Tag Archives: Rates of return

Forget The Phony Pension Accounting, Here’s How Much Your State Pension Is Really Underfunded, by Tyler Durden

If a pension administrator assumes a 7 percent annual return, the pension looks a lot less underfunded than if the administrator assumes a 3 percent annual return. The problem is, there are no safe investments returning 7 percent these days. From Tyler Durden at zerohedge.com:

The phony assumptions that go into calculating public pension underfundings in the United States are a frequent topic for us.  As our readers are aware, state pension administrators are given fairly wide leeway to simply pick a discount rate out of thin air.  Of course, since pensions are nothing but a massive stream of future liabilities that stretch out into perpetuity, every 100 bps increase can substantially, and artificially, lower the fund’s reported underfunded level.

In fact, we estimated the impact of higher discount rates on underfunding levels in a post entitled “An Unsolvable Math Problem: Public Pensions Are Underfunded By As Much As $8 Trillion“…here was the result:

Pension Underfudning

Fortunately, we’re not the only ones that see through the ridiculously phony assumptions that go into duping retirees and taxpayers as the team at American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) has just dropped a report which reviews the financial health of public pensions all over the country if you toss out their 7.5% discount rate and replace it with a risk free rate…

Faulty accounting and reporting methods obscure the magnitude of unfunded liabilities. Partly in response to the devastating impact of the Great Recession, the Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) made two significant changes in 2012 (Statement No. 67, Financial Reporting for Pension Plans and Statement No. 68, Accounting and Financial Reporting for Pensions) to the methods used for measuring the financial health of pension plans. GASB intended these changes to increase transparency, consistency, and comparability of pension information. Public pensions are now required to report their assets and liabilities using a standardized actuarial cost method, to disclose investment returns, and to include unfunded pension liabilities on state balance sheets.

Unfortunately, states have found ways to work around these requirements and paint an unrealistically rosy picture of their pension funding status.

The Center for State Fiscal Reform at ALEC analyzes the annual official financial documents of more than 280 state-administered pension plans using more realistic investment return assumptions in order to gain a clearer picture of the pension problem. The unfunded liabilities of each pension plan are revalued using a discount rate equal to a risk-free rate of return, best represented by debt instruments issued by the United States government. This year’s study uses a risk-free rate of 2.142 percent, derived from an average of the 10- and 20-year U.S. Treasury bond yields over the course of 12 months spanning April 2016 to March 2017. Based on these revised investment return assumptions, we report on total unfunded pension liability, unfunded pension liabilities per capita, and the funding ratio of these plans.

To continue reading: Forget The Phony Pension Accounting, Here’s How Much Your State Pension Is Really Underfunded

Pension Storm Warning, by John Mauldin

Governments have made promises of pension benefits that they will never be able to keep. From John Mauldin at maudlineconomics.com:

This time is different are the four most dangerous words any economist or money manager can utter. We learn new things and invent new technologies. Players come and go. But in the big picture, this time is usually not fundamentally different, because fallible humans are still in charge. (Ken Rogoff and Carmen Reinhart wrote an important book called This Time Is Different on the 260-odd times that governments have defaulted on their debts; and on each occasion, up until the moment of collapse, investors kept telling themselves “This time is different.” It never was.)

Nevertheless, I uttered those four words in last week’s letter. I stand by them, too. In the next 20 years, we’re going to see changes that humanity has never seen before, and in some cases never even imagined, and we’re going to have to change. I truly believe this. We have unleashed economic and technological forces we can observe but not entirely control.

I will defend this bold claim at greater length in my forthcoming book, The Age of Transformation.

Today we will zero in on one of those forces, which last week I called “the bubble in government promises,” which I think is arguably the biggest bubble in human history. Elected officials at all levels have promised workers they will receive pension benefits without taking the hard steps necessary to deliver on those promises. This situation will end badly and hurt many people. Unfortunately, massive snafus like this rarely hurt the politicians who made those overly optimistic promises, often years ago.

Earlier this year I called the pension mess “The Crisis We Can’t Muddle Through.” Reflecting since then, I think I was too optimistic. Simply waiting for the floodwaters to drop down to muddle-through depth won’t be enough. We face an entire new ocean, deeper and wider than we can ever cross unaided.

To continue reading: Pension Storm Warning

He Said That? 8/6/15

From Todd Clark, chairman of the Houston Firefighters’ Relief and Retirement Fund, on the pension fund return assumptions his fund is using:

We strongly believe, and past history shows, we can continue to achieve the 8.5 percent long term.

The Wall Street Journal, “Pensions Brace for Lower Returns,” September 8-9, 2015

The 30-year US government bond is yielding 2.88 percent, and most measures of valuation for the US stock market, even after its recent slide, are still close to historic highs. Many pension funds are lowering their return assumptions to 7 or 7.5 percent. SLL thinks even those assumptions are high. The higher the assumption, the less that must be contributed to the fund. It looks like Houston firefighters may end up getting stiffed on their relief and retirement.