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Class A (or B or C) members meaning

What does Class A (or B or C) members mean?
Shorthand used in many legacy occupational pension scheme rules to group members by date of joining so that different pre‑A‑Day benefit limits and protections can be applied. The labels are drafting devices, not statutory terms. They originated in former Inland Revenue/HMRC specimen rules for schemes approved under chapter i of Part XIV ICTA 1988 (the pre‑2006 “approved” regime). Scheme rules define the classes, which vary by scheme. Commonly (but not invariably): - Class A covers members who joined before 1 June 1989 (often benefiting from grandfathering against later limits, such as the earnings cap). - Class B covers those who joined on/after 1 June 1989 up to 5 April 1997. - Class C covers those who joined on/after 6 April 1997 up to A‑Day (6 April 2006). The classification typically determines accrual rates, application of the earnings cap, maximum pension and lump sum limits, early retirement terms, pension increases, and interaction with retained benefits and GMP. It remains relevant for administering legacy UK defined benefit schemes and for due diligence on scheme mergers, closures and benefit audits. Usage is broadly consistent across England & Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. In Ireland, similar cohort labels may appear in scheme‑specific drafting, but they are...
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View the related Practice Notes about Class A (or B or C) members

PRACTICE NOTES
City Code on Takeovers and Mergers Rule 2: secrecy, leaks, announcement triggers, content and timing; PUSU, sale processes, cash confirmations; Panel practice, rulings and recent amendments

This Resource Note summarises the key features of Rule 2 of the City Code on Takeovers and Mergers (the Code), addressing strict confidentiality obligations ahead of any announcement and both the scheduling and substance of offer announcements. It signposts pertinent materials, commentary and guidance issued by the Panel on Takeovers and Mergers (the Panel), together with Lexis+® UK commentary and tools, to provide practical insight and guidance into interpreting and applying Rule 2. Materials referenced in this Resource Note comprise the following: Practice Statements released by the Panel Executive (the body responsible for the day‑to‑day supervision and regulation of takeovers) (Executive), which offer informal guidance on how the Executive usually interprets and applies the Code Panel Statements (P/S) and Panel Instruments issued by the Panel Public Consultation Papers (PCP) and Response Statements (RS) from the Code Committee the Panel’s published Annual Reports discussing general overarching issues (Annual Reports) newsletters, together with technical and procedural notes published by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA)...

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PRACTICE NOTES
Comprehensive glossary of UK restructuring and insolvency terms, covering Companies Act schemes, Part 26A plans, IA 1986 processes, and cross‑border concepts including COMI, UNCITRAL and assimilated EU rules.

This glossary sets out numerous expressions regularly encountered in the restructuring & insolvency sphere. Words shown in bold within definitions are themselves explained in other entries in this glossary as well. A Article X The MLIJ contains a single provision named Article X, aimed at jurisdictions that have already implemented the MLCBI, like England, or are weighing its adoption. Article X states: ‘Not withstanding any prior interpretation to the contrary, the relief available under [insert a cross-reference to the legislation of this State enacting Article 21 of the UNCITRAL Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency] includes recognition and enforcement of a judgment’ (see Practice Note: UNCITRAL model law on recognition and enforcement of insolvency-related judgments (MLIJ): Article X). Asset-backed security (ABS) A form of security anchored by asset pools, for example loans, leases, and credit card receivables. Assimilated law From 1 January 2024, ‘retained law’ has been retitled ‘assimilated law’. The body of domestic law originally arising from EU obligations, created by the European...

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PRACTICE NOTES
UK share capital and securities—glossary for corporate lawyers (Companies Act 2006, FCA Listing Rules, DTRs, MAR, corporate actions and governance)

A AIM A market for securities run by London Stock Exchange plc, featuring lighter admission criteria and ongoing obligations than the main regulated markets. Formerly the Alternative Investment Market, it is now referred to simply as AIM. AIM company A company with a class of its shares traded on AIM. Acquisition accounting An accounting method whereby the acquirer recognises the acquired assets and liabilities on its balance sheet at the acquisition date, with any difference between the consideration paid and the fair value of the net assets acquired recorded as purchased goodwill. Allotment Shares are treated as allotted when a person obtains the unconditional right to be entered in the company’s register of members in respect of those shares (Companies Act 2006, s 558). Allotment is then followed by the issue of the shares. Allotment authority The authority under CA 2006, ss 549–551 enabling the directors to allot shares in the company, or to grant rights to subscribe for, or...

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