Monday, September 20, 2010

Pensions - Mind the Gap

On the wire today (WSJ):
Many of America's largest pension funds are sticking to expectations of fat returns on their investments even after a decade of paltry gains, which could leave U.S. retirement plans facing an even deeper funding hole and taxpayers on the hook for huge additional contributions.
The median expected investment return for more than 100 U.S. public pension plans surveyed by the National Association of State Retirement Administrators remains 8%, the same level as in 2001, the association says.
The country's 15 biggest public pension systems have an average expected return of 7.8%, and only a handful recently have changed or are reconsidering those return assumptions, according to a survey of those funds by The Wall Street Journal.
Corporate pension plans in many cases have been cutting expectations more quickly than public plans, but often they were starting from more-optimistic assumptions. Pension plans at companies in the Standard & Poor's 500 stock index have trimmed expected returns by one-half of a percentage point over the past five years, but their average return assumption is also 8%, according to the Analyst's Accounting Observer, a research firm.
Pension funds at companies in the S&P 500 faced a $260 billion shortfall at the end of 2009, according to Standard & Poor's. Estimates of the fund deficits faced by state and local governments range from $500 billion to $1 trillion.


While I completely disagree with the prospects of earning 8.5% longer term (isn't the "new normal" lower?) this is not new (or at least should not be).  Some analysts - myself included - have been looking at pension funding status and return assumptions for years.  This is just another example of why you do your homework when analyzing companies.  Keep in mind that corporations use a corporate bond yield discount rate which is going to hurt.

Full story here:  WSJ article on pensions 9-18-10

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About Me

A student of the markets that has held portfolio management, analysis and trading positions for over 15 years.