Venue: Council Chamber, County Hall, Dorchester, DT1 1XJ. View directions
Contact: David Northover Email: david.northover@dorsetcouncil.gov.uk
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Apologies To receive any apologies for absence. Minutes: Apologies were received from Cllr Bobbie Dove, Bournemouth, Christchurch
and Poole Council. |
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To confirm the minutes of the meeting held on 30 November 2021. Minutes: The minutes of the meeting held on 30
November 2021 were confirmed by the Chairman. |
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Declarations of Interest To disclose any pecuniary,
other registrable or personal interest as set out in the adopted Code of
Conduct. In making their decision
councillors are asked to state the agenda item, the nature of the interest and
any action they propose to take as part of their declaration. If required, further advice
should be sought from the Monitoring Officer in advance of the meeting. Minutes: No declarations of disclosable pecuniary interests were made at the meeting. |
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Public Participation To receive questions or statements on the business of the
committee from town and parish councils and members of the public. Minutes: Questions and statements from town and parish
councils and members of the public are included in an appendix to these
minutes. |
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Questions from Members To receive questions or statements on the business of the committee from Dorset Council and
BCP Council elected members. Minutes: There were no questions from members. |
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URGENT ITEMS - Ukraine Situation To consider any items of business which the Chairman has had
prior notification and considers to be urgent pursuant to section 100B (4) b)
of the Local Government Act 1972. The reason for the urgency shall be recorded
in the minutes. Minutes: The following items of
business were considered by the Chairman as urgent pursuant to section 100B (4)
b) of the Local Government Act 1972. The item was considered
to be urgent because of the impact the Russian invasion of Ukraine could
have on investments. On behalf of all
members of the Committee, the Chairman condemned Russia’s unwarranted and
illegal war on Ukraine. The pension fund
had relatively limited exposure to Russia through holdings in an emerging
markets equity fund managed by Brunel Pension Partnership, the pension fund’s
Local Government Pension Scheme (LGPS) investment pooling manager. Before
the invasion approximately 3% by value of this pooled investment vehicle was
invested in Russian companies which for Dorset equated to approximately £5m or
0.13% of the pension fund’s total assets. Brunel were
committed to divesting fully from Russia and their underlying investment
managers had begun to divest before markets closed, with all remaining assets
written down to zero value. Noted |
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Independent Governance Adviser's Annual Report PDF 159 KB To consider the annual report of the pension fund’s independent governance adviser on the governance of the pension fund. Minutes: The Committee
received the annual update on governance compliance from Peter
Scales, MJ Hudson, the pension fund’s Independent Governance Adviser. Overall good
standard of governance had been maintained despite the pandemic and the
introduction of new pensions administration systems which were always extremely
challenging to implement. Significant changes
to the governance framework for LGPS funds were expected and these changes were
expected to lead to significant additional pressure on administering
authorities. Officers would
report to the next meeting of the Committee the results of a ‘stock take’
against the recommendations of the LGPS Scheme Advisory Board (SAB) good governance review. SAB were working
with government to get greater clarity on the potential implications of the
government’s ‘levelling up’ White Paper for LGPS funds. This was likely to be
another factor to consider as part of the review of investment strategy. References in
the White Paper to “local” investment were understood to mean countrywide and
it was questioned why this did not exclude London and the South East. Concerns
were also raised that the proposals could undermine the principle that
investment decisions were based primarily on the requirements of the pension
fund. It was suggested
that minutes of the Local Pension Board should be reported to the Committee and
an annual statement from the Local Pension Board should be included in the
pension fund’s annual report. Noted |
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Pensions Administration Report PDF 183 KB To consider the quarterly report on pension fund administration. Additional documents:
Minutes: The Committee
considered a report from officers on operational and administration matters
relating to the pension fund. Key Performance
Indicators (KPI) had been adversely impacted by the change in administration
system and staff shortages, but it was difficult to determine how much of any
underperformance was attributed each factor.
Improvements had been made but it was expected to take some months to
fully recover to previous levels of performance. Good progress had
been made implementing and developing the new system. There was regular contact
with the provider, Civica, who had responded well
when particular areas of concern had been raised with
them. Officers were confident that data going into the forthcoming actuarial
valuation would be of a good quality.
Interim updates between quarterly meetings could be provided to
Committee members to provide further assurance if required. Officers were
working with Human Resources (HR) colleagues to identify what could be done to
improve retention and recruitment, including a benchmarking survey of other
employers, reviewing the provision of training and development for staff and
assessing the impact of home working.
