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Recent Problems in the Dutch Pension Sector

Leo Kolivakis's picture




 

Via Pension Pulse.

Below is a guest commentary by Martin van Dalen, a portfolio manager in the investment department of the Dutch Social Security Organization:

Recent problems in the Dutch pension sector

I’m very grateful to Leo Kolivakis’ invitation to write this guest post.

Over here, in the Netherlands, the pension sector has a bit of a problem.

First, the structure of the Dutch pension system. There’s a nationwide (compulsory) retirement system, paid on a pay-as-you-go basis (out of the first two income tax brackets), providing a pension at 65 at the same level as the national minimum wage (that is, for a married or non-married couple, single persons get about 70%), calculated over a period of 50 years. (For every year you haven’t been a resident, 2% is deducted.) The starting age of 65 is likely to be moved to 66 (from 2020) and 67 (from 2025), but those plans were temporarily shelved when the Dutch government collapsed. Whether the next government will manage to get this done is uncertain; we’re still trying to form a government.

The second pillar is quite large: about 600 pension funds, (theoretically) fully funded, providing pensions to probably over 90% of non-self-employed workers. Mostly defined benefit, although the share of defined contribution is rising. By now generally based on the average wage during the period of employment, hopefully indexed for inflation. Pension rights are accrued, and contributions paid, on the income over the income provided by the first pillar pension. If all goes well, and one doesn’t have too many breaks in one’s career, one might expect a total of 60% to 70% of one’s average income. Since the income tax rates for retired persons are much lower, the net income might be about 80% of one’s average income (again, hopefully indexed). The total assets of the second-pillar pension schemes at the end of 2009 were € 741 billion.

The third pillar (for self-employed persons and for others who have gaps in their pension career) is run by insurance companies.

The pension sector is regulated by De Nederlandsche Bank, the Dutch central bank. Further on, referred to as “DNB”. 

By international standards, the Dutch system is considered to be quite good. (See Ambachtsheer, K.P.,  Pension revolution: A Solution to the Pensions Crisis, 2007, and the Melbourne Mercer Global Pension Index, updated 14 October 2009, at
http://www.mercer.com/referencecontent.htm?idContent=1359260 .)

So everybody thought their pension was quite safe. One typically gets an annual statement from one’s pension fund (“Uniform Pensioenoverzicht”), consisting of several pages filled with numbers. I expect that most people didn’t spend more than five minutes in studying it. However, the next statement might be scrutinised more closely, as I will try to explain. 

Pension funds have to report on their coverage ratio on a quarterly basis. And this is where the problems start. As I need not explain to the reader, it’s basically a simple matter: you have the current value of the investments on the one hand, and the present value of the expected outflows, based on actuarial assumptions, on the other hand. Divide the first number by the second number.

The big question is of course which discount rate should be used. DNB has prescribed a yieldcurve, period. I understand it’s a zero-coupon curve derived from the Dutch government bond yieldcurve. But whatever it is, it’s the one that pension funds are required to use when reporting their coverage ratio. It’s published monthly on DNB’s website at http://www.statistics.dnb.nl/popup.cgi?/statistics/excel/t1.3nm.xls .

Their policy on the resulting coverage ratios is quite clear:
•    Less than 100%: you’ve got a problem, you have to submit a recovery plan outlining how you are going to get back to at least 100%.
•    100% - 105%: no indexation of pensions and accrued pension rights allowed.
•    105% - 125%: only partial indexation allowed.
•    125% - 145%: full indexation allowed.
•    Over 145%: compensation of previous missed indexation allowed.

(These percentages apply to the average pension fund, in term of asset mix and demographic composition.)

I need hardly point out to the reader that coverage ratios have fallen dramatically over the last few years. See http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Coverage_ratio_Dutch_pension_funds.png for a graph, made from data found on the DNB website. (The data for 2010Q2 have not yet been released.)

Neither do I have to explain to the reader that this drop is to a large extent the result of the drop on yields on Dutch government bonds. (The other part is of course the not-too-spectacular yield on investments during the last years.) Of course, this is to a large extent the result of the crisis in Euroland public finance: yields of Greek, Portuguese and Spanish government bonds have risen dramatically, yields of Bunds have dropped to historically low levels. And the Netherlands are seen, by the international investor community, as a sort of province of Germany, economically speaking. To a fairly large extent, they have a point: Germany is our largest trading partner, for instance. Dutch government bonds move, well, not exactly in lockstep, but in a fairly narrow band: about 20 to 30 basis points above Bunds, give or take a few basis points.

For Dutch public finances, this is obviously a blessing: we’re not the safe haven that Bunds are perceived to be, but pretty nearly so. Dutch pension funds, however, are now faced with the opposite effect: these low yields work against them.

