GKN slams door on gold-plated pensions

GKN workers will be moved into the defined contribution scheme
GKN workers will be moved into the defined contribution scheme

Manufacturer GKN on Wednesday confirmed plans to shut its gold-plated pension scheme to head off rising costs.

The 260-year-old group will shift current final-salary members into a new defined-contribution scheme, which diverts workers’ future pension payments into a pot linked to the performance of the stock market.

The firm has also put a new pension funding plan in place and will pay £250 million of proceeds from a bond issue to fill a hole in the scheme.

The company has a £1.85 billion deficit across all its pension schemes, down from £2 billion in December.

“We continue to invest for growth and have made significant progress to address our UK pension deficit,” said chief executive Nigel Stein.

It operates two primary defined-benefit schemes, GKN2, which includes workers employed by the group, and GKN3 which involves mainly retired staff.

The company benefited from weak sterling in half-year results, with sales up 15% to £5.2 billion and underlying profits before tax rising 14% to £393 million.