Corporate Governance Aligned to King IV Principles

Principles 11-13: Functional Governance Areas

FUNCTIONAL GOVERNANCE AREAS

FUNCTIONAL GOVERNANCE AREAS
  • Principle 11 – The governing body should govern risk in a way that supports the organisation in setting and achieving strategic objectives
  • Principle 12 – The governing body should govern technology and information in a way that supports the organisation in setting and achieving its strategic objectives
  • Principle 13 – The governing body should govern compliance with applicable laws and adopted, non-binding rules, codes and standards in a way that supports the organisation in being ethical and a good corporate citizen

Outcomes

DESIRED OUTCOME

  • Adequate and effective controls through risk, technology and information, compliance, and assurance governance

Risk governance

  • The Board of trustees is mandated to ensure good corporate governance and effective risk management in the Fund. The Board exercises this mandate through its committees which include the Investments and Project Monitoring Committee, Finance Committee, Staff Administration and Corporate Affairs Committee, and the ARC, which oversees risk management and the integrity of financial reporting
  • Through the ongoing materiality determination process, material matters, and emerging risks are identified which could significantly impact the Fund’s business model and ability to deliver value in the short-, medium- and long-term. Read more about our risk and opportunity management

Risk governance

  • Risk management is regarded as an integral part of business activities
  • Effective risk management protects and creates value for the Fund in identifying both risks and oportunities
  • Cyber Security and Information security risk is an integral part of the business
  • To achieve effective risk management, and a robust control environment, the three lines of defence model is a key component to ensure a clear separation of roles between risk-taking functions and risk-control functions

Technology and information governance

  • As part of the Board charter, the Board has oversight of the Information and Technology Policy, systems, and strategies. The Finance Committee is mandated to assist the Board in fulfilling its oversight responsibility for technology governance
  • With the accelerated digitalisation strategy and ongoing quest to improve efficiency of operational processes and communication through automation and use of digital platforms, the Fund has invested heavily in information security
  • The Fund has also launched a new Pension Administration System (OctoPAS)

Technology and information governance

  • Appropriate preventive, detective, and corrective controls have been implemented and the strength of the security infrastructure is continuously tested through penetration tests and vulnerability assessments
  • Uninterrupted IT services and system stability
  • A Chief Information Officer (Benoni Katende) was appointed in September 2021 to accelerate the digitisation journey

Compliance governance

  • The Fund is committed to complying with all the relevant legislation, especially prudential regulation
  • The Board oversees compliance with legislation, regulations, and codes of best practice governing the retirement benefits sector through the Audit, Risk and Assurance Committee
  • The Board has established policies and processes to guide legal compliance and delivery of services
REGULATORS REPORT

Compliance governance

  • The Fund continuously monitors the status of regulatory relationships to enhance proactive engagement across key regulatory changes and areas of focus
  • Highest standards of sound governance, including transparency, accountability and fairness to its members, the Regulators, and all our stakeholders
  • Management continuously monitors its compliance with the key regulations through its quarterly reports to the Board

Compliance governance

  • The Fund is committed to complying with all the relevant legislation, especially prudential regulation
  • The Board oversees compliance with legislation, regulations, and codes of best practice governing the retirement benefits sector through the Audit, Risk and Assurance Committee
  • The Board has established policies and processes to guide legal compliance and delivery of services
REGULATORS REPORT

Compliance governance

  • The Fund continuously monitors the status of regulatory relationships to enhance proactive engagement across key regulatory changes and areas of focus
  • Highest standards of sound governance, including transparency, accountability and fairness to its members, the Regulators, and all our stakeholders
  • Management continuously monitors its compliance with the key regulations through its quarterly reports to the Board
  • The ARC assumes responsibility for the governance of risk and opportunity management and compliance
  • ARC, on behalf of the Board, ensures oversight over the governance of risk by setting the direction for how the Fund’s risk and opportunity management should be approached and addressed
  • Risk appetite dashboard includes both risks and opportunities and is set to ensure that the company achieves its strategic and financial objectives
  • Enterprise-wide Risk Management Framework and policy
  • Combined Assurance Model.
  • A Board approved Compliance Management Policy and Manual
  • Compliance monitoring
  • The Finance Committee assumes responsibility for technology and information governance
  • Formalised information technology governance strategy
  • IT Governance Framework
  • IT governance audits

Measures taken to monitor risk and opportunity management, technology, information, and compliance and how the outcomes were addressed

  • Independent assessment of top risks on a regular basis by the Board
  • Oversight of the Strategic Risk Register
  • The Board oversees implementation of Strategic Projects
  • The Board receives summary reports from the ARC and Finance Committee
  • The Board monitors key legislative and regulatory obligations and Fund compliance thereof

Planned areas of future focus

Principle 14: Remuneration Governance

REMUNERATION GOVERNANCE

REMUNERATION GOVERNANCE
  • Principle 14 – The governing body should ensure that the organisation remunerates fairly, responsibly, and transparently to promote the achievement of strategic objectives and positive outcomes in the short-, medium- and long-term
  • The Board, through the Staff Administration and Corporate Affairs Committee has established human resource policies governing the terms and conditions of employment, remuneration, training, promotions, discipline, and other benefits which are fair and will attract, motivate, and retain high calibre staff

Outcomes

DESIRED OUTCOME

  • Governance of fair, responsible, and transparent remuneration
  • The reward and remuneration structures are linked to KPIs defined under each strategic objective, ensuring performance is linked to business performance as well as individual performance, thereby promoting a high-performance culture and achievement of strategy
  • Sustainable reward is carried out responsibly and the Fund’s reward framework is flexible to meet the changing needs of both the business and economy

Summary of the arrangements for governing remuneration

  • Remuneration and Employment Policy
  • Non-Executive Director Remuneration Policy
  • A Staff Administration and Corporate Affairs Committee (SACA) to ensure fair, responsible, and transparent remuneration practices
  • Quarterly remuneration reporting to SACA
  • Remuneration benchmarking

Key areas of focus during the reporting period

Measures taken to monitor remuneration and how the outcomes were addressed

  • Board receives summary reports from SACA
  • The Board approves business targets at the beginning of every financial year and reviews the results at the end of the year before making a final decision regarding payment of any incentives

Planned areas of
future focus