Not The Answer

I’ve written a lot on this subject, so I suspect that you would prefer another point of view. Here are the words from Cecil Roberts, International President for the UMWA on the subject of the Grassley-Alexander proposal.

Grassley-Alexander multi-employer pension plan proposal not the answer for retired miners and widows

[TRIANGLE, VA.] United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) International President Cecil E. Roberts issued the following statement today regarding the proposal by Senators Chuck Grassley (R-Ia.) and Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) addressing the multi-employer pension plan crisis:

“This proposal provides everything those who advocate against working families have ever wished for. It penalizes workers for joining unions, it penalizes retirees for sticking with those unions, it penalizes employers for recognizing unions and it penalizes unions themselves for successfully representing their members.

“This is not a starting point for negotiations. It is a multi-billion dollar tax increase on working families – especially retired Americans living on fixed incomes – their employers and their unions. Retirees covered by the UMWA Pension Fund, for example, would be subject to a 10 percent tax on pensions that average a little under $600 per month.

“This proposal does not begin to address the immediate crisis UMWA retirees and their families are confronting. Fortunately, the Bipartisan American Miners Act –by Senator Joe Manchin (D-W. Va.), Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) Senator Shelley Moore Capito (R-W. Va.), and a dozen bipartisan Senate cosponsors – does address that crisis, using an existing source of funding that requires no new bureaucracy and most importantly, no new taxes on working families.

“Retired miners, their families and widows do not have the luxury of waiting to see if Congress can eventually come up with a comprehensive solution to the multi-employer pension crisis that treats retirees fairly. 1,200 stand to lose their health care at the end of this year, 12,000 more will lose health care within a few short months, and more than 82,000 will likely see drastic cuts to their pensions a few months after that.

“We continue to strongly urge House and Senate leadership – all of whom say they want to address the immediate crisis retired miners face – to put partisanship aside and pass the Bipartisan American Miners Act. These senior citizens, who provided the fuel to power America at great risk of life and limb, need action now. Let’s get this done.

I agree with Mr. Roberts. My fear is that the U.S. Senate, under Republican majority, will act on this proposal that basically dooms to failure the 120+ multiemployer plans that are designated as Critical and Declining. Why? Instead of providing these cash-starved plans with the lifeline that they need, the proposed legislation will strengthen the PBGC so that when these funds ultimately fail they will be able to provide some of the promised benefits. I’d much prefer the Butch Lewis Act that provides a low-interest loan to these struggling plans that insures the Retired Lives liability is met in full and gives these plans a 30-year lifeline to get their house in order. Without DB plans the next generation of workers will likely be left with only a DC option, and we know how badly that has worked out for many U.S. workers in the private sector.

Don’t Let The Headlines Fool You!

Headline after headline promotes the idea that the U.S. economy has a historically low unemployment rate that currently sits at 3.6%, with only September’s reading of 3.5% lower in the last 40+years. However, according to a Brookings Institute study, nearly 50% of America’s workers (age 18-64) are in low-paying jobs and making on average just over $10/hour or roughly $18,000/year. In addition, many of these jobs either don’t provide benefits or those benefits, such as healthcare and pensions, have diminished over time. Regional biases do exist, as nearly 6 in 10 workers in the South and West struggle under the burden of low-wage work.

The study looked at the country’s nearly 400 metropolitan cities and found that between 1/3 and 2/3 of the jobs in those areas were low-paying. Regrettably, there is a perception that most of these poorer quality jobs are occupied by younger individuals, but this study found that not to be the case.  In fact, most of the 53 million American workers in low paying jobs were in their prime working years of 25-54. For many of these Americans with fulltime jobs, they are not earning a living wage for their region. Worse, as our businesses migrate their employees to defined contribution plans (DC) from defined benefit plans (DB) the burden of funding one’s retirement falls squarely on the shoulders of those that can least afford the extra burden.

