26 April 2024

Corporate Retirement Plans Near Tipping Point

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Corporate defined contribution assets soon will overtake those of corporate defined benefit plans — and that could change everything. In Pensions & Investments' universe of the 200 largest retirement plans, corporate defined benefit assets totaled $1.187 trillion as of Sept. 30. Defined contribution assets totaled $1.102 trillion — a difference of $85 billion. Of the 99 corporations in the 200 largest retirement plans, 91 have both defined benefit and defined contributions plans, while eight have only DC plans. None offers only a DB plan.

Among the full P&I 1,000 universe, corporate plan defined contribution assets already outweigh defined benefit assets, having tipped the scales by $82 billion in the survey period ended Sept. 30, 2013. For the current survey, corporate DC assets in the P&I 1,000 exceed DB assets by $246 billion. Of the 619 corporate retirement plans in the top 1,000, 516 have both defined benefit and defined contribution plans and 103 have defined contribution plans only.

Among the implications, the trend has been leading to or could lead to:

  • smaller internal investment staffs and more outsourcing;
  • shifts in benchmarking to measuring retirement readiness from solely looking at investment performance;
  • increasing DC plan contributions;.
  • more use of customized investment management structures from mutual funds;
  • new opportunities for boutique and alternative investments managers as they devote more marketing to defined contribution plans; and
  • changes in communications as institutional investment managers move from dealing with sophisticated defined benefit plan executives to direct appeals more to participants.

Long time coming 

The move to defined contribution dominance among large corporate sponsors was a long time coming, but considered a sure eventuality by consultants interviewed. Among public retirement plans in the top 200 ranking, defined benefit assets still outpace defined contribution assets by a wide margin, $3.204 trillion to $189.7 billion.

Of the 78 public sponsors in the top 200, 37 offer both defined benefit and defined contribution plans, while 35 offer only defined benefit plans and six offer only defined contribution plans. On the corporate side, defined benefit plans are fading, both among larger or smaller companies, said Stewart Lawrence, New York-based senior vice president and national retirement practice leaders, Segal Consulting and Sibson Consulting, both units of The Segal Group.

Off financial statements 

Overall, corporations increasingly seek to take defined benefit plans off their financial statements to reduce their financial risk, Ms. Walton added. On the defined contribution side, asset growth is being boosted.

Aon Hewitt's latest “Trends & Experience in Defined Contribution Plans” report surveyed plan executives at 400 corporations, whose defined contribution plans have more than $500 billion in combined assets. Some 77% of respondents said a defined contribution plan is their organization's primary retirement plan. That figure is up from 55% in 2003. The trend could lead to smaller internal staffs at plan sponsors to oversee retirement plan investments.

The growth in DC assets is encouraging a move to different investment management structures, consultants said. Of some 250 employers responding to Aon Hewitt's “2015 Hot Topics in Retirement” survey, 30% use some form of a non-mutual fund structure for their investment fund options for participants. By contrast, last year's survey only showed 16% had done so.

P&I's data also demonstrates that change. Among DC plans in P&I's top 200, an average of 28.4% of the assets were in mutual funds as of Sept. 30, down from 30.1% a year earlier. In terms of asset classes, consultants generally continue to see the vast number of DC fund options focused on traditional investment portfolios and target-date funds.

Click here to access the full article on Pensions & Investments.

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