All Features articles – Page 326

  • Features

    Hard times for optimists

    November 2003 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Head-to-head

    November 2003 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Risk premiums to stabilise

    November 2003 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Starting on ten years of reform

    November 2003 (Magazine)

    In March 2002 the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia disappeared as its two remaining republics, Serbia and Montenegro, opted for a looser union with their own currencies, economic policies and customs procedures. While the union retains some federal structures such as foreign and defence ministries and a joint president, other institutions ...

  • Features

    More than semantics

    November 2003 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Spanish system 'still solvent'

    November 2003 (Magazine)

  • Features

    The trouble with style

    November 2003 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Why we all will be speaking IAS 19 soon

    October 2003 (Magazine)

    With apologies to yet another variation on those immortal words from Star Trek, it’s just possible that pension accounting treatment in Europe might become the trend-setter for the world, surpassing even the US Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) that started it all almost 20 years ago. In December 1985, the ...

  • Features

    Swiss rate fixed at 2.25%

    October 2003 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Russian system creaks into action

    October 2003 (Magazine)

    Russia’s pension reform has been slow in coming. For the past eight years, a three-pillar system has gradually been taking shape, and over the past two years, developments to the second pillar appear to have now been finalised. Back in January, President Putin signed the law to allow private asset ...

  • Features

    Jury is out on regulators' actions

    October 2003 (Magazine)

    Whether you are reading a newspaper on the London underground or in a Milan coffee shop, the headlines may be different, but the translation is the same. “Pensions in crisis”… “Pension industry time bomb”…. Equities markets have been in relative free fall since the turn of the new millennium as ...

  • Features

    New adviser

    October 2003 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Politics back on the agenda

    October 2003 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Latvia and Estonia streak ahead

    October 2003 (Magazine)

    Lithuania’s private pensions system differs in some technical respects from its Latvian and Estonian counterparts, including the completely voluntary nature of the second pillar and its use of a system of individualised accounts. Its compatriots are nevertheless some years ahead in establishing private provision. Latvia has had third-pillar funds in ...

  • Features

    Preparing for battles ahead

    October 2003 (Magazine)

    It may not be saying much, but custody has never been so exciting as it is in Germany at the moment. For one thing, the master KAG concept is putting global custodians on the map as nothing has before. And, of course, there is matter of State Street digesting the ...

  • Features

    Revised legislation aims to strengthen fund assets

    October 2003 (Magazine)

    In Austria, pensions have hit the headlines over the past year. The run-up to June’s passing of the pensions reform bill by the Austrian parliament was marked by national strikes and demonstrations as points of the bill were hotly opposed. In the end, concessions had to be made on key ...

  • Features

    Shun equities, say UBS analysts

    October 2003 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Private pensions' two-pronged approach

    October 2003 (Magazine)

    After lagging behind its neighbours in private pensions and investment funds provisions, Lithuania has passed a comprehensive set of financial laws allowing for second-pillar pensions and clearing the way for third-pillar pensions and investment funds to operate on a level footing with life insurance. The significant legal changes took place ...