Brookings also found that some of the wealthiest cities with the strongest economies had significant issues with low-quality jobs, which might just explain why places like San Francisco (700,000 low-paying jobs) and Seattle (560,000) have such awful homelessness issues. One of the areas not touched in the study was the impact that this development is having on the health of those males that have been driven from the workforce at premature ages. Life expectancy continues to fall in the U.S (3 consecutive years) which is outrageous given our wealth and medical institutions. Depression, suicide, and drug abuse are increasingly common among those forced to work in low paying jobs.

Those not able to find high-quality jobs are most often found to be lacking a college education but given the extraordinary cost of attaining a college degree, it isn’t surprising. We currently have more than 41 million Americans with student loan debt that tops $1.5 trillion at this time. The implications are profound and have delayed family unit creation, initial home buying, and many other activities that were once completed by Americans in their 20s, which is no longer the case.

So given these developments, does it still make sense, if it ever did, to thrust a majority of Americans into DC plans? Should it be a surprise that nearly 50% of Americans have saved little to nothing for retirement? I shudder to think of what might happen to the vast majority of Americans currently in the workforce when technological advances (AI) truly begin to impact a majority of occupations.

K.I.S.S.

Why must politicians always complicate a problem that has a rather simple solution? H.R. 397 passed the House with bipartisan support in July. Unfortunately, nothing has been done in the Senate to pass this important legislation needed to protect the promised retirements to so many hard-working Americans. Regrettably, we get a proposed piece of legislation from Republican Senators Grassley and Alexander, that takes the simple solution that addresses the needs of the roughly 125 Critical and Declining plans and proposes onerous changes to all multiemployer plans that might very well thrust a significant percentage of healthier plans into a funding crisis.  Why? What is the ulterior motive?

As we’ve discussed, the current array of Critical and Declining plans have a significant negative cash flow.  They need a lifeline, as these plans can not invest their way to solvency.  H.R. 397 proposes a loan program that would force plans to calculate how much it would need to fully defease the plan’s current retired lives.  They would then borrow the money through a government agency called the Pension Rehabilitation Administration (PRA).  The retired lives are defeased, while the current assets of the plan and any future contributions would go to funding the future liabilities, interest payment, and the principal loan repayment (30-year maturity). The investing horizon has been dramatically lengthened providing for a much longer investment horizon for less liquid assets to capture the liquidity premium. Simple!

The roughly 90% of multiemployer plans that are not in C&D status would continue to operate under the current rules. Have they always done everything right – NO! But, we have an immediate need to fix those plans that are in dire straights so that roughly 1.4 million Americans don’t lose their economic freedom.

However, as we previously stated, Washington DC doesn’t like simple! Instead of focusing on the crisis at hand, Grassley and Alexander want to “fix” every plan, whether they need it or not. Instead of providing loans that would extend the viability of these plans by 30 years, they prefer to have these plans fail and ultimately become the responsibility of the PBGC. Since when are the Republicans the party of big government? Why on Earth do we want to make the PBGC more relevant, as opposed to permitting these plans to stand on their own?

Instead of a simple loan program, Grassley and Alexander are now proposing to partition orphan participants from active lives, significantly reduce discount rates for the calculation of plan liabilities, change the formula for withdrawal liability, dramatically raise costs by ramping up PBGC premiums, provide tax incentives for the adoption of Composite plans, and on and on and on… It certainly makes it seem as if they want to drive multiemployer plans out of business, whether it is healthy or not. This is not a solution. I would hope that members from both parties can see through this charade before the entire multiemployer pension universe is crippled. Enough for now.

 

Are They Not Taxpayers?

Two Republican Senators have responded to the Butch Lewis Act (H.R. 397) that passed through the House in July with their own retirement proposal.  I’m so glad that I haven’t been holding my breath in anticipation that the counter proposal would be supportive of the loan program that is the backbone of the BLA’s legislation and implementation.  I will comment much more on the specifics of the Grassley and Alexander legislative proposal (Multiemployer Pension Recapitalization and Reform Plan) in a future post, but the comment that gets my blood flowing is the following:

“The reforms are designed in a balanced way to avoid tipping more plans into a poorer funded condition, and also to avoid exposing taxpayers to the full risks associated with the largely underfunded multiemployer system and pushing the PBGC into insolvency.”

