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Employment UK
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August 28, 2025
Pension Trustees Warned To Better Vet Cyber Resilience
Pension funds trustees must demand the right evidence on cyber resilience after incidents at Marks & Spencer, Harrods and the Co-op showed how damaging security breaches can be, according to best practice guidance released by a pensions administrator.
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August 28, 2025
MPs Urged To Back Amendment On Pensions Inflation Rules
British lawmakers have been urged to back an amendment to draft pensions legislation that will allow retirement benefits for older pensioners to rise with inflation.
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August 28, 2025
Fieldfisher Steers Asset Advisory Biz On Employee Ownership
The founders of alternative asset advisory firm Albourne said Thursday that they have sold the company to its employees, in a deal advised by Fieldfisher LLP.
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August 28, 2025
Pensions Body Urges Rethink On Pension Investment Powers
The largest trade body for the U.K. retirement sector has hit out at plans by the government that will effectively allow it to direct investment of pension funds.
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August 28, 2025
FCA Names Pensions Exec As New Chair For Small Biz Panel
The Financial Conduct Authority said Thursday that it has appointed pensions executive Will Self as chair of its advisory panel for small business matters as the regulator help the sector explore new technology.
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August 27, 2025
Russell Brand Says LA Sexual Assault Claims 'Dishonest'
Comedian Russell Brand has denied sexually assaulting a woman at his former home in Los Angeles in 2008, telling a London court that the woman's allegations are "fundamentally dishonest."
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August 27, 2025
FCA Clarifies Its Rules For Workplace Savings Accounts
The Financial Conduct Authority warned Wednesday that employers who encourage employees to open workplace savings accounts must comply with its regime on financial advertising, according to a statement clarifying the rules.
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August 27, 2025
Data Biz Loses Fight Over Ex-Exec's £797K Share Options
A former executive of GlobalData PLC has won his claim over share options allegedly worth £797,000 ($1.1 million) as a London court ruled that it would be "unconscionable" for the business not to honor them after he left.
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August 27, 2025
Designer Loses Bid To Claim Unpaid Royalties Over Typeface
A London judge has ruled that a font designer was abusing the court process by bringing a claim for unpaid royalties against a type foundry because it related to matters they had already settled.
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August 27, 2025
Call For More Clarity In Pensions To Aid Neurodiverse Adults
Improving the clarity of communication and language used for savers in the pensions sector would improve accessibility for neurodiverse adults, a U.K. trade body has said.
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August 27, 2025
HSF Kramer Guides Fragrance Co.'s £134M Pension Deal
The U.K. subsidiary of flavor and fragrance giant Givaudan International SA has agreed a full-scheme pension buy-in with Aviva PLC that is worth £134 million ($180 million), the insurer said Wednesday.
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August 26, 2025
Lloyd's Insurer Beats Manager's Whistleblower Appeal
A Lloyd's syndicate has beaten an underwriter's attempt to resurrect his whistleblowing claim over alleged fraud after a London appellate tribunal didn't see any legal errors in a lower tribunal's analysis of his case.
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August 26, 2025
UK Regulator Saves Pension Scheme From Insolvency
The U.K.'s retirement savings watchdog said Tuesday it was able to secure £7 million ($9.4 million) in backing for a beleaguered staff pension scheme, after the plan's original sponsor went bust.
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August 26, 2025
Pension Funds Join £3B Funding For Infrastructure Project
A coalition of U.K. pension funds has backed a £3 billion ($4 billion) funding package for a major utilities project in northwest England following a government-led initiative to get the sector to invest more in the economy.
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August 26, 2025
UK Savers Mull Crypto-Investment For Retirement, Aviva Says
More than a quarter of British savers would consider investing in cryptocurrency as part of their retirement planning, insurance giant Aviva said Tuesday.
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August 26, 2025
Squire Patton Guides Textiles Co. On £11M Pension Deal
The pension plan of bedding manufacturer John Cotton Group Ltd. has agreed an £11 million ($15 million) full-scheme buy-in with Just Group, the financial services company said on Tuesday.
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August 22, 2025
HMRC Tightens Pension Tax Relief Claims By Higher Earners
The U.K. is restricting pension tax relief claims for higher earners in a change coming into effect next month, Britain's tax authority said.
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August 22, 2025
UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London
This past week in London has seen football manager Bruno Lage sue the owner of Olympique Lyonnais and Botafogo football clubs, luxury fashion brand Christian Dior Couture target a jewelry business trading under the same name, and a Russian motorsports promoter take action against Formula One after it canceled its Russian Grand Prix in 2022.
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August 22, 2025
Pension Body Opposes UK Gov't Plan For Mandated Investing
The government must drop its plan to introduce a "reserve power" that will allow it to force pension funds into making U.K. investments, a trade body said Friday.
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August 22, 2025
Hundreds Of Civil Servants To Strike Over Office Closures
More than a thousand civil servants will go on strike in September over plans by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government to close several offices, the Public and Commercial Services Union said on Friday.
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August 22, 2025
UK State Pension Could Rise 4.6% Under Triple Lock Pledge
The state pension could rise by £551 ($746) a year for Britons in 2026 under the so-called triple lock, piling additional costs on taxpayers, a consultancy warned on Friday.
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August 22, 2025
Police Officers Win Bid To Revive GDPR Breach Claims
A group of police officers can revive their group action over their annual pension statements being posted to the wrong address, as an appeals court found on Friday that the error had breached their rights to privacy.
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August 22, 2025
Solicitor Cleared Of Misconduct Over Misleading Clients
A solicitor accused of misleading clients for months about the outcome of a hearing he had lost was cleared of misconduct by a tribunal Friday.