Retention and recruitment continued to be a challenge in all parts of
the council, not just pensions administration. Paul Kent, the
chairman of the Local Pension Board (LPB), intended to step down from this role
after the LPB’s next meeting on 23 March 2022.
Mr Kent’s experience and knowledge had been a great benefit to the
governance of the pension fund and a letter of thanks to him for his
contribution would be written. The
decision to appoint a remunerated independent chairman of the LPB as a
replacement for Mr Kent and, if yes, the level of remuneration would be
delegated to the Chairman and Vice-Chairman. Recommendations
regarding the LPB made by the Independent Governance Adviser in his annual
review would be adopted by the Committee.
There was a need to maintain good relationships between the Committee
and LPB, and to ensure a good two-way flow of information. Hymans Robertson
had been commissioned to review the pension fund’s administration strategy and
concluded that it was “an excellent document with no major concerns”. The Independent Governance Adviser described
it as a glowing endorsement
of the work done by officers and a good example for other pension funds to use
as a template. Resolved That: i.
a letter of thanks be written to Paul Kent who is
stepping down from his role as the chairman of the Local Pension Board. ii.
authority is delegated to the Chairman and
Vice-Chairman to review the need for a remunerated independent chairman of the
local pension board and, if yes, the level of remuneration. iii.
minutes
of the Local Pension Board shall be reported to the Committee on a quarterly
basis. iv.
an
annual statement from the Local Pension Board shall be included in the pension
fund’s annual report. |
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Independent Investment Adviser's Report PDF 129 KB To consider the quarterly report of the pension fund’s independent investment adviser on the
outlook for the pension fund’s investments. Minutes: The Committee
considered a report from Steve Tyson, MJ Hudson, the pension fund’s Independent
Investment Adviser, that gave his views on the economic background to the
pension fund’s investments, the outlook for different asset classes and key
market risks. Inflation was
expected to be higher for longer but not clear how high the peak would be and
how long the peak will last. The crisis
in Ukraine would lead to more upward pressure on inflation and the pension
fund’s inflation hedging strategy would need to be reviewed. In time it was
expected that markets would recover from the Ukraine crisis as had been the
case for previous crises, but markets were expected to experience a period of
volatility with modest returns for some time. The independent
investment adviser made clear that he would not advise buying Russian assets
until the environment had totally changed. The Brunel Pension Partnership
continued to prohibit its underlying investment managers from making any new
investments in Russian assets. Resolved That the pension fund’s inflation hedging strategy be reviewed. |
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Fund Administrator's report PDF 206 KB To consider the quarterly report on the funding position, the value and performance of investments and other related issues. Additional documents:
Minutes: The Committee
considered a report from officers on the pension fund’s funding position, asset
valuation, investment performance and asset allocation as at 31 December 2021. The value of the
pension fund’s assets ended the quarter at £3.8 billion compared to £3.3
billion at the start of the financial year, with nearly two thirds of those
assets now under the management of Brunel. Just under one third of the pension
fund’s liabilities were hedged against inflation sensitivity using just under
12% of assets to do so. If market
conditions stayed as they were for the remainder of the financial year, asset
values at 31 March 2022 were expected to be lower. In September 2021
the Committee approved indicative commitments of £60m each to Brunel’s cycle 3
private equity and infrastructure portfolios.
