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Risks and Rewards in Hybrid pension plans

Risks and Rewards in Hybrid pension plans. Mary Hardy Statistics and Actuarial Science. Outline. Background Why not Defined Benefit? Why not Defined Contribution? Hybrid Pensions Cash Balance Target Benefit Floor Offset (DB Underpin) Concluding Comments. background.

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Risks and Rewards in Hybrid pension plans

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  1. Risks and Rewards in Hybrid pension plans Mary Hardy Statistics and Actuarial Science

  2. Outline • Background • Why not Defined Benefit? • Why not Defined Contribution? • Hybrid Pensions • Cash Balance • Target Benefit • Floor Offset (DB Underpin) • Concluding Comments

  3. background

  4. Employer Perspective - Benefits • Why do employers sponsor pension plans? • Recruitment • Retention • Facilitate turnover of older employees • Tax-efficient remuneration • Industrial relations • Altruism

  5. Employer Perspective - Risks • Variable costs • Plan fails to meet recruitment/retention/retirement objectives • Regulatory risk • Industrial relations risk • Deficit induced crises • Surplus induced crises

  6. Employee Perspective - Risks • Risks • Pension is too low at retirement age • Inflation erosion through deferment and/or retirement • Pension runs out • Employer defaults • Poor return on contributions • Bad investments • Intergenerational transfers

  7. Government Perspective • Canadian pension assets total $1,240 bn (2013Q1) • $400 bn in stocks • ~ 20% of TSX capitalization • Preparing for social security and welfare costs of aging population. • Risk of move to personal pension provision?

  8. Why not DB?

  9. Why not DB? • Volatile employer contributions • Excessive cost to employer • Market consistent valuation • Low interest environment • Poor asset returns • Unwieldy • Fail to meet employer needs • Fail to meet employee needs • Conflicts of interest • plan sponsors, members and trustees.

  10. US Private Sector DB membership

  11. Why not DC?

  12. Why not DC? • Levels of public confidence and understanding of DC are too low; • Individuals are unable or unwilling to choose appropriate funds; • Investment strategies offer little or no protection; • Funds are too volatile in the pre-retirement phase; • Decumulationoptions lack clarity and in many cases are not fit for purpose. Source: “Improving the design of retirement saving pension plans”. OECD

  13. Why not DC? • Defined contribution pensions are not fit for 21st century lives. • The risk of buying at the wrong time, choosing the wrong annuity or failing to find the right rate could increase the number of poorer pensioners by many millions. • Pensioners taking on "the biggest gamble" of their lives when they buy an annuity • Require people "to be able to cope with risks that they do not really understand". • 72% of people would be more likely to save into a pension if it guaranteed a level of retirement income. Source: Pensions – Time for Change, Altmann

  14. Illustration of DC Benefits • Assume 30 years in plan. • Salary fixed in real terms at $50,000 in 2011 • Median US salary • Invested 100% in S&P • 2% MER • Converted to 20-year annuity at long bond rates. • Retire at end year 1999-2011 • Target 65% replacement ratio

  15. Hybrid Pensions

  16. Cash Balance (CB) Pensions • 12 million in CB plans in USA • Looks like DC • contribution (% of salary) paid into participant’s account • account accumulates to retirement • lump sum retirement benefit • withdrawal benefit =account value (after vesting) • Regulated like DB • Participant accounts are nominal

  17. Crediting Rates • Participant’s account accumulates at specified crediting rate. • For example • Yield on 30-year government bonds • Yield on 10-year government bonds • Yield on 5-year government bonds + 25bp • Yield on 1-year government bonds + 100bp • Fixed rate, eg 5% p.y. • CPI rate

  18. Why CB? Promotional Literature, 1985: • The company's contribution is clear-cut and easily understood • A 5% of pay plan might require a contribution of only 4% of pay • Tangible, comprehensive benefits mirror DC plans Source: Kwasha Lipton, quoted in Gold (2001)

  19. Framework, assumptions, notation • Participant with n years service at valuation date. • At valuation t=0. • Retires at T with n+T years • Ignore exits, annuitization. • Value future benefit arising from past contributions • Use market valuation methods • Valuation factor = Value per $1 of nominal contribution.

  20. Framework, assumptions, notation • denotes the participant’s fund at • , denote the crediting rates at • denotes the -year spot rate at • denotes the short rate at • denotes the price at of a $1, -year zero coupon bond.

  21. The Valuation Formula • We let That is • V(t,T) = market value at t of CB benefit at T • per $1 of nominal fund at t • No exits • No future contributions • With continuous compounding

  22. Fixed crediting rate • Suppose is constant, =, say • Then • The T-year zcb price p(0,T), is known at t=0

  23. Crediting with the short rate • Suppose the crediting rate is the short rate plus a fixed margin • That is , then

  24. Crediting with k-year spot rates • Crediting with • We need a market model for • We use one-factor Hull-White / extVasicek model

  25. Crediting with k-year spot rates

  26. Crediting with spot rates, 2013 yield curveα=0.02, =0.006

  27. V(0,20)

  28. V(0,20)

  29. V(0,20)

  30. V(0,20)

  31. V(0,20)

  32. V(0,20)

  33. T=10-years

  34. T=5-years

  35. CB Comments • The CB benefit isn’t as simple as we thought • The costs are not as cheap or stable as we thought • Long rates and constant rates produce more cost volatility than short rates. • Most common crediting rate is 30-year bond rate • Long rates are less volatile than short

  36. CB Comments • High costs were not created by 2008 crisis • Funding methods allow liability valuation to be less than the aggregate accounts • Risk to benefit security • Inequities and perverse incentives • Managing the long rate guarantees is not easy • Easy (but costly) to manage fixed and short rates.

  37. Target Benefit Pensions • A DC plan which looks like a DB plan • Details sketchy… • Er and Ee contribute based on cost of target benefit. • Er contribution fixed (per $ of payroll) • Ee contribution varies to meet target • Assets comingled • May maintain “surplus” or “deficit”  intergenerational issues. • May be regulated on surplus/ deficit

  38. Target Benefit Pensions • Brown proposes 10% joint contribution for 65% RR target. • Cf DC example • Employer cost fixed • Employee cost varies • “Target benefit is expected, not guaranteed” • What do we mean here by “expected”?

  39. Target Benefit Pension • Example 1: • 5% employer contribution; 5% target employee contribution • 20% max employee contribution (25% total) • Fixed interest rates • TRR 60% • 10000 simulations, lognormal returns (µ=0.07,=0.15) • Three year smoothing of asset returns and additional contributions.

  40. TBP Example: Simulated total contributions

  41. TBP Example:Distribution of Replacement Rates

  42. TBP Example 2 (Sanders, 2010)

  43. TBP Comments • With no smoothing: • Volatile ee contributions • Uncertain benefits • With smoothing • Aggregated intergenerational transfers • Uncertain benefits • Other issues • Comingled fund  risk management problems • Adjustment to pensions in payment

  44. DB Underpin • Also called “Floor Offset” • Main benefit is DC • Guaranteed minimum DB benefit. • Example • 12% DC contributions invested in balanced fund • DB minimum = 1.5% FAS py of service • At retirement, compare annuitized DC with DB • Additional fund supports makeup benefit

  45. Defined Benefit Underpin = Floor Offset • DC benefit with a DB guarantee • Wilfred Laurier University, Xerox (Bodie et al, 1988), York University • McGill (recently closed) Historically, only a very small percentage of retiring McGill Pension Plan members have required a supplement to bring their pension up to the minimum. However, this statistic could be quite different in the event of a prolonged market decline. From the McGill University Pension Guide for Members, 2007

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