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Rising Markets Boost U.S. Public Pension Funding
The aggregate funded levels of the 100 largest public pension funds grew to 74.7% during November, up from 71.6% in October.
Strong market gains during October and November helped the estimated funded levels of the 100 largest public pension plans in the U.S. rebound to 74.7%, as of Nov. 30, from 71.6% a month earlier, according to consulting firm Milliman’s public pension funding index. It was a sharp turnaround from September, when poor market performance erased more than five percentage points from the funded ratio during the month alone.
The aggregate asset value of the pension funds increased by approximately $158 billion to $4.225 trillion as of the end of October, then increased by approximately $200 billion to $4.417 trillion as of the end of November. The gap between the estimated assets and liabilities for the pension funds narrowed to $1.496 trillion at the end of November, from $1.808 trillion at the beginning of October, thanks in large part to investment returns of 2.8% and 4.7% in October and November, respectively.
The improved funded levels moved seven of the 100 plans above the 90% funded mark, as of the end of November, to bring the total to 19 plans, compared with 12 at the end of September. However, this is still far below the 46 plans that were more than 90% funded at the end of 2021.
At the same time, another seven plans moved above the 60% funded level, lowering the total number of plans under the threshold to 24 from 31 as of Sept. 30. However, this is still more than the 18 plans with funded levels below 60% at the end of 2021.
The total pension liability grew to an estimated $5.913 trillion, as of November 30, from $5.883 trillion on Sept. 30 and $5.898 trillion at the end of October.
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