Short-term focus needed to get long duration exposure

Despite recent volatility in equity markets, pension plans looking to transition to a liability-matched investment portfolio need to be proactive to mitigate the risk associated with the move, a US-based consultant has advised.

Russell Investments head of fixed income transitions, Travis Bagley says many of their defined benefit corporate pension fund clients are looking to make the move into liability-driven investment strategies but face a difficult transition.

“These plans want to make a decision to go to long duration but it is in an environment where interest rates are extremely low from a historical standpoint,” Bagley says.

“So, it is a behavioural finance issue where right at the point where they (pension plans) are ready to go into long duration assets there is the prospect out there that market interest rates are going to rise, so if you invest in those long duration assets and rates do rise than the value of your assets will go down.”

In a recent white paper Russell Investments investigated a range of strategies to move from a traditional asset-focused portfolio strategy that typically may have 60 per cent in equities and 40 per cent bonds to a liability-driven asset allocation.

“This is one of the riskiest transactions that any plan can undertake because you are selling the equity asset class and buying long duration fixed income asset class,” Bagley says.

Sponsored Content

“The correlation of these two asset classes is very different, they are not correlated at all, and the performance between one and the other can be very different in those asset classes.”

Bagley says the pension plans looking to make the transition are usually defined benefit corporate pension plans with assets of more than $1 billion.

The clients Russell Investmens are typically advising on making the LDI move are larger funds, with up to $50 billion in assets, Bagley says.

Russell Investments found the most popular tactic for making the transition is to use a mixture of government and corporate bonds and futures.

While Russell reports swaps are being used, the lingering fall-out from the financial crisis has meant concerns over counterparty risk made this a less desired method for gaining long duration exposure.

Bagley says the most popular instrument to use is long maturing corporate bonds because their yield rates most closely match the rates at which liabilities are discounted.

With strong demand and a shortage of supply for high quality corporate debt, Bagley says this type of fixed asset looked good for funds over the long-term.

“If a plan has implemented their long duration credit tilt already, they are sitting in a good place,” he says.

The average duration for LDI mandates is 10 years or more, with many funds still only at the beginning of this transformation in their asset allocation.

“Right now those plans are only at about the 3 to 3.5 year-stage so there is definitely a significant amount of move that needs to happen,” Bagley says.

“So, we are only a third of the way there so there is another two-thirds of the way to go for these funds to get to their ultimate end goal.”

The white paper looks at two transition strategies. The first, a so-called “idealist” strategy is where once the plan made a decision that interest rate hedging is appropriate, it moved immediately to an LDI strategy.

The “idealist” plan will then make asset allocation changes with derivatives and work into a physicals (fixed income instruments) portfolios over time.

The second strategy, the so-called “harm minimiser” looked to dollar cost average into LDI over time, using a mix of derivatives and physicals.

“Many of the plans we talk to don’t necessarily want to go into the LDI solution all at once, they would rather dollar cost average into it over a longer period of time,” he says.

“That may mean six months, a year or even multiple years rather than taking on all of that long duration exposure at once. Maybe over a scheduled 12-month horizon makes more sense to them.”

Another version of this “harm minimiser” approach that Russell is seeing is to transition in stages.

This approach takes a given percentage hedge ration, say 45 per cent , and moves to that immediately with whatever physicals, futures, and swaps that is cost optimal. Then the pension fund will pick a time in the future for when they plan to bring its hedge-ratio up to its long-term desirable level.

Bagley says the majority of the funds Russell is talking with had chosen to go down the “harm minimiser” route, with either a dollar cost average or staged approach.

The strategy and tactics a pension plan uses to transition to LDI will depend on a range of things including the funded status of the plan. The make-up and personality of the investment or oversight committee is also crucial, in particular how they react to the significant impact on asset values from rising rates.

Despite the difficulties in making the move, Bagley says plans needed to take positive steps to reach their long-term interest rate hedging goals.

“We would like to see plans be more proactive in moving into long duration but there is also the behavioural finance question, which is: is this the right time to make the move, and most plans would also like a calm or somewhat less volatile market to make this transition,” he says.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Poll results: Do CIOs of US public pension funds get paid adequately?

  mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

The Caisse, Future Fund into infrastructure

Two of the world’s biggest institutional investors have recently made significant forays into Australian infrastructure, seeing opportunities in the country across a wide array of assets. Canada’s second largest pool of pension assets, la Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec (the Caisse), has made a $139.2-million investment in five projects. Macky Tall, the fund’s

Cal pension reforms set to pass

Governor of California, Edmund G Brown Jr, has announced proposed legislation that outlines sweeping reforms to the state’s pension system, but appears to have stepped back from a proposal to create a hybrid pension plan. The hybrid defined-contribution/defined-benefit plan was proposed last year when Brown launched a 12-point reform package. It was widely opposed by

DB plans continue to slide

The funded status of US defined-benefit corporate-pension plans continued to worsen last year, despite plan sponsors increasing contributions by $70 billion, a new Mercer study reveals. Mercer found funding levels have slipped to 2009 levels, with the outlook for 2012 likely to extend the bleak news for plan sponsors. The funded status of pension plans

Super standard risk measure

Australian superannuation funds are now required to disclose a measurement of risk to fund members, with trustees encouraged to use a standardised measurement backed by regulators and industry peak bodies. The Standard Risk Measure will provide a rating of a fund’s investment option based on the likely number of negative returns this option is predicted

Robert Merton: the individual plan man

A retirement solution that focuses on outcomes and is customised for each participant cannot be met by existing defined-contribution designs, according to Nobel Prize-winning economist, Robert Merton, who advocates a “next-generation DC solution”. Merton, who is the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Sloan School of Management’s distinguished professor of finance and resident scientist at Dimensional Fund

Previous