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2009 FIAP International Seminar „Investments and Payouts in the Funded Pension Systems”, Warsaw 28-29 May 2009. Pension funds returns: The case of Eastern and Central Europe. Dariusz Stańko Warsaw School of Economics. Warsaw, 28 May 2009. Plan of this presentation.
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2009 FIAP International Seminar „Investments and Payoutsin the Funded Pension Systems”, Warsaw 28-29 May 2009 Pension funds returns: The case of Eastern and Central Europe Dariusz StańkoWarsaw School of Economics Warsaw, 28 May 2009
Plan of this presentation • purpose and range of analysis • impact of the financial crisis • returns until Feb 2009 • investment policy and limits – impact on results • Sharpe ratios • accumulated returns for various cohorts • general assessment and policy recommendations • Appendix: • data • methodology • returns and their volatility • gross vs net results (fees) • impact of investment of pension funds
1. Purpose and range of analysis • to report investment results obtained by pension funds from the Eastern and Central Europe as well as • to find explanations for such results • to discuss the impact of pension funds’ investment on local capital markets • to answer the question – Have the expectations towards funded pension systems been met?
1. cont. Purpose and range of analysis • subject of analysis: • mandatory pension funds in Bulgaria, Croatia, Slovakia, Romania, Poland, Estonia • voluntary pension funds in Romania and Czech Republic • market as a whole, not individual funds • semi-gross investment results (upfront fees not included) • time horizon: until the end of February 2009, with accounting for 2008 financial crisis
2. Returns up till end of Feb 2009 • all countries positive nominal accumulated returns yet effect of financial crisis highly visible • only countries with longest maturity (CZ, POL, CR) positive real returns – time diversification matters • negative real returns – crises vs short maturity (BG, SLO, RO) and conservative asset allocation (EE, RO) • returns volatility (standard deviation) the biggest in BG, CR, POL; 2008 year increased it considerably
4. Investment policy and limits – impact on pension results • most of pension funds in analysed sample run conservative investment strategy as far as stock exposure is concerned:
5. Sharpe ratios • mostly negative for short-term rates, local bonds and US long-term bonds if measured until end of Feb 2009 yet... • ... positive for all local bonds and for unhedged (local currency gains) US long-term bonds • ... and positive for most local short-term rates and partly for hedged (USD gains) US long-term bonds if the 2008 financial crises is not accounted for (calculation horizon until Dec 2007)
6. Results so far - accumulated real returns for various cohorts • negative values for all or most cohorts in all countries except PL (2005 and earlier), mandatory RO, CZ (2003 and earlier) • the biggest loss for cohort entering in 2008 • -34,7% EE funds A, -29,0% BG, -25,0% EE funds B, -23,4% POL • „average” group: -12,5% CR, -13-11% SLO funds A, B, -5,5% CZ • conservative funds: -7,9% EE [2,37% nom.], -0,7% SL [4,23% nom.], • conservative funds not much help for 2008 disaster
6. cont. Results so far - accumulated real returns... • early cohorts (1998-2001): positive, CZ 2-6%, POL 43-63%, • medium cohorts (2002-2004): getting worse • mostly negative, -22,5% BG (2004), from -13% to -23% EE (A, B, C funds), • relatively positive in CZ (from +3% to -2%) • positive in CRO (+8% in 2004) and POL (from +40% to +12%) • late cohorts (2005-2007): the worse • severely negative: EE (-25-37% A; -25-28% B, -20-15% C), BG (-25-27%), POL (-21%-10%) • negative: SLO (-11-10,5 A, B), CR (-9,5-5%), CZ (-2,5-5%) • defendable: SLO (0,15 to -0,9%, C)
7. General assessment and policy recommendations • results obtained so far • not satisfactory in real terms but • effect of crisis and ... low stock exposure in the past • until 2008 pension funds on average beat the short-term deposits and local bonds and most of local short-term rates • time needed to recover (happening recently?)
