The Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023 (the Act) is part of a legislative package to increase corporate transparency, improve the integrity of information filed at Companies House and thereby prevent the abuse of UK corporate structures and tackle economic crime. It makes a wide range of changes to the law governing UK companies. While these changes are not specifically targeted at corporate trustees of pension schemes, they apply to all UK companies and will therefore affect corporate trustees. The changes that are likely to be relevant to corporate trustees are summarised below.
In addition, the government plans to introduce restrictions on the use of corporate directors alongside the changes introduced by the Act. These restrictions may also affect corporate trustees and are summarised below.
The Act introduces a requirement for directors, persons with significant control (PSCs) and any employees or officers (e.g. the company secretary or management) filing documents at Companies House on behalf of a company to have their identity verified. Individuals will be prohibited from acting as a director unless their identity has been verified and companies will be under an obligation to ensure that individuals do not act as a director unless their identity has been verified. Breach of these requirements will be an offence punishable by a fine, but the director’s appointment and their actions as director will not be invalidated.
Individuals will be able to verify their identity in two ways:
Companies House has issued guidance for individuals on verifying their identity. Once an individual’s identity has been verified, they will not be required to verify it again (save in extremely limited circumstances).
The government currently expects to implement the identity verification requirements as follows:
The Act makes changes to the records that UK companies are required to maintain and to the information that UK companies are required to file at Companies House. These include the following:
The government has not yet confirmed when these changes will come into force.
The Act introduces a new offence of failure to prevent fraud from 1 September 2025. Generally, this offence will only apply to “large organisations”, and corporate trustees of pension schemes will almost certainly not fall within the definition of a “large organisation”. The Act does include a provision whereby a subsidiary of a large organisation can be prosecuted where an employee of the subsidiary commits a fraud intending to benefit the subsidiary. In theory, this could bring corporate trustees which are a subsidiary of a company (or corporate group) that is a large organisation within the offence’s scope. However, in our experience, corporate trustees do not have employees and are therefore unlikely to fall within the offence’s scope.
On a separate, but related note, the government has confirmed that it plans to exercise its powers under the Small Business, Enterprise and Employment Act 2015 to restrict the use of corporate directors (i.e. companies acting as directors of other companies). It is not unusual for professional independent trustee companies to be appointed as a corporate director.
A company will only be allowed to act as a corporate director if all its directors are natural persons who have had their identity verified. We expect most corporate directors of pension scheme trustee companies will be able to verify their directors’ identities so as to meet these requirements. The government has not yet confirmed when the restrictions will be brought in. However, when it does come into force, companies with existing corporate directors will be given 12 months to comply.
You should speak to your company secretarial services provider (or whoever normally carries out your company filings) to confirm that they are aware of the changes and that steps will be taken to ensure compliance with the new requirements by the trustee company and its directors.
Where the trustee company has a corporate director, you should check whether it expects to be able continue to act as a corporate director once the restrictions on corporate directors come into force.
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