By: Russ Kamp, Managing Director, Ryan ALM, Inc.
I’ve produced several posts addressing the important issue of liquidity for pension plans. You may recall my 8/14/24 post titled “A Liquidity Crunch?” that referenced issues within private equity as a result of the lack of distributions or the March 28, 2024 post titled, “The Importance of Liquidity”, which referred to a terrific article penned by Jack Boyce. There have been several others, but the issue isn’t being addressed with the appropriate urgency, so I’ll continue to elevate our concerns. As we’ve stated many times, the only reason that a pension plan exists is because of promised benefits that have been made to the plan participant. It is that promise that must be met each and every month upon retirement. There are costs associated with meeting this commitment, so both the benefit and those expenses must be funded effectively and efficiently. At present, they are not!

Is the above picture representative of the available liquidity in your plan? Has the significant movement into alternatives reduced for you the number of investment strategies within your asset allocation framework that can provide liquidity when called upon? Is the changing shape (steepening) of the US Treasury yield curve reducing the return available on cash thus making the holding of cash reserves less palatable? Has your practice of doing a “cash sweep” of dividends, interest, and capital distributions each and every month created headaches for you?
We’d like to speak with you about a strategy – cash flow matching (CFM) – that can dramatically improve your liquidity, while enhancing the return associated with “cash reserves” thus reducing the potential negative impact on your pursuit of the required ROA. Wouldn’t you like liquidity to be abundant similar to the picture below? How comforting would it be to know that each and every month your plan has the necessary asset cashflows to meet the liability cashflows of benefits and expenses without having to liquidate assets that may be transacted at less than opportune times?

Cash flow matching (CFM) has been around for decades. CFM is often how insurance companies and lottery systems meet their future obligations. They take a present value calculation of that future promise and they fund an investment grade bond program that will carefully match asset cash flows with the liability cash flows so that your required liquidity is available monthly. There is no need to do a cash sweep! If you aren’t familiar with Guinness Global Investors (UK), they have determined through their research that the practice of sweeping dividends is harmful (very) to long-term equity returns. In fact, they found that on a 10-year rolling basis going back to 1940, that dividends contributed 47% of the total return. More starkly, on a 20-year rolling basis, that contribution escalates to 57% – wow! The ability to reinvest those dividends into potentially higher returning equities is quite powerful. A CFM strategy will enable your plan to eliminate the ill effects of the cash sweeping practice and allow growth assets to grow unencumbered.
At Ryan ALM, Inc., liquidity management has always been a focus of ours since all we do is provide asset cash flows through our CFM product to meet those pesky monthly obligations. Let us help you craft a “liquidity policy” that makes sense. Furthermore, through our Custom Liability Index (CLI) we will map for you the needed liquidity as far into the future as you want to fund. Lastly, we’ll construct an investment grade bond portfolio that will ensure the necessary asset cash flows are available monthly (barring any defaults, which are incredibly rare within the IG universe). This portfolio should be the core holding within your plan. All other assets now have seen the investing horizon extended since they are no longer a source of liquidity. As you know, time is a critical variable in the success or failure of an investment program. The more time that one has to invest, the higher the probability of success. We stand ready to assist you.