan and Mrs McWilliam, the Independent Adviser felt there was no conflict in those roles, and if anything it would be helpful for them to be there. - An update from the Scheme Advisory Board was in appendix 5. - As shown in paragraph 1.11, there were new appointments following the many resignations of ministers of the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Community. - Paragraph 1.13 had information about a new Supreme Court judgement which would likely impact both the Fund and employers. The LGA and SAB were aware of the issue and Mr Latham said the Fund may be required to make retrospective changes to records including benefit calculations for this. It is hoped that there might be national guidance in due course. - Future training events were outlined in paragraph 1.14 and Mr Latham asked for the Committee members to contact Mrs Fielder if they wished to attend. The training on the Investment Strategy Review was due to take place on 5th October and he emphasised that this was essential training and important for members to attend. - A key risk relates to the difficulties with recruitment and retention. This matter was being considered by the Advisory Panel given the impact it is having on the Fund. Following Mr Hibbert’s concerns raised and discussed at the last meeting regarding Michael Lynk’s letter on Palestine, Mr Hibbert suggested that the Fund reviewed the ‘Social’ part of ESG relating to the companies the Fund is invested in. Mr Latham highlighted work was ongoing with the WPP and Robeco on this matter. Mrs Fielder added that the WPP Responsible Investment group meets regularly with Robeco to discuss engagement themes and the stocks and shares that are being voted and engaged on within these areas, and she referred to the appendices in agenda item nine. RESOLVED:
(a) The Committee considered and noted the update. (b) The Committee considered the proposed changes to the Council’s Constitution and Pension Board Protocol, relating to pension fund related responsibilities and recommended the proposed changes for consideration by Constitution and Democratic Services Committee and then approval by the Council. (c) The Committee approved the proposed ... view the full minutes text for item 16. |
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Administration and Communications Update PDF 176 KB To provide Committee Members with an update on
administration and communication matters. Additional documents:
Decision: The Committee noted the update. Minutes: Mrs Williams highlighted this item of the agenda was for note and talked through the following key points. - The team were busy with business as usual, the McCloud programme, national pension board dashboard preparation and the re-calculation of member benefits as a result of the retrospective 2021/22 pay award. - The resource issues were outlined in paragraph 2.01 which detailed the number of vacancies the Fund had available and any appointments made. Since the paper was drafted, the Fund had met with HR advisors and were in the process of improving the job advert wording to try to better attract candidates. For example, this included changes to job titles to incorporate the word “administration” so it would be highlighted on more job searches. The adverts were due to go live in the next few weeks. Cllr Hughes asked whether the Fund had thought about hiring an apprentice. Mrs Williams confirmed that the Fund currently had two apprentices already, so no more were taken on this year as the current focus was on recruiting more experienced team members. Mrs Williams then presented training slides regarding the national pensions dashboard and highlighted the following: - The development of the national pensions dashboard applies to all pension schemes (not just the LGPS) but the session focused on how it affected the Clwyd Pension Fund. - The dashboard project is being run by the Department of Work and Pensions; it will allow individuals to access all of their pension schemes’ information in one place to help plan for retirement and increase engagement. It is designed for members who have not yet retired (active and deferred members) - not for pensioners. - The Pensions Regulator, Department of Work and Pensions, HM Treasury, the FCA, dashboard system providers, scheme managers and administration software providers all need to work together on this project in order for it to be delivered on time. - The requirements are being set out in legislation compelling schemes to provide information through a dashboard. Hence the Fund was required to prepare data to connect to the pensions dashboards eco-system. - Non-retired members would have access to pension arrangement details, employment details, accrued pension and estimated retirement income. However, limitations within this dashboard were expected so Mrs Williams was keen to promote the Fund’s Member Self Service as this increased engagement directly with members. - All public sector schemes are required to be onboarded to the pension dashboard infrastructure by September 2024, albeit this did not mean members would get access by September 2024. The date for going live is expected to be around the end of 2024. - Also one element of data, called value data, did not need to be provided until April 2025, because of the ongoing work on the McCloud programme meaning this information may not be ready by September 2024. - Once the pensions dashboard goes live, a member would log onto the dashboard, verify their information and the details would be sent to the Pensions Finder ... view the full minutes text for item 17. |
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Investment and Funding Update PDF 144 KB To provide Committee Members with an update on
investment and funding matters for the Clwyd Pension
Fund. Additional documents:
Decision: The Committee noted the update. Minutes: The Committee noted the update. |
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To provide Committee Members with an update on
