February 2021

US Corporate Pension Funded Ratio Climbs to 89.8% in January

The funded ratio of the 100 largest corporate defined benefit (DB) pension plans improved to 89.8% at the end of January from 88.1% at the end of December as their aggregate deficit fell below $200 billion for the first time in more than a year, according to consulting firm Milliman. With the help of a 16 basis point (bp) increase in the monthly discount rate to 2.62% from 2.46%, the plans’ funding improved by $39 billion in January as their...

International retirement, savings plans grow in popularity

International retirement and savings plans for participants working outside their home country have continued to grow in popularity around the globe, with assets increasing 8.9% in 2020 to $17.2 billion. These plans are finding new cohorts of participants, research by Willis Towers Watson found. Originally aimed at expatriates who were unable to remain enrolled in their home country arrangements, international pension plans — known as IPPs — and international savings plans — ISPs — are also growing in popularity among...

“In Spain We Have The Funds With The Worst Profitability And They Are The Most Expensive”. Antonio Banda from Feelcapital

By The Corner Antonio Banda, CEO of Feelcapital, has already warned of the risk posed by the transposition into Spanish law of the Brussels rule that will allow the entry of pan-European funds. The rule, which comes into force next March, is “the great danger for Spanish fund managers”. Q: Following the modification of the taxation in pension plans, you commented that the real danger for national fund managers was the arrival of pan-European funds, why? A: The regulation on European Pension...

ESG-Conscious Money Managers Are Pension Funds’ Top Consideration

Pension funds and insurers are now looking for more socially responsible money managers. According to a recent global poll conducted by Bfinance, over 60% of pension funds and insurers said they were unlikely to hire an equity manager who is not a signatory of the Principles for Responsible Investment, the world’s biggest industry body for sustainable investing, Bloomberg reports. The survey also showed that about a third of respondents wouldn’t appoint a hedge fund manager that lacked gender or ethnic diversity...

Deutsche Bank inks buy-in deal for U.K. pension fund with L&G

DB (U.K.) Pension Scheme, England, insured £570 million ($783 million) in liabilities through a buy-in with Legal & General Assurance Society, a spokesman confirmed. The transaction, the first for the £4.5 billion plan, was structured to allow for further risk transfer deals with Legal & General to be completed on pre-agreed terms when favorable pricing arises. The spokesman said the plan will look to complete further transactions. Lane Clark & Peacock advised the trustees and Deutsche Bank, the plan sponsor, on...

Canadian Pensions Adapt Investment Strategies for Post-COVID-19 World

Canadian pension funds are adapting their investment strategies for a post-COVID-19 world by shifting their investments away from infrastructure to private equity, and by moving more of their asset management in-house, according to a new report from CIBC Mellon. The report was based on a survey completed last year of 50 Canadian pension managers—half of which had more than C$1.2 billion ($950 million) in assets under management (AUM), with the other half having between C$600 million and $1.2 billion assets...

US. To Plug a Pension Gap, This City Rented Its Streets. To Itself.

The City of Tucson, Ariz., decided last year to pay rent on five golf courses and a zoo — to itself. In California, West Covina agreed to pay rent on its own streets. And in Flagstaff, Ariz., a new lease agreement covers libraries, fire stations and even City Hall. They are risky financial arrangements born of desperation, adopted to fulfill ballooning pension payments that the cities can no longer afford. Starved of cash by the pandemic, cities are essentially using...

Australia. Pension transfer balance cap increase is not all bad news

By Meg Heffron There has been plenty of doom and gloom about the increase in the transfer balance cap that will come into effect on July 1. Remember, the transfer balance cap is the limit on the amount anyone can transfer into what is known as a “retirement phase” pension over their lifetime Retirement phase pensions (so called because they are usually started by people who have retired) are the ones that give the best tax breaks – they allow self-managed super...

Global retirement assets to GDP ratio hits record 80% in 2020

Total assets in the 22 largest major retirement markets reached a record 80% of GDP in 2020, up 11.2 percentage points for the year. Read also Canadian Pensions Adapt Investment Strategies for Post-COVID-19 World The Thinking Ahead Institute's latest Global Pension Assets Study, for the year ended Dec. 31, said the rise in the ratio of retirement assets to average GDP was the largest year-on-year rise since the study began in 1998. Read also International retirement, savings plans grow in popularity While this...

€573bn Dutch pension group appoints first female CEO

Dutch pension group APG has appointed Annette Mosman as chief executive officer, the firm has announced. Mosman will assume the role on 1 March 2021 succeeding Gerard van Olphen, who will be stepping down in April of this year for personal reasons. Mosman is a member of the board of directors and has been chief finance and risk officer since February 2018. She will also be the firm’s first female CEO. Pieter Jongstra, chairman of the supervisory board, said: ‘For the pension...