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Contractual Savings and Financial Markets. Alberto R. Musalem, Thierry Tressel, and Gregorio Impavido. Definition and Importance of Contractual Savings. Funded benefit plans: Retirement savings and Annuities Life insurance
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Contractual Savings and Financial Markets Alberto R. Musalem, Thierry Tressel, and Gregorio Impavido
Definition and Importance of Contractual Savings • Funded benefit plans: • Retirement savings and Annuities • Life insurance • Funded unemployment benefits, gratuity, end of service indemnity, severance payments • Funded contingencies: down payment for a house, education, weddings, funerals • Importance: supply long term savings
Shares of contractual savings and M2 in financial assets (%, 1996)
Economic Impact of Contractual Savings • Potential positive effects on national saving • Requires fiscal adjustment to finance transitional costs of pension reforms that increase funding • More likely with mandatory funded systems due to credit constraints faced by low wage earners • Less likely with voluntary plans • Allocation effects due to higher share of long term funds • Securities market development • Improvement in financial risks management • Growth effects • Due to allocation and potential saving effects
Impact of Contractual Savings Institutions on Securities Market (I) • An increase in CS relative to domestic financial assets promotes depth of stock and bond markets (MK/GDP) • The impact on stock market depth and liquidity (VT/GDP) is stronger in countries with more transparent corporate information • The impact on the stock markets is stronger in countries where: • The financial system is more market based • Contributions to pension funds are mandatory • Portfolio transactions in the capital account of the balance of payments are lower
Impact of Contractual Savings Institutions on Securities Market (II) • The impact on the bond market is stronger in countries with a bank based financial system • The impact of contractual savings institutions on securities market is not the consequence of a joint determination of both contractual savings institutions and financial markets by other slow-moving characteristics of economies (level of development, education, demographic structures, legal environment) • Accordingly, policies shaping the institutionalization of savings do matter
Social and Financial Risk Mitigation Effects • Beneficiaries improve management of longevity, death and other risks • Reduce debtors refinancing risks, including governments, by lengthening the maturity of debts • Reduce pressure on banks to engage in excessive term transformation risks • Reduce enterprise vulnerability to interest rate and demand shocks due to improved financial structure (higher equity/debt ratio)
Government long-term to total debt ratio and contractual savings assets, 1996 (% GDP)
Banks’ Short Term to Total Loans vs Contractual Savings: Conditional CorrelationRegression Line: STL = -6.03 (4.58) * Log(Csfa,%GDP)+37.5 ( R2=0.18)
Banks’ Net Interest Margin (NIM) and Contractual Savings: Conditional CorrelationRegression Line: NIM = -0.60 (-10.78) * Log(Csfa,%GDP)+1.47 (R2=0.35)
Banks’ Credit Risk (Loan Loss Provisions to Total Assets) and Contractual Savings: Conditional CorrelationRegression Line: LLTA = -2.8E-3 (-3.23) * Csfa,%GDP + 0.6 ( R2 = 0.043)
Firms’ Leverage (TDTE) vs Contractual Savings: Conditional Correlation - Market-based Financial Structure Residual = -1.16 * (CS Fin. Assets, % Sec. Market) (t-stat = -2.47) Pooled reg., 82 obs.
Firms’ Leverage (TDTE) vs Contractual Savings: Conditional Correlation - Bank-based Financial StructureResidual = 4.0 * (CS Fin. Assets, % Sec. Market) (t-stat = 2.37) Pooled regression, 74 obs.
Firms’ Debt Maturity vs Contractual Savings: Conditional Correlation - Market-based Financial StructureResidual = -0.09 * (CS Fin. Assets, % Sec Mkt) (t-stat = -3.84) Pooled regression, 82 obs.
Firms’ Debt Maturity vs Contractual Savings: Conditional Correlation - Bank-based Financial StructureResidual = 0.28 * (CS Fin. Assets, % Sec Mkt) (t-stat = 5.28) Pooled Regression, 74 obs.
Main Issues with Contractual Savings in Latin America (I) • Except Brazil and Costa Rica, over-reliance on mandatory long term saving schemes • High administrative costs, high transaction costs (for members and fund managers due to interaction between pillars on collections and benefits), high industry concentration and lack of market contestability • High political risk due to dependency of pension fund regulators from governments • Over-regulated investment policies: • High exposure to governments • Restrictions to diversify investments internationally in an environment where the best companies migrate abroad increases pension funds portfolio risks
Main Issues with Contractual Savings in Latin America (II) • Inadequate opportunities for members to manage market risks • Limited choices regarding portfolio composition (although some countries are expanding choices) • Conversion of accumulated balances into annuities at a given point in time only • Although supervision is gradually shifting towards a risk based approach, it is still focused on compliance
Recommendations to promote Contractual Savings in Latin America (I) • Review regulations and tax treatment to encourage voluntary long term savings • Review systems design: • Encourage market contestability by allowing opting out to employer sponsored plans (Australia, Brazil, Hong Kong) • Consider clearing house models (Sweden, Thrift Saving Plan for federal employees in the USA, Bolivia) • Adopt independent benefit payments between pillars (Argentina), and restrict switching across pillars (Colombia, Peru)
Recommendations to promote Contractual Savings in Latin America (II) • Consider adopting regulators which are independent from governments and accountable to congresses (central bank model) • Adopt more flexible investment regulations based on the prudent person investment rule in tandem with risk based supervision, and allow gradual opening of investments in foreign securities • Improve members’ ability to manage market risks: • Increase portfolio options • Allow for multiple and partial conversions of members’ accumulated balances into annuities