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Strategic
asset allocation for pension funds
by
Dr. Ros Altmann
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material on this page is subject to copyright and must not be reproduced
without the author's permission.)
In
the realm of strategic asset allocation, the investment aims of
defined benefit and defined contribution schemes are different.
Trustees need to consider this carefully. In the past, the investment
objectives of final salary schemes have typically been thought of
as ‘maximising returns, while minimising risk’, which
trustees often translated as outperformance of an index or peer
group benchmark, relying heavily on equities to generate superior
long term returns. It was confidently assumed that equities must
perform better over longer time horizons and downside risks were
not really considered.
However,
the real objective should surely be to match or (especially if there
is a deficit) outperform the liabilities. Trustees are responsible
for ensuring members’ pensions are delivered. They should
not be concerned with ensuring the company can fund pension promises
as cheaply as possible. This means that targeting outperformance
of the pension liabilities, rather than indices, is optimal. These
liabilities are linked to inflation (both salary inflation for non-pensioners
and limited price inflation for pensioners) and to longevity. However,
the liabilities are not linked to equity market returns. Therefore,
achieving the benefits of long term equity outperformance may be
good for maximisation of assets, but having a larger pool of assets,
per se, does not necessarily matter to provision of the final salary
pension. The employer is supposed to stand behind the promise. Surpluses
do not necessarily generate higher pensions, if they simply lead
to lower employer contributions, whereas deficits could lead to
loss of pension, if employers cannot afford to make up the shortfalls.
Relying heavily on equities is not a ‘one-way’ bet,
especially in a mature scheme or with a weak employer.
However,
for defined contribution schemes, investment aims are different.
There is no ‘pensions promise’ and the liabilities are
pensions which must usually be secured by annuities. The greater
the assets, the bigger the pension is likely to be. There are four
critical factors which will determine the eventual size of any defined
contribution pension. Apart from the contribution levels (not really
a matter for trustees) there is investment performance, the level
of charges and finally the costs of annuity purchase (or other means
of securing pension-type income). Trustees can influence all three
of these factors, but I would argue that they are only slowly waking
up to these challenges.
In
many cases, trustees offer little or no choice for members’
investments. Sometimes just a balanced fund, with-profits fund or
‘lifestyle’ option. Very often, only one providers’
products are offered and little ongoing monitoring of this provider
or the investment options is conducted. This leaves the members
without the chance to construct truly well-diversified portfolios
and leaves trustees exposed to claims that they did not offer members
sufficient chance to maximise their pensions.
As
to the question of charges, trustees should focus carefully on choosing
suppliers with the lowest fee levels, or giving members access to
low-cost index-tracking funds, where the risk of underperformance
should be reduced. Exorbitant charges can seriously erode pension
assets over time.
Of
course, even if members are offered a range of products, most are
afraid to choose for themselves and simply select the ‘default
option’. This forces members into a ‘one size fits all’
investment vehicle, which may not be best for them. The financial
services industry has been slow to develop a good range of default
options for money purchase pensions, catering for different members’
needs. For example, products to suit different age groups and different
risk appetites, or possibly a capital protected vehicle for those
typical private investors whose idea of risk is ‘will I lose
money?’. Perhaps for members who do not own their own home,
an investment vehicle which includes property assets could be attractive.
As
regards securing the ultimate pension, I would argue that trustees’
investment duties should also include shopping around for the best
annuities for their members. Enhanced rates, impaired lives, guarantee
periods and the big differentials in market annuity rates would
all suggest that trustees must take great care when selecting an
annuity for their retiring members. Impaired life annuities can
give members 30-50% higher pensions. Appropriate annuity choice
is particularly crucial because the members can never change the
annuity for the rest of their lives. Once bought, they are stuck
with it and, if trustees cannot demonstrate that they took due care
before selecting the annuity, might members be tempted to seek redress?
In
summary, as defined benefit schemes become more mature and defined
contribution schemes increase, trustees should urgently reconsider
their investment thinking. Defined benefit trustees must focus on
outperforming liabilities. Money purchase trustees should ensure
that they are offering members access to a suitably wide range of
investment choices and default options, ensure charges are minimised
and focus carefully on ensuring that the annuity purchase decisions
are made with due care.
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