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August 21, 2025
Law Firms Underprepared For New Pay Gap Reporting Rules
Law firms are ahead when it comes to reporting data on their ethnicity pay gaps — but they might not be prepared for new measures that the government is planning to introduce, experts warn.
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August 21, 2025
Recycling Worker Wins £17K For Unfair Dismissal While Sick
An employment tribunal has ordered a Scottish council to pay £17,244 to a staffer it unfairly fired from a waste-recycling site after he was off sick with depression for 174 days because the council botched the dismissal process.
Expert Analysis
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Mapping The Revised UK Takeover Landscape
The key impact of recent and impending changes to the U.K. Takeover Code for private equity bidders is that a bidder is now required to disclose its plans for employer contributions to the target’s defined benefit pension schemes, including the current arrangements for funding any scheme deficit, say attorneys with Debevoise & Plimpton LLP.
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Religious Freedom In The Workplace: UK Edition
Recently, four U.K. cases concerning whether each employee had been discriminated against on the grounds of religion culminated in the European Court of Human Rights' decision in Eweida and Others v. the United Kingdom. As demonstrated by these cases, it appears that aims such as the protection of other human rights carry more weight than projecting a certain corporate image, say attorneys with Latham & Watkins LLP.
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4 Big Changes Coming To UK Private Antitrust Enforcement
The U.K. government recently published its response to its consultation on private actions in competition law. If implemented, the proposals to introduce opt-out collective actions and settlement procedures for businesses and consumers as well as a fast-track process are likely to increase significantly the number of claims started in the U.K., say attorneys with Allen & Overy LLP.
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10 Tips For An Effective Cross-Border Investigation
Multinational employers may find themselves investigating alleged wrongdoing that occurred in more than one nation, and U.S.-based lawyers and human resources executives often coordinate and directly carry out investigations overseas. But before boarding an international flight to interview witnesses or to review personnel files, in-house counsel and HR executives need to understand that the rules are different when it comes to conducting international investigations, says Philip Berkowitz of Littler Mendelson PC.
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Choice-Of-Law Clauses: Drawbacks For Employers
The problem with an employment context choice-of-law clause is that it implicates tougher employment laws of the selected jurisdiction without blocking the mandatory application of tougher employment protection laws. The multinational employer now has to comply with two sets of employment protection laws, rather than just one, says Donald Dowling of White & Case LLP.
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Spotlight On UK's Changing Employment Laws
The U.K. government recently announced that it is consulting on proposals, which, if implemented, will have a significant impact on the U.K. workplace and employment litigation. With these, plus other ongoing bills, proposals, reviews and consultations, it appears that employer-friendly legislation is on the horizon for 2013, says Suzanne Horne of Paul Hastings LLP.
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Determining Whose Laws Protect Border-Crossing Employees
Probably the most common question in international employment law practice is, "which countries’ employment laws protect border-crossing employees such as expatriates and mobile workers?" This question is relevant when arranging any mobile job, expatriate posting or “secondment,” and it becomes vital when a multinational needs to dismiss border‑crossing staff, says Donald Dowling or White & case LLP
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UK Reforms: A New Era In Criminal Cartel Enforcement?
A law before U.K. Parliament, the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Bill, aims to achieve "strong, sustainable and balanced growth" through wide-ranging measures that seek to improve several areas of the law. In particular, the proposed competition law reforms represent a major re-casting of the U.K. regime, say Becket McGrath and Trupti Reddy of Edwards Wildman Palmer LLP.
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Recent Developments In German Competition Law
The first half of 2012 saw again significant enforcement activity at the German Federal Cartel Office. The authority prohibited two mergers, imposed fines on three cartels, installed an anonymous whistleblower system, and started the second phase of its food sector inquiry, say Silvio Cappellari and Maria Held of Arnold & Porter LLP.
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Weighing UK Pensions Regulator's Moral Hazard Powers
The question of whether the U.K. Pension Regulator's moral hazard powers are enforceable outside the U.K. arose first in the Sea Containers case in 2008 and, more recently, in the cases of the Nortel Networks’ U.K. DB Scheme and the Great Lakes DB Scheme. The differing approach of the Pension Regulator, the U.S. Bankruptcy Court and the Canadian courts in each of these cases is noteworthy, say Sian Robertson of Greenberg Traurig Maher LLP and David Cleary of Greenberg Traurig LLP.
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Extra-Territorial Application Of The Automatic Stay
A recent decision in the Nortel Networks Chapter 11 proceedings demonstrates the difficulty of an expansive approach to U.S. bankruptcy court jurisdiction and calls into question the ability of claimholders to participate in statutorily mandated foreign proceedings without risking loss of their claims and potential sanctions in the U.S. bankruptcy court, say Steven R. Gross, Katherine Ashton and Shannon Rebholz of Debevoise & Plimpton LLP.
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Effective Management Of UK Employee Exits
This article aims to explain in general terms the protections that apply to employees in the United Kingdom and the choices available to an employer in relation to possible employee terminations — along with the relative risk and costs when deciding how to terminate, says Bettina Bender of CM Murray LLP.
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Trends For Encouraging Employee Whistleblowing
There appears to be little doubt that there is an emerging international consensus that whistleblowing is a legitimate tool for dealing with economic fraud and should be encouraged as one way of stemming such wrongdoing, say Eric A. Savage and Anita S. Vadgama of Littler Mendelson PC.
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U.S. Incentives, EU Employees And Conflicts Of Law
U.S. employers frequently offer senior employees who are based overseas the opportunity to participate in incentive and bonus arrangements that contain provisions protecting the employer’s interests. Any doubt concerning the enforceability of such provisions in the EU now appears to have been resolved in the employees’ favor, say Christopher K. Walter and Mark M. Poerio of Paul Hastings Janofsky & Walker LLP.