US funds need paradigm asset allocation shift

US public pension funds are ignoring their liabilities in managing their pension assets, a situation that needs a paradigm shift in thinking and asset allocation to ensure benefits can be paid to beneficiaries.

The dialogue about the US public pension funds’ underfunding position continued at the CFA Institute’s annual conference this week, with Ronald Ryan calling for pension funds to tell the “financial truth”.

Ryan, who is chief executive and founder at Ryan ALM, Inc., which specialises in custom liability indices and liability beta portfolios, says the accounting rules governing US corporate and public funds are distorting the real underfunding position, which is much worse than reported.

Further, he says pension funds tend not to manage to liabilities, a situation which means “you don’t know the enemy”.

“Given the enormity of the pension crisis, investment consultants and those managing the pension assets need to say what we have been doing doesn’t work. It’s simple – tell the financial truth,” he says. “Imagine a doctor getting an X-ray or blood test wrong, well that’s what’s happening in pensions, it’s getting the wrong diagnosis. Without a customised liability index you don‘t know the enemy, you don’t know what liabilities look like. But they are big and they are very interest rate sensitive.”

Ryan says there needs to be a paradigm shift in the asset allocation of the US pension system so that liabilities can be funded in a stable and low cost way.

Sponsored Content

He advocates for each fund to have a custom-liability index, which sets out the benefit schedule which can be priced at market rates and the size, shape, duration and interest rate sensitivity of liabilities can be managed.

“At every investment meeting of a pension fund you would think there would be a discussion of the funded ratio to gauge if they are on track and how to make sure the asset allocation responsive to liabilities. But this doesn’t happen,” he says.

Ryan, who was also formerly director of fixed-income research at Lehman Brothers and has received a number of awards, including the Bernstein Fabozzi/Jacobs Levy outstanding article award from the Journal of Portfolio Management and the William F. Sharpe Indexing Achievement Award for lifetime achievement from the Information Management Network, also advocates for a change in the language around pension management.

“Once liabilities are defined as the true objective, we have to redefine the language used. For example alpha will no longer be excess asset growth, but the amount above liabilities growth.”

One of the problems he identifies is that change will involve the players in the industry recognising they got it wrong.

“Consultants find it hard to say all these years we’ve been doing it wrong and now I want to do it differently,” he says.

 

Leave a Comment

Long term lens shields Colorado from private credit jitters

Long term lens shields Colorado from private credit jitters

As concerns in private credit mount, Colorado PERA CIO and COO Amy McGarrity says the pension fund isn’t seeing any strains in its growing allocation to the asset class, arguing that long-term investors are shielded from the risks because they can lock up their capital to weather market cycles.

Sort content by

South Carolina ramps up PE

The $31.3 billion South Carolina Retirement System Investment Commission has launched a co-investment private equity program in a bid to reduce risk and enhance returns. Partnering with Chicago-headquartered GCM Grosvenor, RSIC will tap Grosvenor’s own private equity deal flow, as well as introductions to the manager’s GP network.

The impact of technology on investments

Harshal Chaudhari recently sidestepped from his role as company-wide CIO at IBM, looking after $150 billion in pension assets, to a new role as the tech giant’s chief analytics officer. He spoke to Top1000Funds about the strategy he ran at the pension fund, his wider thoughts on the global economy and the impact of technology on the investment world.

QSuper: standing out from the crowd

QSuper CIO, Brad Holzberger, has long stood out from his peers by loading up on long-term government bonds and even the recent sudden collapse of yields, as investors started pricing in slower growth, hasn’t deterred him from sticking with this asset class. The retiring CIO of one of Australia's largest funds about expectations.

ADIA boosts internal active fixed income

The $700 billion Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, ADIA, is boosting its internal fixed income capabilities and scaling up capacity to run active strategies in-house as it simplifies the portfolio to become more fleet-of-foot.

Finding risk: First State Super

A decade of ultra-low rates and mediocre growth does not mean that every year will yield low returns for investors, according to Damian Graham, the CIO of First State Super one of Australia's largest institutional investors. He talks about how to get enough risk in the portfolio.

Caisse Geneva’s approach to risk

The pension fund for the Swiss Canton of Geneva runs a fundamental investment strategy shaped around harvesting the premia. The fund's CIO, Gregoire Haenni, mindful of heightened risk in the equity allocation because of the late cycle.

Previous