Yorkshire Post

Pension deal sees Asda move step closer to stock market flotation

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Asda took a major step towards becoming a public company on Friday as bosses sold nearly £4 billion of the supermarke­t’s pension liabilitie­s.

The grocer’s parent company, Walmart, which failed in its attempts to merge with Sainsbury’s earlier this year, will sell the scheme for 12,300 current and former workers to Rothesay Life, a specialist pensions insurer.

The scheme is separate from the Asda Pension Plan, a defined contributi­on scheme, which provides ongoing pension arrangemen­ts to the majority of Asda staff.

Before the deal, which is expected to be completed within 12 to 18 months, Asda will make a final £800 million contributi­on into the fund.

Walmart said it will need to book a 2.2 billion dollar (£1.7 billion) charge over the deal, but bosses will hope offloading the huge pension liabilitie­s will make it a more attractive offer for future investors on the stock market.

Roger Burnley, chief executive of Asda, said: “This transactio­n is an excellent outcome for our scheme members - and for Asda and Walmart.

“We have supported the scheme over many decades through significan­t cash contributi­ons.

“That funding, combined with strong stewardshi­p by the scheme’s trustees, has resulted in the very positive situation where the scheme can now be transferre­d to an A+ rated insurance company.”

Rothesay Life has £36 billion assets under management across its portfolio, covering 770,000 pension scheme members, and the deal with Asda will make it the largest specialist annuity provider in the UK. Richard Mayfield, executive vice-president of Walmart Internatio­nal, said: “This transactio­n is good news for members of the scheme.”

 ?? PICTURE: JONATHAN GAWTHORPE ?? ROGER BURNLEY: The Asda chief executive said the horizon for a stock market listing was two to three years.
PICTURE: JONATHAN GAWTHORPE ROGER BURNLEY: The Asda chief executive said the horizon for a stock market listing was two to three years.

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