pooling investments in Wales matters. Additional documents: Decision: The Committee noted the update and discussed the JGC agenda. Minutes: Mr Latham congratulated the Chairman on his new position as Vice Chair of the WPP for a 12 month period. Mr Latham highlighted that the sustainable equity fund had been approved by the JGC and this was something that had been instigated by this Committee. The next step is the FCA would review the submission carefully to ensure there was no greenwashing and it was noted this could take some time. Mr Latham hoped that the Fund would be able to invest in the sustainable offering once it had completed its investment strategy review. Lastly, Mr Latham highlighted the ongoing work on private markets which Mrs Fielder was also heavily involved with. This was crucial given that the Fund had 27% of assets in private markets. RESOLVED:
The Committee noted the update and discussed the JGC agenda. |
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Economic and Market Update, and Performance Monitoring Report PDF 106 KB To provide Committee Members with an economic
and market update, and performance of the Fund and Fund
Managers. Additional documents:
Decision: The Committee noted the performance of the Fund over periods to the end of June 2022 along with the Economic and Market update which effectively set the scene. Minutes: Mr Harkin noted the following key points:
- He emphasised the difficult period for all assets over the quarter to 30 June 2022 with the exception of commodities which had performed strongly. Over this period, there had been pressure on equity markets which trended downwards as rising bond yields meant the present value of future earnings decreased. - Over the quarter, the Fund’s total market value decreased by c£185 million to £2,280.2 million. He believed that the Fund’s assets had been resilient during a difficult time due to the diversified investment strategy overall. - Despite that, the longer-term figures for the Fund’s performance were still strong on a relative basis and the Fund had been protected through the flightpath strategy through difficult economic environments. - The biggest challenge for the Fund currently was the inflationary pressure given that the 12 month CPI rate for the UK increased to 9.4% in June 2022. It was crucial to ensure that the Fund was protected, as far as possible, in the short-term against this type of inflationary pressure. - It was hoped that the initial thoughts regarding the Investment Strategy Statement would be brought to the next Committee meeting in November but as it stood the Fund had a robust investment strategy.
RESOLVED:
The Committee noted the performance of the Fund over periods to the end of June 2022 along with the Economic and Market update which effectively set the scene. |
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Funding, Flight-Path and Risk Management Framework PDF 114 KB To update Committee Members on the funding
position, and the implementation of the Flight path and risk
management framework Additional documents: Decision: The Committee noted the update and considered the contents of the report. Minutes: Mr Middleman emphasised Mr Harkin’s point regarding the inflationary pressures on the Fund and noted the following key points:
- At 31 March 2022 (at the valuation date), the funding level was estimated to be 101% and despite the challenging investment environment, the Fund was expected to still be ahead of the target funding level of 95% by 2% at 30 June 2022. - The figures within the report were based on an update from the 2019 actuarial valuation as Mercer were currently in the middle of updating the 2022 actuarial valuation. - The April 2023 pension increase could result in a possible 10%+ increase in member benefits. This would be beneficial for members but would put a strain on the Fund as it would increase the liabilities and some allowance for this would be made in the valuation. - The changes in interest rates were noted. Mr Middleman confirmed this matter and how the Fund would deal with this would be discussed at the next FRMG meeting in the context of how it will affect funding and the flightpath. - As noted in the report, the equity protection had been successful for the Fund in the last quarter despite the challenging period. Mr Middleman believed the Fund was in the best position at the moment due to the protections in place from the funding and flightpath strategy.
The Bank of England had a target to reduce the rate of inflation. Mr Latham therefore asked whether Mr Middleman believed that this was achievable. Mr Middleman said that for the 2022 valuation, it was assumed that the Bank of England would not meet its 2% CPI target as quickly as the Bank of England were stating, but it is not unreasonable that it could be met in, say, 5 years which is what has been built into the provisional assumptions. Reducing inflation more quickly would be positive in terms of the Fund’s liabilities (all other things equal).
RESOLVED:
The Committee noted the update and considered the contents of the report. |
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LOCAL GOVERNMENT (ACCESS TO INFORMATION) ACT 1985 - TO CONSIDER THE EXCLUSION OF THE PRESS AND PUBLIC RESOLVED That the press and public be excluded for the remainder of the meeting for the following items by virtue of exempt information under paragraph(s) 14 and 18 of Part 4 of Schedule 12A of the Local Government Act 1972 (as amended).
Additional documents: |
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Cyber Strategy work programme and Cyber Hygiene Guidelines
To provide Committee Members with an update on
the Fund’s cyber strategy work programme and the Fund’s
Cyber Hygiene Guidelines for noting. Decision: This item of the agenda was presented and discussed. Minutes: This item of the agenda was presented and discussed.
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