A week or two ago, DNB issued a statement to the effect that 12 to 14 pension funds had such a low coverage ratio that they should cut their current pensions and their accrued pension rights by, depending on the fund in question, 1% to as much as 14%, starting as soon as January 1, 2011. DNB was barred by law from saying which pension funds were involved, but since then, the names of all of them have surfaced. All in all, about 700.000 people would be facing cuts (total of current pension recipients, current contributors and past contributors), on a nationwide total of about 8 million people who are involved in a pension scheme (plus their dependants). (The number of 8 million people is a back-of-the-envelope calculation by a senior official of a large Dutch social security organisation who I asked for a guesstimate.)

Some of these funds are quite small (in some cases I don’t understand why they haven’t merged with a larger one), but one of them, PME, is a fairly large one. One of the largest, in fact, right behind the “big boys” ABP (public sector and education) and PZW (healthcare). 700.000 people out of 8 million means that nearly 10% of the Dutch should brace themselves for bad news. It’s understandable that this has caused a pretty big row.

Cutting nominal entitlements has never happened before, at least, not since World War II. (Not getting your pensions or future pensions indexed is, obviously, also a way of cutting them, but it attracts less attention that way.)

As was to be expected, the pension funds have shown little inclination to do as they have been told. Some of the things they have said, thus far:

•    DNB made this demand out of the blue, without first telling us that they would do so, and informed the press at the same time. They should have been more polite. We’re not going to accede to their demand until they repeat their request in a polite way. (The Dutch, whatever their social status or position, do not take kindly to being told what to do. Ask any Dutch police officer for examples.)
•    We have agreed with the trade unions and employers’ associations to wait until 2012 before taking any steps, so DNB has to accept this agreement. (The fact that DNB, or for that matter the Minister of Social Affairs, has legal powers of itself is not seen as being relevant in any way. This is entirely normal in the Netherlands. It is impossible to exercise authority without the consent of the governed, especially in matters pertaining to labour.)
•    This is the result of something beyond our control, i.e. the behaviour of international financial markets, so we cannot be held responsible in any way.
•    This is the result of DNB prescribing this yieldcurve, so it’s entirely DNB’s fault.
•    The mere fact that DNB has said this, means that a lot of people are very upset, for which DNB is wholly to blame. The only way to restore confidence in the Dutch pension system is for DNB to retract its statement immediately.
•    As this problem has been created by the government yield curve, it’s up to the government to solve it: please send us the required umpteen billion euro’s immediately.
•    The present yield curve is historically low, which means it will rise in the future. Using a historically low rate means being too pessimistic. It would be desirable to use an average over a number of years. (This position has been taken by ABP pension fund in articles in several Dutch newspapers.)
•    This is not simply a matter of cutting everybody’s claims by x%. We have to decide on whose claims to cut by which percentage, to spread the pain in a just manner. If we have to cut at all. This will take time.
•    This is a very complex problem, whichever way you look at it. Let’s not start cutting claims in undue haste, but let’s make an in-depth study of the entire matter. 

Please excuse the levity. I have allowed myself some leeway in paraphrasing the arguments put forward, as, I think, befits a blogger.;) I hasten to add that I am well aware that the boards of the pension funds concerned will be extremely uncomfortable. Their position is not to be envied…

In the meantime, the yields on Dutch government bonds are reaching new lows almost every day. This means that a favourite way of handling complex problems – hoping they will disappear in some mysterious way without any painful steps having been necessary- is unlikely to work.

The Dutch parliament is currently debating the matter, along the familiar lines of “how could this happen” and “who is to be blamed”.

My two cents:

On the one hand: 

There is something funny about the DNB yield curve. It currently tops at about 20 years at 3.60%, but is significantly lower for later years: 3.10% at the end of the curve. That’s counterintuitive, to say the least. Furthermore, I’ve told that the observations used in construing this curve stop at the end of the Dutch government yield curve, i.e., at this moment 32 years, the NETHER 3.75 01/14/42 being the longest Dutch government bond, not counting a number of completely illiquid perpetual loans. Anything beyond that, up to 2070, is done by just extending the last set of observations. Now, this means that any fluctuations or distortions at the end are compounded in the calculations. A difference few basis points might not seem much, but raised to the power of 60…

On the other hand:

The purpose of this present-value calculation is to arrive at an answer to the question “how much should we invest today in order to be able to pay this stream of outgoing cashflows?”. This means that realistic assumptions as to future yields on this investments should be used, or the whole exercise is pointless. (I have read that U.S. pension funds are allowed to use yields of 8% or more in their calculations. If this is correct, I think this is a disaster waiting to happen, but that is another matter.)

