Study: European Funds Imprecisely Model Their Liability Hedging Portfolios

Research by EDHEC-Risk Institute has found that 45% of pensions had poorly defined liability hedging portfolios while a quarter of schemes have not fully identified their liabilities.

(September 28, 2010) — A recent study by EDHEC-Risk Institute has shown that nearly half of all European pension funds are imprecisely modeling their liability hedging portfolios.

Samuel Sender, applied research manager at the institute, said the primary challenge for a pension fund, according to the latest research, is meeting its liability by hedging it away, fully or partially. The EDHEC Survey of the Asset and Liability Management Practices of European Pension Funds discovered that 45% of pensions have poorly defined liability hedging portfolios. Meanwhile, a quarter of schemes have failed to fully identify their liabilities. Sender said the second challenge is to gain access to performance through optimal diversification within and between asset classes. The last challenge, according to Sender, is for pension funds to respect their minimum funding ratios by insuring away risks.

Furthermore, the report indicated that European pension funds have a “blinkered view” of their risks. While accounting risk is managed by only 33% of respondents, more than half ignore sponsor risk, or the risk of a bankrupt sponsor leaving a pension fund with deficits.

The report additionally highlighted that there are more inflation-linked securities in the UK than in continental Europe. Indexation to inflation is the norm in the UK, with 64% of respondents having more than 20% of their assets in inflation-linked assets. About 40% of schemes in the UK use derivatives for at least 20% of their LHPs, but only 12% of the portfolio run by schemes in Continental Europe, Professional Pensions reported.

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The study by EDHEC-Risk Institute consisted of interviews with 129 pension funds, advisers, regulators and fund managers with a total €3 trillion in assets under management. Pension fund assets represented €900 billion.



To contact the <em>aiCIO</em> editor of this story: Paula Vasan at <a href='mailto:pvasan@assetinternational.com'>pvasan@assetinternational.com</a>; 646-308-2742

Mercer Urges Insurance-Style Governance Tools to Brace Super Funds for Risk

There is a gap in risk management in super funds, which now rival insurance companies in size and complexity, according to consultancy group Mercer.

(September 28, 2010) — Mercer is calling for insurance-style governance tools to prepare Australia’s superannuation funds for increasing risks.

Darren Wickham, a Principal in Mercer’s Retirement, Risk and Finance business, said rapid change in the industry and growth in funds under management means that superannuation funds have become more complex and vulnerable to risk. “The financial crisis brought to light a number of dormant risk areas for superannuation funds,” Wickham said in a statement. “As well, the risk profile will continue to change particularly as the population ages and the industry approaches a new era of draw-down, where more members will be drawing down from their savings rather than accumulating.”

He added that recent growth in funds under management means many superannuation funds now rival mid-size insurance companies in size and complexity. However, unlike other areas of the financial services industry, the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) does not require superannuation funds to prepare a financial condition report. Currently only a handful of superannuation funds use financial condition reports, which would provide funds with an assessment of financial strength, modeling of the fund’s sustainability, a thorough risk review and deep dive stress tests on key areas of risk, Mercer revealed.

“This represents a real gap in risk management, especially when you consider the $1.3 trillion of savings tied up in super that belongs to regular Australians. It’s time for a rethink of what makes for best practice in superannuation risk management.”

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To contact the <em>aiCIO</em> editor of this story: Paula Vasan at <a href='mailto:pvasan@assetinternational.com'>pvasan@assetinternational.com</a>; 646-308-2742

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