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Solving A Pension Problem…With Leverage? That’s So 2007.

January 15, 2010 4 comments

A recent story in Pensions & Investments Online suggested that “a number” of pension fund managers are considering leveraging their entire funds. This is right on the heels of a period in which many firms and funds lost huge amounts of money, partly because their leverage was pulled and they were forced to cover assets at bad prices. Memories are very short, or understanding is very poor.

According to the story, using borrowed money to invest as if they have 20% more assets than they actually do, “…would enable the board to reduce its equity exposure and increase allocations to lower-returning and lower-risk assets that offer greater diversification benefits while seeking to meet the board’s expected actuarial return.”

Is it just me, or does this seem like the real problem is that the board’s expected actuarial return is unreasonable? This is, in fact, the problem with most pensions today: in a world where long-term real rates are under 2% and inflation expectations are rising, returns are likely to be thin in all asset classes for a while. In such a case, it is reasonable for actuarial expected returns to decline. They don’t, because it is easy to monkey with that number to make your plan status look better than it is, but they should.

SWIB officials discovered that, like many pension funds, Wisconsin’s exposure to equity risk comprised 90% of the fund’s volatility. The pioneering change also would position the fund to endure a period of high inflation and low economic growth, a scenario of growing concern for many investors.

Here is my unsolicited advice to solve this problem, and I’ll charge less than their consultants: to cut equity risk, sell a bunch of your equities. To position the fund to endure a period of high inflation and low economic growth, buy TIPS. Ta-da! Oh, and you might want to talk to your board and see if you can get the actuarial returns to respond to actual market conditions, rather than take market positions to respond to ad-hoc actuarial return assumptions.

Seriously, people get paid for this?

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