Assuming one wants pension funds to invest in a safe way, without too much downside risk, this means, in my humble opinion, that one should use a yield curve that contains a large component of government bond yields, so to speak. (DNB does not tell pension funds which asset-mix they should use, but does apply “buffer requirements” for assets other than government bonds. The 125% mentioned above applies to a “standard asset mix” containing, roughly, 60% bonds, 30% equities and 10% anything else. Or thereabouts.)

If this means that in the present situation one arrives at an uncomfortably high number (of the present value of the future claims), that’s only a reflection of the reality.

If this means that current pensions and current claims have to be cut, so be it. (And I am quite aware that cutting someone’s pension by, say, 20 to 50 euro’s per month will be quite painful in a large number of cases.)

But if we don’t do that now, we are in effect spending money we don’t have. Which means that future generations will have to foot the bill, one way or another.

(Would it have been possible to hedge this risk? Up to a point, Lord Copper. Let’s assume that the duration of the liabilities of a typical pension funds is 15 to 20 years. Of course this depends on the demographics of the participants, but this seems not too far off the mark. Theoretically, the ALM manager could tell the asset manager to invest in a first-rate bond portfolio with the same duration: 100% Dutch government bonds. You’d have a lovely hedge: both liabilities and assets would bob up and down on the waves of the Dutch yieldcurve. But at this moment that would entail accepting a hideously low YTM: less than 3% on average, across the entire length of the curve. The price such a pension fund would pay for (a lot of) certainty as to its coverage ratio, would be an annual contribution that neither the employed participants nor the sponsor would want to find out. On the other hand, a pension fund with such an investment portfolio would not be required to have the “buffer requirements” that DNB require of other funds. The 125% coverage ratio mentioned above would be set at a much lower level. I don’t know what level, probably as low as 105%. But it’s a purely theoretical question. There just isn’t enough very long-dated Dutch government debt around to satisfy the needs of even a minority of Dutch pension funds if they would choose to structure their assets this way.)

It’s quite impossible so say what will happen. Clearly, the Dutch trade unions have a large say in the matter, and their members are generally older. (The typical trade union member is over 40, I understand.) Dutch employers’ unions, I would expect, probably care less as long as their members, in their role of pension fund sponsors, aren’t going to have to fill the gap.

Whether DNB will be able to assert itself, and force the funds to cut the nominal pensions and accrued claims, is to bee seen. DNB has had some bad publicity recently, especially over the collapse of DSB Bank. (The committee that investigated the way DNB handled this reported that DSB Bank should not have been given a bank licence in the first place…) DNB has announced far-reaching changes, among them setting up an “intervention unit” that should be authorised to take steps before things go wrong. (In my capacity as a citizen and a taxpayer I was a bit surprised to read this… I would have thought that a regulator would be able to take steps before things go wrong.)

I think this would be an excellent time for DNB to show that they do mean business. Let me put it this way.;)

A few links (in Dutch, I’m afraid, but I trust Google Translate will be able to give the reader a rough idea of the contents):

•    DNB, FAQ about this issue: http://www.dnb.nl/nieuws-en-publicaties/feiten-en-visie/kroniek-van-de-kredietcrisis/dnb238207.jsp
•    Interview with Ms. Kellermann, DNB board member: http://www.fd.nl/artikel/20092068/dnb-kritisch-accountant-actuarissen
•    Statement of PME pension fund: http://www.metalektropensioen.nl/portal/page_pageid=3015,5824987&_dad=portal&_schema=PORTAL&p_item_id=6343632
•    A collection of articles on pensions in NRC Handelsblad newspaper: http://www.nrc.nl/nieuwsthema/pensioenen/ 
•    List of pension funds that are involved:  http://www.telegraaf.nl/overgeld/rubriek/pensioen/7489903/__Overzicht_14_zwakke_pensioenfondsen__.html
•    Joint statement of pension fund associations: http://www.nu.nl/files/Brief_TK_VB_UvB_OPF.pdf  

Martin van Dalen is a portfolio manager in the investments department of a Dutch social security organisation. The above has been written in a purely private capacity, and does not reflect in any way the position or opinions of either his employer or the board of the fund whose assets he helps to manage.

I thank Martin for this insightful contribution on the current state of the Dutch pension system which has long been the envy of the world. But as we can see from reading this comment, even the Dutch pension system is going through its share of problems.

 

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Sat, 09/11/2010 - 11:33 | 575691 zuhoobie
zuhoobie's picture

Great insight into the Netherlands pension system. Actually, a perfect example of what happens to savers in a low interest rate environment.  If your a saver and you want to have enough money for the future, when your getting less than 4% on your cash, you have to save more.  Or, accept a smaller benefit in the future.  Pretty responsible.

