IPE's Netherlands Coverage – Page 161

  • Features

    Doctors funds' 'transition year'

    November 2005 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Taking the next big step

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    Developing from a pension fund into a fully-fledged commercial tiger does not happen overnight. Mn Services in Rijswijk knows all about it. Until 2001 Mn Services was an integral part of the Pension Fund for Metalworking and Mechanical Engineering. Four years ago Mn Services ‘broke loose’ from its parent and ...

  • Features

    Mn's gaze falls on UK and Europe

    November 2005 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Foreign investment increased

    November 2005 (Magazine)

  • Features

    PGGM sees long life in Levensloop

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    PGGM’s new pension fund subsidiary Careon Levensloop has finalised a seven-year outsourcing contract with KAS Bank and Ordina. The agreement - effective from 1 January 2006 - will see Ordina in charge of administrative tasks, while KAS facilitates the associated banking process. “We will offer products to our clients to ...

  • Features

    The perils of serving two masters

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    Anyone who has attempted to serve two masters knows that the risk of conflicts is enormous. Real success is only possible in two cases: where the two masters have no overlapping interests or when they have completely aligned interests. Dutch pension funds have a long history of serving multiple masters, ...

  • Features

    The case for keeping it simple

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    Pension funds are doing well in solving disputes with their members, and they are even improving. This is the view of Dutch Pensions Ombudsman Piet Keizer. “There is a clear trend towards better information and dealing with members’ complaints. A growing number of funds have their own complaints’ schemes, which ...

  • Features

    Funds in profile

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    DSM Pension Services Ewout Gillissen, senior investment manager The stock market success of speciality chemicals company DSM, the former petrochemical giant, is being mirrored by the financial success of its pension funds. After the divestment of the petrochemical segment to Saudi Arabia’s SABIC, the in-house pension management supplier DSM Pensions ...

  • Features

    The bull in the china shop

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    It is a new dawn over Eindhoven for the investment team for the Philips Pension Fund. This autumn it joined the thundering herd of Merrill Lynch Investment Managers (MLIM), one of the largest asset managers in the world with $478bn (e396bn)under management. The deal, completed in September, is a boon ...

  • Features

    Tailoring messages to members

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    Like many aspects of modern life, pensions are becoming less standardised and more complex, with individuals facing more choice and demanding more information tailored to their needs. As pension funds try to meet the requirements of their members, communication is becoming an increasingly important part of the service they provide. ...

  • Features

    More to communication than links

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    Consensus is growing both within and outside of the pension world that clearness and transparency about complex pension schemes is needed. Yet the quality of communication between funds and participants and pensioners is often criticised. Have pension funds and insurers not yet found the best way to communicate, or is ...

  • Features

    How well does FTK fit?

    November 2005 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Emerging market debt: a maturing asset class

    November 2005 (Magazine)

    Investors should consider emerging market debt (EMD) as a key component of a diversified portfolio. Despite various crises during the 1990s, EMD has outperformed versus all other asset classes over the last ten years (see Table 1). And, because the asset class is more closely aligned to other risk assets, ...

  • News

    ABP grows by €8.6bn to €186.9bn

    2005-10-14T03:39:00Z

    NETHERLANDS – Stichting Pensioenfonds ABP, Europe’s largest pension fund, got even bigger in the third quarter – growing by €8.6bn to €186.9bn with a 4.6% investment return.