Are the participants in these plans NOT taxpayers? Do the benefits that they receive not generate tax revenue directly and significantly more revenue through their participation in our economy? Why are we not concerned that the 1.4 million workers in Critical and Declining multiemployer plans may lose a substantial percentage of their promised benefit? Given the critical elements in the Grassley and Alexander bill there is a very good chance that a significant percentage of the 10+ million union employees in the multiemployer retirement program may witness a significant reduction in their promises, too.  Lastly, did we not ask the American taxpayer to support the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) program to “rescue” the financial industry following the GFC? The TARP program that authorized the rescue of up to $700 billion. Why is this much smaller request creating all of this concern for the taxpayer now? There seems to be a double standard in play, and it stinks!

Are They Worth It?

Anyone who has spent more than a few minutes reading my blogs knows that I am a huge fan of DB plans as the primary retirement vehicle for participants. I personally like the idea of a 401(k) plan as a supplement, its original intent, to a primary retirement account, but certainly not as a primary vehicle for the vast majority of American workers. Much has been done to try to improve 401(k) programs from auto-escalate, to auto-enrollment, to changes in QDIA options, but there is much more that is needed to be done.

One of the “enhancements” that I initially appreciated was the idea of a target-date fund (TDF) as a QDIA option in lieu of a GIC or money market account. However, I’ve soured on these instruments because of their cost structure. Despite the fact that we now have more than $1 trillion in AUM in TDFs, costs have not fallen as rapidly as they should have. According to Morningstar the average TDF still charges 62 bps. Are advisors really adjusting their fund exposures frequently enough to justify this fee? After all, an individual participant could invest their retirement balances in pure index funds for mere pennies. Starting the year off 60+ bps behind the index is a lot to overcome. The compounding impact of years of higher fees will negatively impact one’s retirement accumulation.

As our retirement industry becomes more reliant on defined contribution plans, we are burdening our workers to fund, manage, and disburse this benefit. Do we also have to make matters worse by charging excessive fees for portfolios that are charging too much for the activity that is being conducted?

And Another One Bites The Dust

Another one bites the dust
Another one bites the dust
And another one gone, and another one gone
Another one bites the dust…

Thank you, Queen, for the perfect opening to this blog post. With FedEx’s announcement earlier this week that all future employees would only be eligible to participate in the company’s 401(k) plan, we have yet another example of a major US company moving employees from the safety of a defined benefit plan to an employee self-directed, variable retirement benefit structure. Are we supposed to be happy for those employees?

“In a memo to employees, first reported Monday by The Wall Street Journal, FedEx human resources executive Judy Edge said, “As we continue to evolve FedEx retirement benefits to remain competitive, we recognize that more and more people understand the value of a 401k structure.”” Baloney! Sure, there are certainly some Americans that like the portability of their retirement benefit, but for a majority of American workers do they really understand that they will have to fund, manage, and then disburse this “benefit” with little to no training?

FedEx is reporting that the company contribution will be 8% for those that contribute 6% or more. Let’s see for how long this contribution level lasts. The next economic downturn will have company officials scrambling to find potential savings and this payment is a great source of future savings.  Furthermore, you are eliminating a benefit that is professionally managed to one where every Tom, Dick, and Jane is asked to become a portfolio manager. Are they still going to allow opting out, the de-escalation of contributions, loans, and premature withdrawals? Then this is nothing more than a glorified savings account.

Corporate America doesn’t want to be in the retirement game and, they certainly don’t want the pension liabilities and contribution expenses impacting their financial statements. Can we just have some corporate official stand up and be honest about this? With little real wage growth in this country for the last 2+ decades, it is very difficult for many Americans to fund this benefit. It isn’t a matter of lacking discipline. It is a matter of lacking the financial wherewithal. This “benefit” may be portable, but an anemic account balance isn’t going to do much for you whether you stay with one company or move to 10 different ones!

Are You Hedging Pension Inflation?

Since the Great Financial Crisis (GFC) many pension plans have shifted assets into either Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS) or real assets (commodities) or both. The question that I’d ask is what are they trying to hedge? Is it asset inflation or pension inflation? If it is pension inflation then they are likely not hedging their exposures appropriately since pension inflation is very different from that of asset inflation.