It was agreed to increase the commitment to the infrastructure portfolio
to £70m and to make an additional commitment of £20m to Brunel’s secured income
portfolio. These commitments would take
time to be drawn down and would be funded from cash balances or redemptions
from asset classes where the pension fund was above target, such as corporate
bonds. The funding
position estimated by the actuary was that the value of the pension fund’s
assets at 31 December 2021 covered 89% of the present value of liabilities. A
full review of the funding position would be undertaken by the pension fund’s
actuary as at 31 March 2022 and this would inform a review of the investment
strategy. To dampen down the impact of volatility in markets, the actuary makes
a smoothing adjustment to the market value of assets at the valuation date
based on asset values over the six month period around
the valuation date. Also, the rate used to discount expected liabilities to a
present value is based on expected future investment returns which take into
consideration current valuations. There
would be an opportunity for Committee members to raise questions directly with
the actuary in the coming months prior to the conclusion of the valuation. The investment return
for the quarter was 4.2% compared to the combined benchmark return of
4.1%. Over the longer term, annualised
returns for three years were 10.3% compared to the benchmark return of 9.5%, and the benchmark and
annualised returns for five years were 7.4%, matching the benchmark
return. Out performance of benchmarks
was fundamentally a result of the performance of underlying managers. Brunel warned that
many of its portfolios were expected to underperform their benchmarks in the
quarter to 31 March 2022 largely due to markets favouring ‘value’ stocks over
‘growth’ stocks. Brunel were having
frequent conversations with two underlying managers where there were
performance concerns but these had not yet reached a
position where termination was being considered. Resolved |
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Brunel Governance Update To receive an update from Cllr John Beesley in his capacity as the Committee’s
representative on the Brunel Oversight Board. Minutes: Cllr John Beesley,
the pension fund’s representative on the Brunel Oversight Board (BOB), updated
the Committee on governance matters relating to the investment pooling
partnership. BOB had met twice
since the last meeting of the Committee in September 2021. The main topic for
the first of these two meetings on 2 December 2021 had been feedback from the
Conference of Parties (COP) in Glasgow on climate change. The main topic for the second of these two
meetings on 27 January 2022 was Brunel’s budget for 2022-23. Future meetings would look at portfolio
underperformance and the climate action stock take. Noted |
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External Auditor's Report 2019/20 PDF 121 KB To consider the report of the external auditor for 2019/20. Additional documents: Minutes: The Committee considered the final report of Deloitte, the pension
fund’s independent external auditor, on the financial statements for
2019-20. No substantive matters and been
identified and an unqualified opinion would be issued. The auditor’s report for
2020-21 for the pension fund accounts and the main local authority accounts had
still not been received. Collectively the audit profession was trying to respond to the Redmond
review and build capacity. Deloitte had a lack of capacity, particularly in
local government audit, and were themselves also subject to a scheduled review
by the Financial Reporting Council (FRC) during which they were not expected to
sign off any audits. Deloitte’s audit
partner had offered to come to the Committee or respond to any further
questions. The delays had caused frustration for BCP and other scheme employers
whose own audits had been held up due to their reliance on Deloitte to complete
their work in relation to the pension fund accounts. Noted |
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Treasury Management Strategy 2022/23 PDF 116 KB To approve the
pension fund’s Treasury Management Strategy for 2022/23. Minutes: The Committee
considered a report by officers setting out the Treasury Management Strategy
(TMS) for 2022-23. Although the pension
fund had no strategic allocation to cash, cashflows needed to be managed to
ensure there was sufficient liquidity to meet liabilities as they fell due and to invest any surplus balances
appropriately. The TMS provided the
framework within which officers must manage these cashflows and cash
investments, and broadly followed the TMS for Dorset Council, the administering
authority for the pension fund, where applicable. The TMS for 2022-23
was largely unchanged from 2021-22, except for a proposed increase in the minimum
balance readily available in same day access bank accounts and/or money market
funds from £10m to £20m. This was to
better manage the risk of needing to borrow funds or sell assets at short
notice to meet liabilities and commitments, particularly private market capital
calls. Dorset
Council’s treasury management advisers, Arlingclose,
had a contract for three years with the ability for the Council to extend by a
further one year. Resolved That the Treasury
Management Strategy for 2022-23 be approved. |
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Dates for Future Meetings To confirm the dates for the meetings of the Committee in 2022/23: 10am
Tuesday 14 June 2022 – County Hall, Dorchester 10am
Wednesday 21 September 2022 – County Hall, Dorchester 10am
Tuesday 29 November 2022 – County Hall, Dorchester 10am
Tuesday 14 March 2023 – County Hall, Dorchester Minutes: Members were
disappointed that the meeting had not been held in the offices of one of the
pension fund’s investment managers in London as originally intended. The decision to change the meeting location
had been made because of concerns about accessibility for members of the public
