Our Pensions Shouldn’t Be Used to Juice the Economy

The UK has landed on private equity as its answer to lackluster economic growth and inadequate retirement savings. Perhaps taking a page from the US, where retirement funds have long made significant equity investments, the UK is hoping that adding lots of private equity to its pension pots will drive higher returns and superior growth outcomes.

It’s a terrible idea. It shows that financial regulators, government officials and those in the financial industry lobbying for these changes have lost sight of what retirement investing is supposed to be. Rumblings of opening US pensions to more private equity investing have thankfully been shelved for the time being.

What is the investment objective of a pension fund? The answer seems obvious to me: a pension fund — whether a defined benefit or defined contribution plan — should provide beneficiaries with stable retirement incomes while exposing all the stakeholders to as little risk as possible. In both cases, the objective is not the highest return, because that ignores both risk and what retirement assets are meant to provide — income in retirement. The objective is also not to provide easy and stable capital to grow the macro economy, nor is it to provide a willing and reliable buyer of government debt to keep interest rates low. Having a clear investment objective is important. These are not just words in a financial report. Lacking an investment objective is like taking a journey without a destination; the odds are excellent that you’ll get lost. And that’s exactly what’s happening to pension funds today as the market turns and bond investments lose value.

American defined-benefit pensions are unusual for their tolerance of risk. The plans tend to be heavily weighted toward public equities with a fair share of private equity thrown in, whereas those in the UK and Germany are largely focused on fixed-income assets.

Spreading Your Bets | US defined benefit pension plans have a much higher appetite for risk