7 cont. General assessment and policy recommendations • main drivers of results • investment limits but also • investment policy (sometimes much lower than theoretically admissible) • system’s maturity and timing with crisis • conservative fund not solution if saving in it for long-term during accumulation period • it does pay to save more aggressively for a long time (case of Poland) but properly timed switch to conservative funds a must when approaching retirement
7 cont. General assessment and policy recommendations • main policy recommendations: • life cycle (conservative!) funds needed but there are no magic solution (case of SLO and EE) • what should be the default fund bearing in mind behavioural patterns of savers in mandatory pension systems? • what should be the „pre-retirement” period? • how to ensure proper switching mechanism” • education to the public about the nature of long-term saving and equity premium • help for investment decisions (multifunds) but also • help to discuss with reversal tendencies in funded markets • more elastic investment limits COMBINED WITH changes in performance evaluation frameworks
Literature • Antolin P. (2008). Pension Fund Performance, OECD Working Papers on Insurance and Private Pensions, No. 20, OECD, http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/3/49/41218144.pdf • Sharpe, W. (1994). ‘Sharpe Ratio’, Journal of Portfolio Management, 21(1), 49-58, available also at: http://www.stanford.edu/~wfsharpe/art/sr/sr.htm. • Tapia, W. (2008). Comparing aggregate investment returns in privately managed pension funds, OECD Working Paper on Insurance and Private Pensions, No. 22, http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/39/5/41408063.pdf • Walker E., Iglesias A. (2007). Financial Performance of Pension Fund Systems around the World: An Exploratory Study, Final Report for OECD – World Bank, November 15, 2007, World Bank project on Investment Performance of Privately Managed Pension Funds, unpublished manuscript.
Data • Sofia Group members inquiry, correspondence with institutions, literature and Internet search: • pension funds units or returns, • TBills and TBonds yields, • local stock and bond indices, US bond indices • CPI, pension fees, stock market capitalization etc. • pension funds returns: industry averages (usually market share weighted average)
Methodology • pension returns calculation • weighted market share averages; not lagged aggregate weights (Walker, Iglesias, 2007: 10) – difference should not be important yet (short time horizon) • survivorship bias effect acceptable (Polish OFEs: 0,54 bps 1999-Feb2009 for simple averages) • discrete, compounded • TBills and TBonds yields • wealth index as discussed in Walker, Iglesias (2007: 7) • US long bonds – hedged and unhedged versions • stock returns • price-weighted index (RO, CR) vs value-weighted (BG?, SLO, POL, EE) with dividends effect included
Methodology • risk-free rate benchmarks, • classical short-term rates (ex. WIBOR3M) • long-term rates (Walker, Iglesias, 2007) • long-term local bonds if available • US long bonds – hedged and unhedged versions • Sharpe ratios (Sharpe, 1994) – volatility of excess returns • risk measures • standard deviation of returns • beta values against stock indices
Methodology: Benchmarks for pension funds • stock indices dived by 50-80% in 2008 • price-weighted index (RO, CR) vs value-weighted (BG?, SLO, POL, EE) with dividends effect included • risk-free rate benchmarks, • classical short-term rates (ex. WIBOR3M) • long-term rates (Walker, Iglesias, 2007) • long-term local bonds if available • US long bonds – hedged and unhedged versions
Gross vs net results (fees) • in most cases semi-gross rates of return (mgmt fee) • net rates of return should take into account upfront fees * As of July 2009 to be lowered to 0,3%.** To be lowered to 3,5 commencing 2009.*** To be lowered to 186 m PLN pa for assets above 45 bn PLN (equiv of 0,413%).
Investment of pension funds – impact on capital markets • increasing domestic savings - market development (size, instruments, maturity) • Czech Republic 4,8% of GDP (2007) • Bulgaria 4,1% of GDP (2007) • Croatia 7,7% of GDP, 8% of stock market (2007) • Hungary 11,1% of GDP (2007) • Romania 0,2% of GDP (2007), 1,8% of stock market (2008) • Poland 11,9% GDP (2007), 27,5% of stock market (2007) • 2008 – stabilizer of local capital markets