IFM7 - Indiana State University

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Transcript IFM7 - Indiana State University

29 - 1
WEB CHAPTER 29
Pension Plan Management
Pension plan terminology
Defined benefit versus defined
contribution plans
Pension fund investment tactics
Retiree health benefits
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How important are pension funds?
They constitute the largest class of
investors.
They hold about 33% of all U. S.
stocks.
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Pension Plan Terminology
Defined benefit plan: Employer agrees
to give retirees a specific benefit,
generally a percentage of final salary.
Defined contribution plan: Employer
agrees to make specific payments into
a retirement fund, frequently a mutual
fund. Retirees’ benefits depend on the
investment performance of their own
fund. 401(k) is the most common type.
(More...)
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Profit sharing plan: Employer
payments vary with the firm’s profits.
(Defined contribution, but as a
percentage of profits).
Cash balance plan: Employer
promises to put a specified
percentage of the employee’s salary
into the plan, and to pay a specified
return on the plan’s assets.
(More...)
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Vesting: Gives the employee the
right to receive pension benefits at
retirement even if he/she leaves the
company before retirement.
Deferred vesting: Pension rights are
not vested for the first few years.
Portability: A “portable” pension
plan can be moved to another
employer if the employee changes
jobs.
(More...)
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Fully funded: Value of plan assets
equals the present value of expected
retirement benefits.
Underfunded: Plan assets are less than
the PV of the benefits. An “unfunded
liability” is said to exist.
Overfunded: The reverse of
underfunded.
(More...)
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Actuarial rate of return: The rate of
return:
used to find the PV of expected
benefits (discount rate).
at which the fund’s assets are
assumed to be invested.
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act (ERISA): The federal law
governing the administration and
structure of corporate pension plans.
(More...)
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Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation
(PBGC):
A government agency created by
ERISA to ensure that employees of
firms which go bankrupt before their
defined benefit plans are fully funded
will receive some minimum level of
benefits.
However, for high income employees
(i.e., airline pilots), PBGC pension
payments are often less than those
promised by the company.
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Who establishes guidelines for
reporting pension fund information on
corporate financial statements?
Financial Accounting Standards
Board (FASB), together with the SEC,
establishes rules for reporting
pension information.
Pension costs are huge, and
assumptions have major effect on
reported profits.
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How are pension fund data reported
in a firm’s financial statements?
Defined Contribution Plan:
The annual contribution is shown
as a cost on the income statement.
A note explains the entry.
Defined Benefit Plan:
The plan’s funding status must be
reported directly on the balance
(More...)
sheet.
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The annual pension contribution
(expense) is shown on the income
statement.
Details regarding the annual expense,
along with the composition of the
fund’s assets, are reported in the
notes section.
The annual pension contribution is
tied to the assumed actuarial rate of
return: the greater the assumed
return, the smaller the contribution.
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Given the following data, how much must
the firm contribute annually (at year-end)
over the employee’s working life to fully
fund the plan by retirement age?
Data/Assumptions:
Employee begins work at 25, will work
40 years until 65, and then retire.
Employee will live another 15 years, to
age 80, and will draw a pension of
$20,000 per year.
The plan’s actuarial rate of return is 10%.
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Determine the amount the
firm must have in the plan
at the time the employee
retires. It is $152,122.
Step 1.
Input
15
15
10
10
N
I
PV
20,000
20000
00
PMT
FV
$152,121.59
OutputCompute PV =152,122
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Determine the annual contribution during the employment
years. With $152,122 to be
accumulated, the answer is
$343.71.
Step 2:
Input
Output
40
10
0
N
I
PV
152122
PMT
343.71
FV
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Graph of Pension Fund Assets
Dollars
($000)
152
0
40
55
Years
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Pension fund management is much
more complex than this illustration.
Don’t know how long the employee will
work for the firm (the 40 years).
Don’t know what the annual pension
payment will be (the $20,000).
Don’t know what rate of return the
pension fund will earn (the 10%).
A large number of employees creates
complexities, but it also reduces the
aggregate actuarial uncertainty.