Pension inflation is what a plan sponsor agrees to as a benefit increase as a cost of living adjustment (COLAs) for Retired Lives and a salary increase factor for Active Lives. Usually, these COLAs are based on the Consumer Price Index (CPI) with a floor and a cap or even a % of the CPI while salary increases tend to be quite static at a 3% annual increase. As a result, pension inflation tends to be less volatile than the CPI. The plan sponsor actuary includes pension inflation (COLAs and salary increases) in their projected benefit payment schedule for both retired and active lives. In sharp contrast, the CPI is a volatile measurement of consumer inflation.

In a quick screen of the Money Market Directory, it appears that roughly 730 DB plans have some exposure to real assets and another 120 use TIPS. I’m guessing that the plans are trying to hedge asset inflation, but that is purely a guess, fearing that the U.S. government’s multiple quantitative easing programs would create massive inflationary pressures. Well, that has obviously not happened. Inflation has been muted in the last decade with no calendar year since 2011 experiencing a CPI reading greater than 3%.

At Ryan ALM we are researching the subject of pension inflation versus asset inflation, and how that distinction impacts asset allocation. Please don’t hesitate to reach out to us if you’d like to get our thoughts.

What Plan Sponsors Need To Ask Their Consultants

Asset consultants continue to play a vital role in the management of defined benefit plans. Occasionally, a plan has to conduct a search for a new one based on several reasons. An industry colleague recently asked me what questions they should ask during their search process for a new asset consultant. I appreciated getting asked that question and I took some time to think about the questions that I’d ask if given the opportunity.

I believe that consultants will tell you that their primary functions are related to asset allocation and manager selection. I know that they do much more than just that, but I think that these areas are where they feel that they add the most value. Given these areas of focus, here are the questions that I would pose:

  • What is the true objective of a DB plan?
  • How is that reflected in the asset allocation?
  • How do you calculate the ROA?
  • Is asset allocation based on the funded status or the ROA?
  • Should a plan with a 60% funded status have a different asset allocation than a plan with a 90% funded status even if they have the same ROA objective?
  • What is the role of bonds within a DB plan?
  • How do you de-risk a pension plan within your asset allocation strategy?
  • How do you fund benefit payments?
  • What are you doing differently today than 5 to 10-years ago? 
  • What did you do differently after the GFC?
  • How do you define risk in asset allocation?
  • If risk is defined as the uncertainty of funding benefits. What is the strategy that you employ to meet this objective?
  • What benchmark do you use for asset/liability management? 
  • What is highlighted on the first page of your quarterly performance report? If it isn’t assets versus liabilities what it it?
  • How do contributions play a role in asset allocation?
  • What are your definitions of alpha and beta within a DB pension plan?
  • When do you change an asset allocation?
  • Do you have an inflation hedge strategy? If so, what are you hedging – asset inflation or pension inflation?
  • How does your shortlist of managers do 3 years after a search is completed relative to the broad universe of managers? Do you monitor this and how often?

As you see, my questions are much more focused on asset allocation and importantly through a liability lens, which is often missing in a traditional asset consultant relationship. Unfortunately, our industry has the tendency to do the same old, same old. Clearly, defined benefit plans have come under great stress in recent decades. Doing the same old, same old has failed.  Isn’t it about time that we try something new? But, in actuality, paying greater attention to plan liabilities would bring us back to the early days of managing DB pension plans when a plan’s liabilities were the main focus and those obligations were defeased.

Why did we get away from securing the promised benefits by focusing more attention to the return on asset assumption (ROA)? By doing so, we have added greater uncertainty and more risk.  DB plans need to be secured, but for them to be successful, we need to significantly reduce funding volatility. Are you comfortable that the average DB plan has greater equity exposure at this time than they had before the Great Financial Crisis?  I’m not.

