Source:
Thanks to improving life expectancy and the Federal Reserve’s financial
repression lowering yields, US company pension funds have been hit by a
double whammy.
As Moody’s warns, companies
will have to find $110 billion in the next seven years to fund pension
liabilities shortfalls. Moody’s adds, “given these increasing
liabilities and cash drains, we expect to see an acceleration in lump
sum offers,” as firms try to derisk.
As Chief Investment Officer reports,
Improving life expectancy is expected to add billions to the amount companies must pay into their defined benefit plans.
US companies will have to find $110 billion in the next seven years
to fund pension liabilities as life expectancy increases, according to
ratings agency Moody’s.
Using data from new mortality tables published by the Society of
Actuaries last week, Moody’s calculated significant increases in the
amount of cash US firms would have to contribute to their defined
benefit pensions in order to match growing liabilities.
The new mortality tables show male life expectancy at age 65 in the
US has improved by two years since 2000, when the Society of Actuaries
last updated its assumptions. For women, life expectancy at age 65 has
improved by 2.4 years. This has resulted in an estimated increase of
between 4% and 8% in company pension obligations.
Moody’s applied the calculations to the funding obligations for 10 of
the biggest listed companies in the US. IBM’s funding obligations –
which include servicing the pension fund as well as regular
contributions adjusted for 2% inflation – were estimated at $99.7
billion in 2013, but Moody’s calculations showed this could increase to
as much as $113.6 billion at the top end of assumptions.
“Given these increasing liabilities and cash drains, we expect to see
an acceleration in lump sum offers and annuitizations similar to
Motorola’s recent pension plan restructuring, which, through a
combination of annuitizations and lump sum offers, it expects will
reduce its [obligations] by $4.2 billion,” wrote Wesley Smyth, senior
accounting analyst at Moody’s.
In September, ahead of the publication of the tables, Moody’s
predicted the new data would trigger a rise in de-risking activity. This
year has already seen several giant transactions, with the BT Pension
Scheme, Motorola, Bristol-Myers, and two Dutch miners’ pension funds all
engaging in de-risking deals.
Culled from zero hedge in Blacklisted
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