to attend in person and the ability to webcast meetings from outside County Hall
as the technology was not very portable. Proposals for the location of the Committee
meetings and training sessions
for 2022-23 would be developed by the Chairman, Vice-Chairman, Executive
Director – Corporate Development and Service Manager - Treasury and Investments. Two options would
be considered (1) to hold training sessions in London but hold all meetings of
the Committee open to the public in County Hall or (2) look for venues in London
that will have the facilities to allow members of the public to attend in
person and for meetings to be webcast. Resolved That meetings be
held on the following dates and proposals for the location of the meetings and
training sessions for 2022-23 be developed by the Chairman, Vice-Chairman, Executive Director – Corporate Development
and Service Manager -
Treasury and Investments: ·
10am Tuesday 14 June 2022 ·
10am Wednesday 21 September 2022 ·
10am Tuesday 29 November 2022 ·
10am Tuesday 14 March 2023 |
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Exempt Business To move the exclusion of the press and the public for the following item
in view of the likely disclosure of exempt information within the meaning of
paragraph 3 of schedule 12 A to the Local Government Act 1972 (as amended). The public and the press will be asked to leave the meeting whilst the
item of business is considered. Minutes: Resolved That under Section
100A(4) of the Local Government Act 1972, the public be excluded from the
meeting for the business specified in minute 14 because it was likely that if
members of the public were present there would be disclosure to them of exempt
information as defined in Paragraph 3 of Part 1 of Schedule 12A to the Act and
the public interest in withholding the information outweighs the public interest
in disclosing that information. |
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Investment Strategy Review To discuss
the engagement of investment consultants to support a review of the pension
fund’s investment strategy following the conclusion of the triennial valuation. Minutes: The Committee discussed the need to engage investment consultants to
support the review of the pension fund’s investment strategy following the conclusion of the
triennial valuation. Resolved That officers commence a procurement exercise to engage investment consultants to
support a review of the pension fund’s investment strategy following the
conclusion of the triennial valuation. |
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Questions and Answers Minutes: Pension Fund Committee:
Questions from town and parish councils and members of the public Caz Dennett, Dorset Action
on Pensions Question 1 – Evidence of the effectiveness
of an Engagement Strategy (412 words) On 14 December 2021, a
delegation from South West Action on Pensions (SWAP) and members of the Brunel
Pension Partnership management team met together. During the meeting Brunel’s
Chief Responsible Investment Officer, Faith Ward, strongly emphasized her
commitment to their policy of ‘engagement’ with fossil fuel linked companies,
rather than to divesting funds from them. Although SWAP have a clear
preference for rapid and total divestment (by the end of 2023), we are
interested in how such ‘engagement’ with fossil fuel investments might lead to
some climate positive or net zero outcomes. In a recent podcast*, David
Vickers, Chief Investment Officer at Brunel, who was also present at the
meeting which I attended said: “We believe in engagement, but there comes a
point where, if you are not having an impact, you disinvest.” In 2021 Dr. Ellen Quigley was
commissioned by Cambridge University to research the advantages and
disadvantages of fossil fuel divestment, and in doing so to understand the
efficacy of engagement vs divestment in terms of de-carbonising the
University’s Pension Fund. The Fund totalling £3.5 billion is the largest
university endowment in Europe, and in 2019 2.8% was invested in the fossil fuel
sector. Her research found that
regarding shareholder engagement “on the basis of its historic evidence it
would not appear to be a sufficient tactic on its own for the scale and speed
of change required to decarbonise the fossil fuel sector”** Furthermore, “To be consistent
with the Paris Agreement goal, a large majority of proven fossil fuel reserves
would need to be left in the ground (a third of oil reserves, half of gas
reserves, and 80% of coal reserves) between 2010 and 2050 in order to keep within
a safe warming threshold. Research suggests that existing fossil fuel
infrastructure, in addition to that which is currently planned, permitted, or
under construction, would already exceed the carbon budget needed to retain a
66% chance of staying below 1.5˚C.” Question: Given that engagement is very unlikely to work with
fossil fuel companies when the core of their business is to extract and sell
fossil fuels for financial gain, and that since 2018 all major gas and oil
companies have approved projects that are not consistent with the Paris Climate
goals, will the Pension Committee ask Brunel Pension Partnership to provide
incontrovertible evidence that their policy of engagement is effective in
altering the core business models of the oil 7 gas giants that are set to
destroy our planet? *David Vickers Podcast:
https://www.brunelpensionpartnership.org/2021/12/14/net-zero-porfolios-not-enough-says-david-vickers-in-lgim-podcast-what-net-zero-means-to-brunel/
**University of Cambridge
Report https://www.cam.ac.uk/sites/www.cam.ac.uk/files/sm6_divestment_report.pdf
Response: The Dorset County Pension Fund conducts a major review of its long-term investment strategy every three years. This process begins with an analysis of our overall funding position conducted by our actuaries, Barnet Waddingham. It will be based on the value of our assets ... view the full minutes text for item 156. |