|
Providers with “cross-border capability and expertise in ESG investment” would be well placed to take advantage of the new market, Moody’s said, as would insurers offering personal pensions.
The PEPP regulation, adopted by the European Parliament on 4 April, includes a requirement that “savings should be invested taking into account ESG factors”, including the climate and sustainability objectives of the Paris agreement on climate change and the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.
Moody’s added: “Insurers, which currently account for the bulk of the personal pension market, will benefit from expanding their primarily domestic activities to cross-border distribution in the EU, taking advantage of scale and asset pooling.”
PEPPs will be overseen by the European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority and include a “clear set of information” for each user, according to the European Parliament.
In addition, investors will be required to take financial advice before accessing PEPPs “to make sure savers know what they are buying and what they may expect”.
The “basic option” PEPP will have a cost cap of 1%, with investors given options for the investment risk level they want and the ability to switch providers, with switching costs also capped.