Pensions - Articles - Pension Funding Levels Declined in All Global Markets 2011


 Despite some improvements in the fourth quarter of 2011, pension funding levels in major global markets dropped over the year due to declining discount rates and disappointing asset returns, according to Towers Watson’s (NYSE, NASDAQ: TW) latest Pension Index.

 Although the fourth quarter of 2011 experienced generally positive asset returns, the beneficial impact was largely offset by continuing declines in discount rates. As a result, overall movements in the Pension Index for the quarter were relatively small and mixed, ranging from a fall of 2.7% in the U.K. to a 4.4% increase in the U.S. The Towers Watson Pension Index is a measure of funded ratio based on the projected benefit obligation (PBO) for a benchmark pension plan. The Pension Index is tracked across seven markets: Brazil, Canada, the Euro-zone, Japan, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and the United States.

 “In recent years, defined benefit pension plans have been doubly hit by unfavorable asset performance and declining interest rates,” said Christine Farmer, senior international consultant. “And 2011 was no exception. We expect these economic trends to cause employers to continue to evaluate their overall retirement benefit plan risk management strategies.”

 Of the seven markets, the Canadian Index had the largest decrease, declining by approximately 16% for the year. The U.S. registered the next-largest decrease, at nearly 12%.

 “In the U.S., a positive fourth quarter investment return reversed much of the third quarter’s losses, but was not enough to offset the effect of the continuing decline in bond yields over the year,” said Jerry Mingione, senior retirement consultant. “Both corporate and government yields ended the year at near-historic lows, in part due to government interventions designed to stimulate the economy, causing problematically high liability growth.”

 The U.K. Index also dropped significantly, by almost 9%. Asset returns were positive over the year; however, discount rates, which had been close to flat for the first three quarters, declined significantly in the fourth quarter.

 Results for all regional pension indices are shown below:

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   
    TW Pension Index     Dec. 2010     Sept. 2011     Dec. 2011     % change (Sept. 2011- Dec. 2011)     % change (Dec. 2010- Dec. 2011)
    Brazil     103.2     100.4     101.1     0.7%     -2.0%
    Canada     68.1     58.2     57.1     -1.9%     -16.2%
    Eurozone     91.6     84.4     87.5     3.7%     -4.5%
    Japan     52.6     46.5     46.9     0.9%     -10.8%
    Switzerland     98.4     87.2     90.4     3.7%     -8.1%
    U.K.     87.1     81.8     79.6     -2.7%     -8.6%
    U.S.     70.7     59.7     62.3     4.4%     -11.9%

Back to Index


Similar News to this Story

State pensioners to get above inflation triple lock boost
The Office for National Statistics has announced that the Consumer Prices Index (CPI) rose by 2.8% in the 12 months to February 2025, down from the 3.
Pensions for 9 in 10 DC savers invest in productive assets
TPR says larger schemes more likely to have the right governance standards and invest in a diversified portfolio. Smaller schemes seem less likely to
Transfer Activity index fell to record low in February 2025
XPS Group’s Transfer Activity Index has fallen to the lowest observed rate since the Index was established in 2018. In February 2025, there was an ann

Site Search

Exact   Any  

Latest Actuarial Jobs

Actuarial Login

Email
Password
 Jobseeker    Client
Reminder Logon

APA Sponsors

Actuarial Jobs & News Feeds

Jobs RSS News RSS

WikiActuary

Be the first to contribute to our definitive actuarial reference forum. Built by actuaries for actuaries.