Your percentages are not very clear....they add up to alot more than 100...It might be better to list the actual figures for each line, or alternatively recalculate the percentage of your total assetts for each line, e.g. if std life is 15k, then it is 10%
After that, the main issue here IMO, is when are you going to need access to the money, and how much you will need. It is only if you know these figures that you can create a wise plan. But that depends on several things...
1. What type of income will you get from your pension? What type of pension is it? (is it a guaranteed monthly payment?)
2. When does your pension payments kick in? (some can be accessed from age 50...)
3. Are there other income earners that you should include in your planning?
4. How much cash will you need every year for the next ten years (I honestly think you should make a stab at budgeting this...)
Then you could start to plan better about how much you should keep in cash, and how much you should keep invested.
The standard advice is too move your investments from high risk to low risk as you approach retirement, to protect against big falls in the market. i.e. less and less as a percentage in the stock market.
But, FYI, I have seen academic papers, which suggest that if you withdraw <3% a year from your assets, and keep the vast majority of them in the stock market, you will have managed to weather nearly every past storm without running out of your pension pot. The 3% figure is from memory now, so YMMV. I think the value of the 3% was recalculated every year, i.e. in good years you were allowed to withdraw more, and in bad years less.
But if your existing pension was going to meet your day to day finances, it would be an argument for investing heavily in the market with the rest. Obviously only investing in passive index tracking funds.