Schroders Names North America Institutional Leader
May 12, 2014 (PLANSPONSOR.com) – Global asset management firm Schroders hired Marc Mayer to lead its institutional business initiatives in North America.
“We are privileged to find someone of Marc’s caliber to lead
the next leg of growth of our institutional business in North America. Our
strategy is to expand our business in core asset classes such as global equities,
multi-asset and multi-sector fixed income. Marc’s experience in offering both
alpha and solutions capabilities underscores our commitment to becoming a
strategic investment partner to North American institutions across all segments,”
says Karl Dasher, Schroders CEO of North America, who is based in New York.
Mayer brings more than 25 years of senior investment
leadership experience to Schroders. Most recently, he served as CEO of GMO
LLC. Prior to that, Mayer spent 20 years
at AllianceBernstein, where he served in various leadership roles including, head
of Institutional Research, head of Institutional Brokerage, global head of
Institutions, global head of Retail, and CIO of Multi-Asset.
Schroders, headquartered in London, has
experienced significant growth in its U.S. institutional business during the past
five years, with AUM rising from $15.8 billion as of December, 31, 2009, to $35.20 billion as of March 31, 2014.
May 12, 2014 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - The “Move It” strategy for defined benefit (DB) plan de-risking applies to plan sponsors with zero pension risk tolerance or the relatively few plans whose risk footprint is so large that the company is willing to pay almost any price to eliminate it.
Moving
risk is an alternative that makes sense only for the plans with the highest
enterprise risk. The solutions consist of unloading liabilities and assets to
another organization and can be very costly for the plan sponsor.
Annuity purchases. Commonly known as
“buy-outs,” annuity purchases involve the transfer of pension assets and
liabilities to an insurance company that is deemed by the plan’s fiduciaries to
have a very low probability of default. Of course the insurance company will
underwrite the risk and charge appropriately for the annuities. A plan sponsor
typically uses a buy-out strategy to secure participant benefits when plan
termination is on the horizon.
In
2012, a record $41 billion in pension risk transfer activity occurred—from just
three companies: Ford, General Motors (GM), and Verizon. In GM’s case, the
unfunded pension plan liabilities exceeded 70% of its entire market
capitalization prior to the risk transfer. The plan sponsor felt the need to
eliminate the enterprise risk and, as a result, GM paid a hefty settlement
price for its annuity purchases.
Lump-sum windows. A lump-sum window
simply defines a limited time period when terminated vested participants can
choose whether or not to accept their pension benefits in a lump sum. Also, to
incentivize the lump-sum acceptance rate, special subsidies could be included.
For example, to incentivize employees to retire at age 62, a plan sponsor could
offer a payout level that the participant would normally receive only if he or
she waited for commencement until age 65.Offering a lump-sum window or amending
your plan to offer lump sums permanently are both designed to relieve the plan
of future liability risk associated with the participants electing lump-sum
cash-outs.
Before executing
either of these strategies it is important to bear in mind the following
considerations: Lump-sum payouts to participants would tend to reach record
highs at times when interest rates are at record lows. Also, there is an
opportunity cost associated with lump-sum transactions because assets are also
leaving the plan. Also salient is the anti-selection risk present with lump-sum
offerings where the less healthy participants would elect lump sums while the
healthy would select life annuities. Lastly, because of the associated transfer
of risk from employer to employee, there are always some related fiduciary
concerns and also concerns of negative public relations.
Voluntary plan
termination.
As mentioned earlier, for those sponsors with zero risk tolerance, a voluntary
plan termination may be the ultimate destination. Plans en route to termination
are often amended to allow for lump sums, if they do not already contain this
option. This is done in order to reduce the size of the pension obligation and
thus it reduces the overall dollar cost of the risk transfer transaction to an
insurance company that will provide annuities for the remaining employees who
did not cash out.
Voluntary
plan termination is an option that sits at the extreme end of the de-risking
spectrum. As such, it is the most costly of the available de-risking options.
Plan termination liabilities are typically 115% to 120% percent of that of
ongoing plan liabilities measured on an accounting basis. Besides the premium
above ongoing costs that must be paid to an insurance company, there are also
the costs of final data cleanup, benefit calculations, participant
communications and notifications, legal fees, and third-party fiduciary fees.
Depending on an enterprise’s financial standing, risk tolerance, and future outlook,
a plan termination—in spite of the cost—may be the optimal solution. Of course
in this event, the costs of a potential replacement retirement plan should also
be considered in advance, as well as the potential effect on the employee
population.
Risks of de-risking
By
definition, risk management deals with probabilities, not certainties. As such,
advisers have to pose difficult questions to help their clients see the
possible negative consequences of the recommended strategies.
For
de-risking, these include:
What
about the opportunity cost when pension liabilities and assets are offloaded,
prior to a rally in the financial markets?
What
if interest rates rise and the pension plan becomes overfunded, after the
implementation of subsidized lump sum buyouts or other costly risk reduction
strategies?
Would
an organization be better off in the long run maintaining a fully funded
pension plan that is generating income and showing surplus on the balance sheet
instead of going through a voluntary plan termination expenditure?
How
soon should a plan sponsor fully fund its plan and at what costs, including the
costs of potentially borrowing to accelerate funding?
What
ultimate funding level should a plan sponsor target?
How will changes in
plan design impact an organization’s ability to attract and retain the quality
employees it needs to remain competitive?
To
answer these questions, plan sponsors should think about both cost and employee
behavior in light of the changes in the retirement landscape, and try to use
their modified retirement plan to influence behavior in a positive way for the
organization. Keep in mind that balance-sheet considerations do not necessarily
conflict with employee focus.
With
rising interest rates, more plans will achieve surplus funding. At this point
the plan’s funded status position can be stabilized by implementation of the
appropriate de-risking techniques, described in detail here.
The current scenario provides what may prove to be a rare opportunity to lock
in pension income.
Lifetime
pension gains on the income statement and plan contributions at near-zero
levels would surely provide a stable platform for building an attractive
employee benefits program. Perhaps there would then be a reversion to the conditions
of the 1990s, when pension plans were a true asset to employees and the
enterprise. Even better, this time we will all have the added benefit of the
risk-reduction lessons taught to us in the 2000s.
John Ehrhardt and
Zorast Wadia, principals and consulting actuaries with Milliman in New
York
NOTE: This feature is
to provide general information only, does not constitute legal advice, and
cannot be used or substituted for legal or tax advice.
Any opinions of the author(s) do not necessarily
reflect the stance of Asset International or its affiliates.