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DING DING DINGwct2010 wrote:
Should be just nominal & inflation-linked bonds.
That’s only true if the plan is fully funded when it’s frozen.FrankCFA wrote:
No need to have equities.
unfortunately, the institute does not reward original thinking. You have to go by the curriculum. That is the thing that stresses me out.Tommy83 wrote:
That’s only true if the plan is fully funded when it’s frozen.FrankCFA wrote:
No need to have equities.
There’s difference between (i) freezing a pension plan and (ii) the funded status of a pension plan. Two totally different things. Most DB plans are underfunded for what it’s worth.
As you stated, if you freeze it, future liabilities will no longer accrue. You still have liabilities that have already been earned by plan participants, however. The value of plan assets (funded status) needs to be considered before making asset allocation decisions.
If your plan is 50% funded when you freeze it, immunizing plan liabilities is inadequate.
ok, curriculum, fyi.Tommy83 wrote:
That’s only true if the plan is fully funded when it’s frozen.FrankCFA wrote:
No need to have equities.
There’s difference between (i) freezing a pension plan and (ii) the funded status of a pension plan. Two totally different things. Most DB plans are underfunded for what it’s worth.
As you stated, if you freeze it, future liabilities will no longer accrue. You still have liabilities that have already been earned by plan participants, however. The value of plan assets (funded status) needs to be considered before making asset allocation decisions.
If your plan is 50% funded when you freeze it, immunizing plan liabilities is inadequate.
Yeah, these IPS questions are tough but I don’t think this is creative thinking. The oringal point was there wasn’t enough info to determine whether equities were needed in the plan. The funded status of the plan is really important to know – immunizing an underfunded plan isn’t a good strategy. That info would have to be provided on an actual exam.Cric12 wrote:
unfortunately, the institute does not reward original thinking. You have to go by the curriculum. That is the thing that stresses me out.
Tommy- think about this from a legal perspective. If it’s a publicly-traded company with an underfunded pension plan that has been frozen, do you think that company has the “right or choice” to play catch-up by investing in Equities? Or to take it a step further, in “riskier” Alternative assets?Tommy83 wrote:
If it’s underfunded, it’ll need equity, or other risky assets, if the company doesn’t want to make further contributions. Or no equity/risky assets if the company will continue to make contributions to the plan.
It’s a good question. I’m not an expert on regulation, but in the US these DB plans are regulated by ERISA. I don’t think it’s really the company’s choice in cases when the plan is severely underfunded. I think there are required contributions in these situations, but they aren’t huge. Not sure how ERISA figures into asset allocations of DB plans, but I think they have a seat at the table in some cases.tozerrt wrote:
Tommy- think about this from a legal perspective. If it’s a publicly-traded company with an underfunded pension plan that has been frozen, do you think that company has the “right or choice” to play catch-up by investing in Equities? Or to take it a step further, in “riskier” Alternative assets?Tommy83 wrote:
If it’s underfunded, it’ll need equity, or other risky assets, if the company doesn’t want to make further contributions. Or no equity/risky assets if the company will continue to make contributions to the plan.