TORONTO, January 6, 2012 - Many employers that provide a defined benefit (DB) pension plan for their employees may find themselves having to double their contributions or more, this year in order to meet solvency requirements, according to Aon Hewitt, the global human resource consulting and outsourcing business of Aon Corporation (NYSE: AON). The median pension solvency funded ratio - the ratio of the market value of plan assets to liabilities - is approximately 15 per cent lower this year than at the start of 2011 due to lower interest rates and the stock market decline. With the solvency position of these plans only in the 68 per cent range - down from around 83 per cent a year ago - plan sponsors that will file an actuarial valuation this year will need to add extra funds to comply with minimum funding rules that assure DB plans can meet their pension promises. As a result, employers may be pressing pension regulators for further funding relief, if such relief has not already been granted.
Not all DB plan sponsors find themselves having to increase
their contributions, however. "Organizations that have
taken steps to manage their plan's risk exposure are likely
better funded," said Tom Ault, a vice president with Aon
Hewitt in Vancouver. "Depending on the plan and the
approach adopted, sponsors may find that their solvency
ratio has dropped by considerably less than 15 per cent in
the last year."
Developing an Action Plan
André Choquet, an investment consultant with Aon Hewitt in
Toronto, outlined some of the possible actions plan
sponsors could have adopted at the beginning of 2011 and
the effect these measures might have had on their solvency
ratio:
Taking less risk: If plan sponsors invested more in bonds
and less in equities, they would have experienced a lower
drop in their solvency ratio. Increasing investment in
bonds from 40 per cent to 60 per cent would have meant a
drop to only a 71 per cent solvency ratio, rather than 68
per cent. "Three per cent may not sound like much, but it
means a $3 million smaller shortfall to fund on a $100
million pension plan," stated Choquet
Having a better match between bond and liability duration:
Pension plans typically invest in universe bonds, with
terms of mainly between five and ten years. Switching to
long bonds, with maturity between 10 and 30 years more
closely match the plan's liabilities cash flows and
helps assets and liabilities behave in tandem when interest
rates fluctuate. If plan sponsors had taken this step in
2011, they would have experienced a 72 per cent solvency
ratio.
Adopting a less-risk/long bonds approach: Implementing both
measures would have resulted in a solvency ratio of
approximately 77 per cent at the end of 2011.
"In order to experience little or no drop in solvency ratio, plan sponsors would have had to remove all investment risk from the plan, and/or invested in derivative products - assets that are even more sensitive to interest rate movements than regular bonds," stated Choquet. Plan sponsors have historically avoided such measures, partially due to the low interest rate environment that currently prevails.
Looking Ahead to 2012
"Given that there will be more economic uncertainty in the
coming year, all DB plan sponsors should reconsider their
risk management approach now in order to avoid having to
make even greater contributions at the end of 2012," said
Ault.
In addition to the various investment strategies mentioned above, organizations should take another look at their pension plan design, funding policy and contribution strategy.
Dynamic investment policies are also becoming more prevalent. "These policies, in particular dynamic de-risking policies that reduce risk as a plan's funded ratio improves, reduce risk and long-term costs, while taking the emotional element out of asset mix decisions," stated Ault. "Such policies can be tailored to a low-interest rate environment, allowing for some downside protection, while leaving room for some improvement if interest rates rise."
About Aon Hewitt
Aon Hewitt is the global leader in human capital consulting
and outsourcing solutions. The company partners with
organizations to solve their most complex benefits, talent
and related financial challenges, and improve business
performance. Aon Hewitt designs, implements, communicates
and administers a wide range of human capital, retirement,
investment management, health care, compensation and talent
management strategies. With more than 29,000 professionals
in 90 countries, Aon Hewitt makes the world a better place
to work for clients and their employees. For more
information on Aon Hewitt, please visit
About Aon
Aon Corporation (NYSE:AON) is the leading global provider
of risk management, insurance and reinsurance brokerage,
and human resources solutions and outsourcing services.
Through its more than 61,000 colleagues worldwide, Aon
unites to empower results for clients in over 120 countries
via innovative and effective risk and people solutions and
through industry-leading global resources and technical
expertise. Aon has been named repeatedly as the world's
best broker, best insurance intermediary, reinsurance
intermediary, captives manager and best employee benefits
consulting firm by multiple industry sources. Visit to
learn about Aon's global partnership and shirt
sponsorship with Manchester United.
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Media Contact:
Marcia McDougall
416-662-2181
marcia.mcdougall@aonhewitt.com
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