The Dysfunction Trilogy Part B
By Chan Akya
By Chan Akya
A core
aspect of the logic of folk who support stimulus programs in the name of John
Maynard Keynes is that government spending to offset private sector contraction
remains a victimless crime. This is completely untrue, and understanding the
actual costs of Keynesian machinations by studying real-world examples of
dysfunction is important to unravel this pernicious logic.
In the
first part of this series, we considered the impact of random intervention in
the shipping sector, in particular the role it has played to crush profits and
imperil employment in the sector globally.
In the
second part of this series, we will look at conditions in the area of
retirement planning and returns. The notion of stealthy wealth transfers is
part of a longer debate that goes into the core aspects of the financial
crisis; to a large extent many of the issues have been raised previously in
these pages but perhaps more in passing than as the core focus.
The
core function of financial markets is to connect pools of savings with the
people who need money for their immediate future. In demographic terms, this
can be expressed as markets being the intermediary between older people with
savings and young people who need to borrow to set up house, buy cars and other
utilitarian requirements.
Construct
of pensions - a quick primer
This a
quick primer, and not all the nuances are or even can be covered in such a
short summary. First let's quickly recap the theory here, even if parts of it
will appear unrealistic to many readers who have been hardened with real-world
experiences over the past few years.
The
rate of return for these old people is meant to take into account two primary
factors: the cost of money and the risks entailed. The cost of money is
measured by one of two factors - either as the minimum rate of return on money
that keeps its purchasing power constant; or as a cumulative measure of
opportunity lost by renting it out without risk.
Typically
these two rates are close to the same, or in other words, returns on local
government bonds are meant to offset the loss of purchasing power while
preserving the principal. Instead of local government bonds, one could consider
bank deposits as a suitable alternative.
Real world impact: if you consider the historical depreciation in the value of money
- purchasing power - across the Group of Seven nations, and the needs of a
comfortable existence in future, then a realistic return rate on pension
portfolios would range between 5% and 10%. Remember also that this rate needs
to account for capital withdrawal once people actually retire. Once we remove
the periods of overly high inflation as well as stagnation or deflation (that
would be you, Japan) the base (minimum) rate works out to 6%. This is the
realistic minimum rate that needs to be achieved on pension portfolios, but one
could also consider it a weighted average of returns before people actually
retire.
The
second aspect, namely risk, is merely a function of (a) the probability of losing
principal and (b) the severity of such losses, should they occur. Consider as
an example the difference between investing in the share market and investing
in a farm. Investments in share markets typically are more volatile, but
because of the investment's liquidity the severity of losses is relatively
small (that is, people can exit pretty quickly or hedge their losses). In the
case of farm investments though, the likelihood of losses is small - because
crop yields and animal product prices tend to be fairly similar from year to
year; but when there is volatility (for example, because of a natural disaster
like a tornado or a hurricane) the extent of losses is usually quite severe.
Arguably
therefore, the compound term risk as an explanatory variable for the above two
investments would be quite similar - for stocks a high probability multiplied
by a low severity and for farmland a low probability multiplied by a high
severity. We could thus say that the expected return of both these investments
would be similar.
(Of
course, similar doesn't mean people will be neutral in choosing between the two
investments as heuristics would play an important part; a man who saw his
brethren suffer significant losses on a farm would be more partial to stock
investing, and vice versa).
This
ladder of choices that makes up one's risk preferences contains one more factor
of choice, namely the type of returns. While some investors are perfectly happy
churning in and out of stocks, selling a part of their portfolio whenever they
need to paint the house of example, others would prefer to secure regular
returns - that is, coupon payments from the likes of bonds.
Typically,
older people would prefer steady returns as it helps them plan their costs and
thus lifestyle, while younger folk could / would withstand greater volatility
in their choice of investments as the requirement for immediate income is less
(contrast these younger people though with young people - those who don't have
net savings, and who need net borrowings to get along).
Real world impact: To make choices easier for fund managers, various countries around
the world have set minimum standards for pension investments in terms of
appropriateness, liquidity, maturity or duration matching and so on. Some even
prescribe the ideal mix of income generating assets such as bonds and capital
growth assets such as stocks.
The
most famous example of such regulations is Employee Retirement Income Security
Act in the United States; there are a host of similar initiatives in other
countries. Whilst some offer broad guidelines, others get rather specific - for
example Dutch pensions aren't allowed direct exposure to physical commodities.
Performance
Given
the various restrictions on pensions, overall performance in terms of returns
has been mediocre to say the least. When you look at 30-year data streams, it
is easy to see that mutual funds barely track the performance of broader
indices such as the S&P500; this is primarily due to overheads such as
management fees and of course, paying for regulatory oversight. For pensions,
in addition to the underperformance of mutual funds, one has to add the impact
of enforced asset mixes - certain investments in bonds for example as required
diversification - and the underperformance becomes even more pronounced.
This is
a core point to consider: asset allocation should not be set in stone, but in
the case of pensions the flexibility afforded to managers is perilously low.
Consider a situation where the economy is at rock bottom - such as now - and
then think of what happens if pension funds are required to continually
purchase government bonds even at yields below the rate of inflation (negative
real yields). The effect is twofold: firstly to lose money hand over fist for
their pensioners and secondly that whenever rates rebound higher, the
portfolios also nurse massive mark-to-market losses.
