John Ralfe
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The Pensions Crisis
 
The Pensions Crisis
See RBC Capital Markets Open Forum Note 9 by JER "Are Company Contributions Big Enough?" (July 22nd 2004) with commentary from Martin Dickson, Norma Cohen (FT), Patience Wheatcroft (The Times), Liam Halligan (Sunday Telegraph) and Lisa Buckingham (Mail on Sunday).

See House of Lords Select Committee Report on an Aging Population (Jan 12 2004)

See RBC Capital Markets Open Forum Note 3 by JER "The Actuaries’ Magic Pencil: BA, BT & Invensys" (Dec 11 2003) with commentary from Martin Dickson (FT), Alex Brummer (Daily Mail) and Tony Hilton (Evening Standard)

See JER article in FT "Britain’s least favourite pension plan" (August 1 2003)

The words "pensions" and "crisis" have become inextricably linked. The November 2001 BBC Moneybox Special had "Pensions in Peril",looking at Ravenhead Glass, which had gone bust with a pensions deficit. 2002 saw more examples of small companies in the same position, including United British Shoe Machinery, Albert Fisher and ASW.

November 2001 saw the first in a series of excellent papers from UBS
"UK pensions following FRS 17", which has the best grasp of pension economics of all the investment banks. Other banks commenting included Schroder Salomon "Son of MFR: FRS 17" and Deutsche Bank "The end of the equity cult?"

As the FTSE hovered around 5,200 during the first half of 2002, the debate on the right assets for pension funds continued to rage. John Plender "Small evacuation from UK equities", Philip Coggan "No more easy answers on assets" and Anthony Hilton "Time to come clean on the big pensions problem", all cited Boots as an alternative pension model.

In June 2002 Merrill Lynch hosted a well-attended seminar "Equities and Bonds in Corporate Pension Funds: Is Boots right?",with contributions from me (answer "yes"), Andrew Dyson, from Merrill Lynch Investment Management ("no") and Dawid Konotey-Ahulu, from Merrill Lynch Capital Markets ("maybe").

Two ex-JP Morgan practitioners, Roberto Mendoza and Peter Hancock threw their considerable weight behind pension funds holding bonds in an FT article "Risk & transparency in pensions". Ben Alexander is another practitioner who applied financial economics, especially Fischer Black, to pensions in general and Boots in particular. His London Business School dissertation is "Gentlemen prefer bonds".

By June 2002 all UK companies had reported under the first stage of FRS 17, with the numbers making uncomfortable reading. It is worth pointing out BP’s position, as the largest UK company "Equity exposure hits BP pension fund" and "The world of pension fund accounting". By December 2002 BP’s FRS 17 deficit clocked in at about $9.7bn pre-tax "BP pensions".

By the end of June 2002 the FTSE had fallen 10% to 4,656 and more people were starting to sweat. The July FT headline says it all "Market turmoil hits company schemes hard: A fissure in pension fund accounts has turned into a gaping hole for some".

As well as producing a paper "Pension funding in Europe" in September 2002, UBS produced a major report "FRS 17 one year on", compiling and updating FRS 17 numbers for the FTSE 100. Alarmingly, they suggested that equity markets may still not have properly priced pension risk, with comment from Martin Dickson "Just how heavy is the pensions millstone?".

Watson Wyatt’s estimate of UK pension underfunding reached £75bn in August. Articles appeared in September and October entitled "On the edge of a credibility gap", "Bubble, bubble, default trouble" and "Adding to the pyramid of risk", from the formidable trio of Philip Coggan, John Plender and Barry Riley. The FT also had a letter "Bursting a pension funds bubble".

As we got into 2003, with the FSTE a whisker under 4,000, down for the third year in a row, people were outdoing each other in their doom and gloom. Watson Wyatt’s 2003 Global investment review has a lead article of "Stormy weather for the capital markets". UBS updated its estimates of FRS 17 deficits sub-titled "The pain gets worse", as well as a new piece on the FTSE 350.

Morgan Stanley’s January Paper "UK pensions:Is it just a storm in a teacup?" grabbed the headlines with an estimated deficit of £85bn (see FT article),which was used by Philip Coggan in his March full-page analysis "The £85bn question". The annual Barclays Equity Gilt Study was also published, showing that for the third year in a row, bonds were a better investment than shares.

The first quarter of 2003 saw a whole clutch of FT articles commenting on the pensions crisis, John Plender, "Please, Sir, must I have even less" , Jane Fuller, "Pensions of Sin" , Martin Wolf "UK awakes from pensions dream" and "Losers of the pensions lottery", John Kay, "The real culprits in the Pensions Crisis", as well as Leaders, "Pension Woes" and "Pension Plans". The Times’ Patience Wheatcroft had "Pain of ending pension holiday".

For good measure I include an March FT article of mine "A challenge to the equity cult". The BBC personal finance page also picked up on the themes for individuals in "Confronting the pensions crisis".

Given all the doom and gloom, the February Daily Telegraph advice from Christine Farnish, Head of the NAPF, for companies to ’sweat it out and wait’ "Pensions crisis, what crisis?" may not be entirely tongue-in-cheek.

For those of you who think my selection of articles is unduly biased, I include a piece from March’s FT by Alistair Ross Goobey (son of George, Father of the Cult of the Equity etc), entitled "Quashing the pension fund scare stories".
The credit rating agencies finally took notice of pensions as a credit issue and S & P put 12 companies on credit watch. ABN Amro came up with another 10 companies facing credit downgrades due to their pensions "Pensions crisis gathers pace".

Not all bad news - it was revealed in March 2003 that 65% of the £3bn BMW fund for ex-Rover workers had been switched to bonds in 2000.

The long awaited and long delayedPensions Green Paper of December 2002 was alarmingly complacent. The House of Lords Debate, opened by Lord (Norman) Fowler, was much less complacent. It is very wide ranging, including comments on FRS 17, Boots’ strategy, the responsibility of actuaries and the MFR.

John Plender, a passionate advocate of transparency, has some very interesting comments on the Brookings Institution Working Paper "Did higher stock prices cause stock prices to rise?" This concludes empirically what we knew anecdotally - pension surpluses caused by bullish equity markets in the 1990’s fuelled the stock market still further. Great on the way up, not so good on the way down.



"If final salary pension schemes did not exist we would not invent them. Their apparent success over the last generation has been based on the illusion that equities outperform bonds & that this outperformance reduces pension costs." JOHN RALFE Financial Times “A challenge to the equity cult” March 1 2003



"The idea the pension funds should hold bonds not equities is standard corporate finance text book stuff going back some 20 years." JOHN RALFE Investments & Pensions Europe “Restating the matching doctrine” July 2002



"Conventional wisdom that equities outperform bond & that this outperformance reduces pension costs, crucially ignores risk." JOHN RALFE Risk “Why bonds are right for pension funds” November 2001