Baby Steps

With the bipartisan effort recently put forward by the U.S. Senate to support funding for the nearly collapsed United Mine Workers pension system, Congress is finally showing an interest in supporting the American worker that was promised a benefit, but who have been left high and dry in many recent cases. Given Congress’s heightened focus on the impeachment hearings, I wasn’t sure that much, if anything, was going to get done during the remainder of the year. Glad that I might be wrong!

The proposed American Miners Act of 2019 would transfer funds from the Interior Department’s Abandoned Mine Land fund to help meet the benefit obligations (including some healthcare expenditures) for those workers in the 1974 Pension Plan, which is a plan with roughly $3.1 billion in assets, while saddled with an estimated $3 billion in unfunded obligations. The legislation was introduced by West Virginia Senators Shelly Moore Capito (R) and Joe Manchin (D) along with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, (R-KY). The legislation is also co-sponsored by a number of Senators from mining states, such as Ohio, Pensylvania, and Virginia, as well as others.

This is a good first step, but much more needs to be done to sure up the failing pension systems for roughly 120 other multiemployer plans. Hopefully, with McConnell’s support of this effort, he will be more inclined to bring to the floor for a vote the Butch Lewis Act that passed through the House in July. Time is wasting, and with each passing day, more pressure is applied to these cash-starved plans. A major market correction prior to receiving critical support would likely be a death knell event.

 

Here we Go Again?

My wife and I are blessed with four grandchildren, and with that gift comes many opportunities to “sing” nursery rhymes to our little ones.  One of my favorites is the “Wheels On The Bus”, which as you know go round and round and round and round and… Well, I can’t help think that the song is relevant to decision making within the U.S. pension industry. We continuously live through multiple cycles running concurrently as if they are just wheels on the bus going round.

I recently presented to attendees at the IFEBP conference in San Diego. My topic was “Modern Asset Allocation”, and my thesis was that doing the same old, same old, was just NOT going to cut it anymore! We need to finally stop that bus. (Please reach out to me if you are interested in getting my presentation and notes). Managing to the return on asset assumption (for public and multiemployer plans) has led to the habitual underfunding of the pension plans through lower contributions, while also leading to more aggressive risk profiles than necessary as asset allocations are stretched to achieve more aggressive return targets. You would think that having suffered through two significant market declines in the last 18 years that consultants and plan sponsors would want to get off the asset allocation rollercoaster.

Well, according to database provider Wilshire Trust Universe Comparison Survey (TUCS), few have learned their lesson, as public pension systems continue to either increase equity exposure or they’re letting their gains just ride. According to Wilshire, equity and equity-like alternative weights are now at pre-2007 levels as median exposures for domestic equities sit at 47.3%, while private equity averages roughly 5.6%. In addition, traditional fixed income, the only asset class that correlates to a pension’s liabilities, has been significantly reduced and the composition of the bond portfolio has changed dramatically with the additions of high yield and private debt, potentially injecting more risk into the equation.

I certainly don’t know when the next recession might occur, but it will. Do we really want to have these plans sitting with their highest equity exposure when it hits the fan? Shouldn’t we be looking for ways to reduce risk after a long cycle of outperformance? Contribution expense as a percentage of salary has been growing leaps and bounds. In a recent article in Cal Matters, pension costs were highlighted. Specifically, the Stanislaus Consolidated Fire Protection District was highlighted. It seems that pension costs are about to bankrupt this entity because CalPERS has levied an additional annual required contribution to cover the UAL.

Even with the extra CalPERS charge in 2015-16, Stanislaus Consolidated’s retirement costs were not overwhelming, about 32% of wages and salaries for the district’s employees. But the UAL squeeze was about to get tighter. It jumped to $397,981 the next year and $517,834 in 2017-18. The agency’s 2019-20 budget sets aside $842,404 for UAL, contributing to a financial freefall. This rapid increase has caused layoffs of staff and the closing of a firehouse. Residents are obviously not pleased to see their taxes go up at the same time that services are diminishing.

But, let’s just keep swinging for the fences, and maybe, just maybe, we’ll get lucky this time. I don’t know about you, but I wouldn’t want to have to rely on luck to make sure that the promised benefits would be paid. It may not be time to get off the bus, but let’s encourage the driver to take a different route this time.