Real world impact: As some countries require pension managers to exit loss-making
assets past a particular threshold, in effect managers end up both buying and
selling financial assets at the worst possible times. It is not that these folk
are stupid, but rather that their jobs have fairly ill-considered portfolio
conditions in place that engender stupidity. And of course, when that kind of
scenario prevails, that is, managers simply do not have the ability to apply
their skills, the industry gets dumbed down.
Another
factor affecting performance is the construct itself. Underlying assumptions
for constructing pension portfolios are driven by actuarial calculations that
focus on how long people live and what that means for the mix of income and
growth in portfolios.
If a
chap had a life expectancy of 70 and retired at the age of 60, the pension
portfolio only needs to be sufficient for 10 years of capital withdrawals. No
one wants to save too much and leave a large balance in the pension portfolios
for heirs to squabble over, particularly not in countries where estates are
taxed on death at punitive rates. So the idea is to match the initial size of
the pension pot and target returns with the requirements for capital
withdrawals or income generation over a fixed timeframe.
Real world impact: Typically, pension portfolios assume life expectancies that are
lower than those being observed currently. In many countries, pension plans,
particularly those from the private sector, state explicitly that payments will
be over a fixed term only with a lump sum amount available on maturity - say on
a person's 85th birthday.
The
second real world impact, particularly in European countries and now
increasingly in the case of the US, is to shift the burden of pension under-payments
(due to poor performance for example) and longevity issues to government
budgets.
Indeed,
in many countries such as Germany and France, employers pay their pension
contributions directly to the government-designated accounts, which then have the
responsibility for managing the pension pots. While this spares companies from
pension-related risks (remember the famous case of General Motors 10 years ago
when the company needed billions of dollars to top up its pensions pot for
employees), it also exposes pensioners to worse investment performance as well
as residual systemic risk on their sovereign budgets. As a recent real world
example, when the Greek government went bust, pensioners in the country
suffered the most.
Analyze
the vectors
So if one
chooses to analyze the vectors, we end up looking at the following: mediocre
returns, inappropriate asset mixes and incorrect actuarial assumptions. The
shift of risk away from private-sector funding to the public sector entails
greater urgency in assessing systemic risk of sovereigns, particularly given
the mandated asset mix in investment portfolios.
Real world impact: In the markets, the sum total of all risk calculations is
expressed by a single variable, namely price. However, that signal can be easily
clouded by government actions. For example, consider what happened when France
was downgraded by the rating agencies. Whilst a widening of bond yields against
say Germany would have been the correct response, the exact opposite happened
because pension plans - thanks to the automatic sell-off requirements that were
triggered on French stocks - ended up purchasing more "safe"
securities, that is, French government bonds, thereby helping to tighten
spreads against better quality sovereigns. Pretty much the same thing happened
after the United Kingdom was downgraded a few weeks ago.
In this
dangerous territory of invalid price signals clouding the actual calculations
of risk entailed in pension portfolios, we also have had to contend with the
actions of central banks, particularly over the past 18 months.
Uninterrupted
purchases of low-risk assets such as government bonds have been pushed through
in the name of quantitative easing, intended as it were for investment funds to
flow towards more risky assets and eventually, credit creation that could help
to regenerate growth.
But
this theory has a fatal flaw that is partly driven by demographics. When a
large number of old people expect to receive certain amounts from their pension
portfolios, reductions in running yields end up reducing their monthly income.
This in turn causes them to cut spending even more as they try to add savings
to their overall pot, in effect more than mitigating the positive actions of
the central banks.
There
is also the effect of systemic risk in that rising sovereign risk is obvious to
pensioners; and as they fear “haircuts� on their pension plans in future,
the motivation to save becomes larger. This is also true for people close to
pension age (say folks in their 50s) and then slowly extends to those in their
40s and so on. That is precisely what happened in Japan from the mid-'90s to
2012 and now threatens to happen across Europe.
There
is also a pernicious moral perfidy here: going back to the initial definition
of financial markets' function, it is obvious that the key intention is to
shift money from the hands of savers (generally old people) to those of
borrowers (generally younger people).
In some
countries such as the US and the UK, this debate has been framed around race
and even immigration. With demographic narrowing in these countries, new
entrants are usually the target market for lending by banks; and such folks
tend to be immigrants or members of minority communities that have better
demographic profiles than the majority.
Real world impact: It is actually now impossible to construct a pension portfolio
with an expected return for 6% whilst meeting investment restrictions set by
the authorities. The best that people manage to eke out in general pensions is
2% to 3%; anything higher requires inordinate principal risks. Add in the
liability calculation (future payments at the current low discount rates) and
effectively every G-7 sovereign is bankrupt many times over when pension
deficits are taken into account.
With
all the best intentions, the facts are clear on the ground that Keynesian
strategies have been counterproductive, especially for retirees. The larger
battle for people's minds though has swung in favor of the Keynesian orthodoxy
with the "anything necessary" mantra of European Central Bank
president Mario Draghi being taken up with a vengeance by other central bankers
from Haruhiko Kuroda in Japan to Ben Bernanke in the US.
By
pushing even more quantitative easing down the throats of their economies, these
central bankers are doubling down, but at the cost of pensioners' security in
coming decades.
Have
you ever imagined standing in the middle of the road and watching helplessly as
a 60-tonne truck barrels down at you at 100 kilometers an hour? That feeling is
not dissimilar to what the average retiree now faces.
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