Going beyond DB vs DC for the ultimate pension

One constructive consequence of the global financial crisis, according to the director of the Rotman International Centre for Pension Management, Keith Ambachtsheer, is the exposure of defined benefit and defined contribution scheme designs as inadequate. Amanda White spoke to him about alternative pension models and the most cost-effective delivery mechanism.

The turbulence in markets has been a catalyst for some navel gazing in the global pension market, which has the two-fold effect of re-examining pension design and the institutional elements that need to be in place to deliver cost efficiency, according to Keith Ambachtsheer, director of the Rotman International Centre for Pension Management (ICPM).

“I hope that what comes out of this cycle of market turbulence is that the defined contribution versus defined benefit debate diminishes into a discussion of what the best system should look like.”

And there is an awakening of that question, according to Ambachtsheer, who points to pension funds, government and regulators in Canada, Australia and The Netherlands which are all regarding optimal pension plan design with some seriousness.

The answer will depend, to some extent, on local considerations, and how various countries deal with how to develop to the best pension systems will be one of the questions posed at the ICPM conference, which will be held in Toronto in June.

Sponsored Content

ICPM aims to be the bridge between investment academics and practitioners, and has 23 research partners in the US, Europe, Asia and Australia, mostly made up of large pension funds including the Australian Future Fund, PGGM, Mn Services, OMERS, the Washington State Investment Board, Nomura Research Institute, USS and the Ontario Teachers Pension Plan.

“The opportunity the financial crisis has created is that the old approaches are faulty, but it needs everyone to get together,” Ambachtsheer says. “Everyone has their own hammer and thinks theirs is the best, but it requires integrative thinking.”

In Ambachtsheer’s view, the optimal pension system is a target-benefit approach, and he has developed a proposal for a Canada Supplementary Pension Plan, which combines the best of both defined benefit and defined contribution plans.

It has three basic tenets: a retirement savings accumulation/decumulation formula likely to generate adequate, affordable post-work lifetime payment streams; complete workforce coverage and job-to-job portability across Canada; and pension delivery by institutions that are transparent and cost-effective, and operate solely in the best interests of the people they are meant to serve.

Ambachtsheer is widely recognised for his out-of-the-box thinking on pension governance, finance and investment issues. He founded his own firm, KPA Advisory in 1985, and was also one of the founders of CEM Benchmarking, which benchmarks investment and administration services of more than 500 pension funds globally.

Now the ICPM and CEM are collaborating to analyse the data and some preliminary results that raise some interesting inferences regarding the cost-effective delivery of pensions.

“The financial crisis has highlighted there have to be effective institutional elements in place to deliver the goods cost efficiently, which raises questions of scale, governance, and insourcing versus outsourcing.”

On average, according to his research, a 10-times increase in membership size is associated with a $108 drop in benefit administration costs per member. Similarly, in the investment database, on average, a 10-times increase in the dollar value of the funds is statistically associated with a 0.17 percentage point drop in total investment costs.

In addition, size not only gives funds a cost advantage, it also gives a performance advantage because the larger funds typically invest more in private equity and alternatives assets, with a larger overall allocation to passive management.

But just how big is big enough?  It’s a question that is also up for debate. The chief executive of the Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System, Michael Nobrega, was recently quoted as saying his fund with $44 billion was not big enough to deliver the quality and depth of governance, investment skills and risk management expertise its members need and deserve.

According to Ambachtsheer, who says any fund under $20 billion is too small, the reality that scale produces better outcomes for members should be reflected in the public policy and strategic plans of pension funds.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Capital ventures forth … cautiously

Everyone likes venture capital. It’s one of the feel-good asset types that fiduciary investors can believe makes a difference to society. Unfortunately, for the past 10 years it has also, on average, lost money.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Climate-change cloud has silver lining: Mercer

Climate change could slash as much as 10 per cent off portfolios in the next 20 years, according to Mercer’s much-anticipated climate change report, the result of an 18-month collaboration with 14 institutional investors from around the globe.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

CalSTRS plugs holes in neat buckets with risk overlays

CalSTRS will employ a new way of evaluating portfolio risk which overlays risk across asset classes, rather than replacing asset classes with risk categories, and introduces six broad risk factors.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Ontario Teachers puts hand up for triennial vote on pay

A say-on-pay vote every three years is preferable to an annual vote that could lead to a focus on short-term objectives, according to the $100 million Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan in its annual letter to more than 650 public companies around the world.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Occidental managers make capital mistakes in rush to Orient

Everyone is mesmerised by the Asian growth story. The emerging middle classes, hundreds of millions of new consumers and, not the least, high fees for funds management services.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Derivatives: sour grapes or Dodd-Frank victims?

While claims the Dodd-Frank Act will make the derivatives market prohibitively expensive could be seen as a case of sour grapes from a market unregulated until now, a committee reviewing the Act has asserted that end-users of derivatives, including pension funds, will bear the brunt of the new laws.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous