The company which bought British Homes Stores (BHS) for £1 from Sir Philip Green maintains the pension schemes were not its responsibility.
MPs have concluded the regulator was not responsible for the collapse of plans to rescue the BHS pension schemes. Michael Klimes examines the report
The scrapping of Project Thor to save British Home Stores cannot be blamed on pension regulation, according to the watchdog's chief executive Lesley Titcomb.
Lesley Titcomb has suggested a number of measures which could enable The Pensions Regulator (TPR) to better help struggling defined benefit (DB) schemes to manage risks.
Dominic Chappell's claim the British Home Stores (BHS) trustees supported a proposal to restructure pensions before he bought the retailer is "incorrect and untrue" according to new evidence.
The Pensions Regulator chief executive has been recalled to provide further evidence to the parliamentary inquiry into British Home Stores.
Over recent weeks we have seen many developments in the BHS drama. PP takes a look
British Home Stores (BHS) collapsed due to the treatment it received from The Pensions Regulator (TPR) and Philip Green according to Dominic Chappell.
The way the Pensions Protection Fund (PPF) and The Pensions Regulator (TPR) deal with defined benefit (DB) schemes under stress does not help pensioners MPs have heard.
The trustees and advisers for the British Home Stores (BHS) schemes were "independent" and "professional" according to former trustee chairwoman Margaret Downes.