26 April 2024

Corporate Funds to Pull Back on Contribution Lever

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U.S. corporations are planning minimal contributions to their pension plans in 2022 after strong investment returns, rising interest rates and legislative relief have improved funding ratios.

They plan to contribute a total of $11.25 billion to their global pension plans in 2022, according to Pensions & Investments' analysis of S&P 500 companies that announced contributions of at least $100 million. The data reflect the companies' expected contributions disclosed in their 10-K filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission between Jan. 27 and March 1.

Among those corporations, actual contributions to their global pension plans totaled slightly less than $13 billion in 2021.

Some 33 companies disclosed expected contributions of at least $100 million this year, down from 50 last year.

A major reason behind the expected decline in contributions is the significant increase in plans' funding ratios last year.

In its estimate of the aggregate funding ratio of pension funds sponsored by S&P 1500 companies, Mercer said the ratio increased to 97% as of Dec. 31 from 84% a year earlier. It is the highest ratio the consultant has estimated since year-end 2007 when the ratio reached 104%. As of Feb. 28, Mercer's estimate remained at 97%.

While strong investment returns were a primary catalyst in the aggregate jump in pension plan assets, the real difference maker was higher interest rates that brought liabilities lower.

The typical discount rate measured by the Mercer Yield Curve increased to 2.76% as of Dec. 31 from 2.32% a year earlier.

Compare expected U.S. company pension contributions with P&I's Corporate Pension Contribution Tracker

Scott Jarboe, a Washington-based partner in Mercer’s U.S. wealth business, said in a phone interview that the improved funding has lowered minimum required contributions significantly, and funding relief included with the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 allowed plan sponsors “to be able to kick the can down the road longer.”

The ARPA provided interest-rate stabilization and longer amortization periods for plans. Similar measures originally enacted by the Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act, or MAP-21, signed into law in 2012, allowed corporate plan sponsors to take a 25-year historic average of corporate bond rates to determine a rate within a 10% range, or corridor, of the two-year average of corporate bond index rates to calculate their pension liabilities.

The beginning of the phaseout of those provisions was originally set for 2021. The ARPA narrowed that range of the two-year average to 5% from 10% through 2025, at which point the corridor begins to gradually widen until it hits 30% in 2030.

The ARPA also provides for 15-year amortization of funding shortfalls, up from seven years, for plan years beginning after Dec. 31, 2021.

Contribution holiday 

The relief combined with the already-improved funding ratios creates a multiyear contribution holiday for many corporations, said Michael Moran, senior pension strategist at Goldman Sachs Asset Management in New York. “They’re not looking to make contributions in the next few years because they don’t have contribution requirements and many of them are fully funded,” Mr. Moran said in an interview.

While minimum funding requirements have plummeted, corporations do have the option of making discretionary contributions. Current geopolitical events, however, might also keep corporations from pulling the trigger on those types of contributions, Mr. Jarboe said.

He noted that the current market volatility that has resulted from the Russian invasion of Ukraine may be a deterrent.

“Corporations are probably going to be a little more conservative with cash to make sure they’ve got strong balance sheets and weather any storm that may be forthcoming,” Mr. Jarboe said.

He also noted that rumored legislation that would increase the U.S. corporate tax rate might inspire corporations to hold off on making discretionary contributions. One driver of the current solid funding ratio among corporate plans was an abundance of large contributions made by companies in 2017 and 2018.

U.S. corporations for the most part made large contributions in those two years to take advantage of tax breaks that were set to expire due to the passage of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, signed into law by then-President Donald Trump in December 2017. The law reduced the corporate tax rate to 21% from 35%.

Because the law allows plan sponsors to deduct a portion of their pension contributions based on its tax rate, corporations made multiple years’ worth of contributions before the Sept. 15, 2018, tax deadline to deduct them at the higher rate.

If a new law is passed raising the corporate tax rate, corporations will likely wait until after the applicable deadline to make higher contributions, Mr. Jarboe said.

The only exception, he said, is that some corporate plan sponsors might want to make discretionary contributions if doing so will allow them to terminate their plans. That is, however, unlikely among the large plans tracked by P&I for this story. Mr. Jarboe said the vast majority of terminations have been for plans with less than $1 billion in assets.

Billion-dollar contributions 

Two corporations said they expect to contribute more than $1 billion to their U.S. pension plans in 2022.

United Parcel Service Inc., Atlanta, in its Feb. 22 10-K filing, said it planned to contribute just under $1.9 billion to its U.S. pension plans.

UPS contributed $157 million to the U.S. plans in 2021 and $2.8 billion to the U.S. plans in 2020.

UPS spokesman Glenn Zaccara said in an email that UPS is making the contributions above the minimum required level as part of plans announced last June for the company to achieve an adjusted gross debt/earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation ratio of about 1.5 times by the end of 2023. “Net pension liabilities are one component of that calculation,” Mr. Zaccara said. “Maintaining a strong balance sheet is one of our five core principles at UPS.”

As of Dec. 31, UPS had $56 billion in U.S. pension plan assets and $61.4 billion in U.S. projected benefit obligations, for a funding ratio of 91.2%, up from 80.4% a year earlier. The discount rate for the U.S. plans was 3.13%, up from 2.9% the previous year.

Chevron Corp., San Ramon, Calif., said in its Feb. 24 10-K filing that it plans to contribute $1.1 billion to its U.S. plans in 2022. The company contributed $1.55 billion to the U.S. plans in 2021 and $950 million to the plans in 2020.

As of Dec. 31, Chevron had $9.92 billion in U.S. pension plan assets and $12.97 billion in U.S. PBO, for a funding ratio of 76.5%, up from 65.5% a year earlier.

Chevron spokesman Braden Reddall said in an email that part of the contribution was discretionary. He did not provide further information.

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