Will U.S. Corporate PENSION Fund Accounting practices one day evolve into a Legitimate economic concern/headwind for the country ? Considering the Market's DECADE long bout of NON-performance (the Dow Jones Index is up a paltry 3.1% since its level of 8,452 on 10/19/1998...the S+P 500 is now down a stunning 17% over the same 10 year period as the S+P 500 was at 1,100 on 10/22/1998 vs. 910 today, 10/22/08), coupled with the FACT that we are entering 'prime retirement age' territory for the country's Largest Population segment (BABY BOOMERS - those Americans born in between 1946 and 1964), I decided to look into this issue a little bit more carefully.
While on the lookout for pension accounting related insights + risks I rediscovered Warren Buffett's 2007 Annual Shareholders Letter. For my reference, I'm including below the hugely informative bit he penned on pages 19-20 related to the potentially RECKLESS market-return related assumptions currently governing Corporate America's Pension Fund Accounting model (click the below link for full access to Buffett's 2007 Letter):
http://www.berkshirehathaway.com/letters/2007ltr.pdf
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Fanciful Figures – How Public Companies Juice Earnings
By Warren Buffett
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The average holdings of bonds and cash for all pension funds is about 28%, and on these assets returns can be expected to be no more than 5%. Higher yields, of course, are obtainable but they carry with them a risk of commensurate (or greater) loss. This means that the remaining 72% of assets – which are mostly in equities, either held directly or through vehicles such as hedge funds or private-equity investments – must earn 9.2% in order for the fund overall to achieve the postulated 8%. And that return must be delivered after all fees, which are now far higher than they have ever been.
How realistic is this expectation? Let’s revisit some data I mentioned two years ago: During the 20th Century, the Dow advanced from 66 to 11,497. This gain, though it appears huge, shrinks to 5.3% when compounded annually. An investor who owned the Dow throughout the century would also have received generous dividends for much of the period, but only about 2% or so in the final years. It was a wonderful century.
Think now about this century. For investors to merely match that 5.3% market-value gain, the Dow – recently below 13,000 – would need to close at about 2,000,000 on
Naturally, everyone expects to be above average. And those helpers – bless their hearts – will certainly encourage their clients in this belief. But, as a class, the helper-aided group must be below average. The reason is simple: 1) Investors, overall, will necessarily earn an average return, minus costs they incur; 2) Passive and index investors, through their very inactivity, will earn that average minus costs that are very low; 3) With that group earning average returns, so must the remaining group – the active investors. But this group will incur high transaction, management, and advisory costs. Therefore, the active investors will have their returns diminished by a far greater percentage than will their inactive brethren. That means that the passive group – the “know-nothings” – must win. I should mention that people who expect to earn 10% annually from equities during this century – envisioning that 2% of that will come from dividends and 8% from price appreciation – are implicitly forecasting a level of about 24,000,000 on the Dow by 2100. If your adviser talks to you about double-digit returns from equities, explain this math to him – not that it will faze him. Many helpers are apparently direct descendants of the queen in
Data Courtesy: BerkshireHathaway.com
