Labour forces through pension investment powers despite backlash
Source: telegraph.co.uk
TL;DR
- Labour government won Commons votes on 15 April 2026 to reject Lords amendments and retain reserve power over private pension investments in the Pension Schemes Bill.
- The power caps default funds at 10% in qualifying private market assets and 5% in UK assets to enforce Mansion House Accord goals despite industry opposition.
- Savers face potential government direction of £400bn pots, raising fears of lower returns and state overreach after Lords tried to block it.[[1]](https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commons/2026-04-15/debates/D93794FC-5F61-4C4B-B7F8-85CC0F2BC060/PensionSchemesBill)[[2]](https://www.cityam.com/pet-projects-tories-slam-pension-mandation-powers-as-labour-refuse-to-back-down)
The story at a glance
The Labour government pushed through rejection of over 80 House of Lords amendments to the Pension Schemes Bill in a Commons debate and votes on 15 April 2026, securing powers to direct how private workplace pension default funds invest. Key figures include Pensions Minister Torsten Bell, who defended the move, and Shadow Pensions Secretary Helen Whately, who attacked it as a power grab. This is reported now after the Commons overturned Lords blocks on the controversial "reserve power" amid ongoing industry backlash. The bill builds on prior Conservative efforts like auto-enrolment and the voluntary Mansion House Accord.[[1]](https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commons/2026-04-15/debates/D93794FC-5F61-4C4B-B7F8-85CC0F2BC060/PensionSchemesBill)[[2]](https://www.cityam.com/pet-projects-tories-slam-pension-mandation-powers-as-labour-refuse-to-back-down)
Key points
- Government retained a "reserve power" in Clause 2 to require defined contribution default funds—covering most new contributions—to hold up to 10% in qualifying private assets (e.g. private equity, infrastructure) and 5% in UK assets if voluntary progress stalls.[[1]](https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commons/2026-04-15/debates/D93794FC-5F61-4C4B-B7F8-85CC0F2BC060/PensionSchemesBill)
- Power applies mainly to Mansion House Accord signatories (17 major providers), with safeguards like a "savers' interest test," time limits, reporting, and asset-class neutrality—no directing to specific sectors or projects.[[1]](https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commons/2026-04-15/debates/D93794FC-5F61-4C4B-B7F8-85CC0F2BC060/PensionSchemesBill)
- Commons divisions saw Labour majorities (e.g. 278-158 on amendment 1, 275-159 on amendment 35), disagreeing with Lords attempts to remove the power after peers voted 217-113 against it in March.[[3]](https://votes.parliament.uk/Votes/Commons/Division/2316)[[1]](https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commons/2026-04-15/debates/D93794FC-5F61-4C4B-B7F8-85CC0F2BC060/PensionSchemesBill)
- Bill also covers pension consolidation into £25bn+ "megafunds," small pots solutions, value-for-money rules, and superfunds, but investment powers drew most fire.[[2]](https://www.cityam.com/pet-projects-tories-slam-pension-mandation-powers-as-labour-refuse-to-back-down)
- Industry groups (Pensions UK, ABI, PMI, Aviva, BlackRock) and experts oppose mandation, citing risks to returns and trustee duties; UK pensions hold low private assets (~5% home bias vs. peers).[[1]](https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commons/2026-04-15/debates/D93794FC-5F61-4C4B-B7F8-85CC0F2BC060/PensionSchemesBill)
Details and context
The reserve power addresses a "collective action problem": schemes compete on low costs over long-term returns, under-investing in higher-return private markets despite industry consensus via the 2023 Mansion House Accord. Government amendments cap the power explicitly and limit it to Accord goals, claiming it boosts diversification for savers in a fragmented £400bn+ system built on auto-enrolment.[[1]](https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commons/2026-04-15/debates/D93794FC-5F61-4C4B-B7F8-85CC0F2BC060/PensionSchemesBill)
Opposition argues it's a shift from voluntary to coercive, potentially worse than status quo; even ex-Labour figures like Ed Balls and Tory chancellors lobbied on it. Lords scrutiny forced concessions, but Commons majority restored it—bill now advances, possibly with ping-pong.[[2]](https://www.cityam.com/pet-projects-tories-slam-pension-mandation-powers-as-labour-refuse-to-back-down)
Trade-offs: higher potential returns (e.g. Canada/Sweden models) vs. risks of government interference eroding fiduciary duty; applies to workplace DC schemes, not all pensions.[[1]](https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commons/2026-04-15/debates/D93794FC-5F61-4C4B-B7F8-85CC0F2BC060/PensionSchemesBill)
Key quotes
Torsten Bell, Pensions Minister: "To do so [accept Lords amendments] would be to let savers down, to ignore the strong consensus about what is in savers’ interests, and to disregard the barriers that we all know are holding back delivery on that consensus."[[2]](https://www.cityam.com/pet-projects-tories-slam-pension-mandation-powers-as-labour-refuse-to-back-down)
Mel Stride, Shadow Chancellor: "Your savings should be invested in your best interests – not to fund the pet projects of Rachel Reeves."[[2]](https://www.cityam.com/pet-projects-tories-slam-pension-mandation-powers-as-labour-refuse-to-back-down)
Why it matters
The stakes involve trillions in UK pension assets, where government direction could steer capital to growth areas like infrastructure but risks politicising savers' retirement security. For pension holders, it means possible higher returns from diversification—or lower if mandates override trustees—but mainly affects future workplace DC contributions in large schemes. Watch if bill passes fully by session end, any further Lords pushback, or industry legal challenges; power use remains a future "reserve," not immediate.[[1]](https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commons/2026-04-15/debates/D93794FC-5F61-4C4B-B7F8-85CC0F2BC060/PensionSchemesBill)