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Professional Services

Hartley Pensions enters administration at request of Financial Conduct Authority

Directors at the Bristol-based self-invested personal pension provider have acknowledged the company is now insolvent

Hartley Pensions has gone into administration

Hartley Pensions, a º£½ÇÊÓÆµ self-invested personal pension provider (SIPP), has been put into administration at the request of the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA).

Peter Kubik and Brian Johnson of UHY Hacker Young have been appointed as joint administrators. The FCA requested that Bristol-based Hartley Pensions enter into an insolvency process in the interest of clients.

At the time of failure, Hartley Pensions was subject to a number of FCA requirements, which were imposed due to a number of “serious operational, financial and regulatory issues” the firm was attempting to deal with.

The SIPP provider sought professional insolvency advice, which resulted in the directors acknowledging the company was insolvent and no longer able to operate outside of an insolvency process, the FCA said. The joint administrators will be writing to Hartley Pensions’ clients to explain what the insolvency means for them and what action they should take.

At the time Hartley entered administration, it managed around 16,000 SIPP and small self-administered pension scheme (SSAS) accounts. The administrators will continue to administer these accounts in line with the requirements of the FCA. Existing pension assets are held by trustee firms which have not entered into administration. The administrators will shortly undertake a reconciliation of the funds held by those trustees and will then be in contact with customers after that.

Due to the requirements of the FCA, account holders cannot currently make new pension contributions or transfer into or out of an account managed by Hartley. However, account holders are able to draw down funds from their pensions, trade investments and request their pension commencement lump sum amounts as normal.

The administrators are now in discussions with a number of different parties with a view to them taking on the management of Hartley’s client accounts.

"The aim is that once a new provider has been found, an agreement will be put in place for the accounts to be transferred to the new provider as soon as possible," the administrators said in a statement.