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What risks are borne by the plan
sponsor and plan beneficiaries under
the four types of pension plans?
Defined benefit plan: Most risk falls
on the company, because it
guarantees to pay a specific
retirement benefit regardless of the
firm’s profitability or the return on
the plan’s assets.
(More...)
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Defined contribution plan: Places
more risk on employees, because
benefits depend on the return
performance of each employee’s
chosen investment fund.
Profit sharing: Most risk to
employee, least to employer.
Company doesn’t pay into fund
unless it has earnings, and
employees bear investment risk.
(More...)
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Cash balance: “Middle of the road”
in terms of risk for both employer
and employee. Employer’s payment
obligations are fixed and known,
while employees are guaranteed a
specified return.
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What type of companies tend to
have each type of plan?
Large, more mature companies (and
governments) tend to use defined
benefit plans.
New, start-up companies tend to use
profit sharing plans.
Many older companies are shifting to
defined contribution and cash
balance plans.
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If a company uses either a defined
contribution or a profit sharing plan,
how are the assets administered?
Usually set up as a 401(k) plan.
Employees make tax-deductible
contributions into one or more
investment vehicles (often mutual
funds) established by the company.
Company may make independent or
matching contributions.
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Does the type of pension plan
influence the possibility of age
discrimination?
Defined benefit plans are more costly to
firms when older workers are hired. The
firm has a shorter time to accumulate
the needed funds, hence must make
larger annual contributions.
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Does the type of pension plan
influence the possibility of sex
discrimination?
Since women live longer than men,
female employees are more costly
under defined benefit plans.
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How does the type of pension
plan influence employee
training costs?
Defined benefit plans encourage
employees to stay with a single
company, hence they reduce
training costs.
Vesting and portability facilitate job
shifts, hence increase training
costs.
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Does the type of pension plan
influence the militancy of unions when
a company faces financial adversity?
Benefits paid under defined benefit
plans are usually tied to the number of
years worked and the final (or last few)
year’s salary. Therefore, unions are
more likely to work with a firm to
ensure its survival under a defined
benefit plan.
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What are the two components of a
plan’s funding strategy?
How fast should any unfunded
liability be reduced?
What rate of return should be
assumed in the actuarial
calculations?
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What is the primary goal of a
plan’s investment strategy?
To structure the portfolio to minimize
the risk of not achieving the
assumed actuarial rate of return.
A low risk portfolio will mean low
expected returns, which will mean
larger annual contributions, which
hurt profits.
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How can a company judge the performance of its pension plan managers?
Alpha analysis: Compare the
realized return on the portfolio with
the required return on the portfolio.
Comparative analysis: Compare the
manager’s historical returns with
other managers having the same
investment objective (same risk
profile).
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What’s meant by “tapping”
pension fund assets?
This occurs when a company terminates
an overfunded defined benefit plan, uses
a portion of the funds to purchase
annuities which provide the promised
pensions to employees, and then
recovers the excess for use by the firm.
First used by corporate raiders after
takeovers, with proceeds used to pay
down takeover debt.
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Why is “tapping” controversial?
Some people believe that pension fund
assets belong to employees, hence
tapping “robs” employees. (Excess
funds make it easier to bargain for
higher benefits.)
Courts have ruled that defined benefit
plan assets belong to the firm, so firms
can recover these assets as long as
this action does not jeopardize current
employees’ contractual benefits.
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What has happened to the cost of
retiree health benefits over the
last decade?
Because of the increased number of
retirees, longer life expectancies, and
the dramatic escalation in health care
costs over the last ten years, many
firms are forecasting that retiree
health care costs will be as high, or
higher, than pension costs.
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How are retiree health benefits
reported to shareholders?
 Before 1990, firms used pay-as-you-go
procedures which concealed the true
liability.
 Now companies must set up reserves for
retiree medical benefits.
 Firms must report current expenses to
account for vested future medical benefits.
 The 1990 rule has forced companies to
assess their retiree health care liability.
Many are now cutting benefits.