So - lets say they cut benefits. What happens if/when interest rates go to 10%, the Plan's all become 200% funded, would benefit cuts be restored?  

Bad as benefit cuts are - its better than denial (a perfect example of which is Social Security).

Sun, 09/05/2010 - 08:08 | 564469 Troy Ounce
Troy Ounce's picture

BTW, in above graph, the average percentage of coverage is compulsory minimum 110%. In 1990 it was 280%. Wanna know where the money is?

During the boom period, you:

  • guarantee pensions promises,
  • reduce the retirement age to 62 (from 65),
  • grant companies with an exemption on pension contributions (these pensions are totally empty),
  • approve that employees can pay lower premiums in order to "improve purchasing power"
  • approve investing in equities without wondering what happens if the stock market crashes
  • do not ask yourself the consequences of having an older population, so if there are more pensioners than workers?

But the policy was adopted by employers and employees (and btw, not confirmed by the pensioners, who do not sit on these pension board, but now get the buck passed) and they must sit on the blisters themselves.

Source: http://is.gd/eW0dM

For the names of the 37 most shaky Dutch pension funds: http://is.gd/eW0kx

 

Sun, 09/05/2010 - 07:30 | 564457 Cojones
Cojones's picture

What's also very noteworthy is that dutch legislation prohibited surplus pension savings in the booming years, because they would lead to pensions exceeding 100% of the income while employed. Also fiscal possibilities to privately save for retirement (tax deductable at time of deposit, taxed when withdrawn after retirement) where abolished, in order to have some extra short-term tax revenues.

Basically, the reason for the Dutch upcoming pension disaster is  caused by the government legislation and the false sense of security provided by state installed regulators for the financial sector.

Sun, 09/05/2010 - 06:00 | 564440 pachanguero
pachanguero's picture


Troy ounce wrote:

Moral of the story:

  • Fuck the government
  • Fuck the pensionfunds
///////////////////////// Spot on dude,  When you hand your money/gold to another then you have counter party risk.  I like having my money as MY money and not having it tied to a bunch of losers. Short stupid people, buy gold.

Sun, 09/05/2010 - 03:49 | 564395 Troy Ounce
Troy Ounce's picture

I earned 100 Guilders as a student and decided to put it aside for for my pension (yes, I was a fine young chap)

Of course, at that time, I wanted the buying power of that 100 Guilder to remain in place. I did not wanted it to be worth 1/20 or 1/100 of that when I would reach 65.

I mean, if I knew what was going to happen, why should I save my money? Rather spend it on beer.

There are a few problem areas:

  1. The money is not yours. It belongs to the government and they have the power to debase it (through inflation). So it WILL be worth almost noting when you reach 65.
  2. In many cases, as a professional, you were being forced (in Holland that is) to join a pensionfund, even if you did not want to.
  3. You did not have any say in there investment policies (they had their own "investment experts, ha!)

You pay, as a professional, enormous amounts every month to keep the system going.

Th is chap now owns gold and silver and cut all ties with pensionfunds.

Moral of the story:

  • Fuck the government
  • Fuck the pensionfunds

Do it yourself.

 

 

 

 

Sun, 09/05/2010 - 01:11 | 564335 Nihilarian
Nihilarian's picture

There's only two things I hate in this world. People who are intolerant of other people's cultures and the Dutch.

Sun, 09/05/2010 - 00:40 | 564311 Al Bundy
Al Bundy's picture

I also live here in the Netherlands (Amsterdam, specifically).  Recently we have had several "retirements" in the firm - i.e., folks who have no desire to quit working but are nonetheless forced to as soon as they hit the number 65.  Waiver requests go unheeded. 

Seems ridiculous to me.  After all, somebody should need to be around to cover my Dutch colleagues when they go on "personal holiday" for 6 weeks at a shot!

Sun, 09/05/2010 - 00:08 | 564291 ebworthen
ebworthen's picture

Don't worrry.

Before long the powers in the U.S. A. will institute inflation and stagflation or hyperinflation.

Your pension funds will soon be earning 10% or more.

You said:  "Cutting nominal entitlements has never happened before, at least, not since World War II. "

That sounds familiar, like the "not since the Great Depression" quotes for all kinds of maladies here in the U.S.

Sad, isn't it, that we didn't learn the lessons of those generations.

I suppose it is normal, but sad.

Good thing you are a long ways from the Pacific and Asia.

Sun, 09/05/2010 - 08:39 | 564481 Zero Debt
Zero Debt's picture

10% is barely enough to keep up with inflation.

http://www.shadowstats.com/alternate_data/inflation-charts

It will be great to see when governments will print money for pensions and I am so looking forward to see the disaster going full circle.

Sat, 09/04/2010 - 23:18 | 564253 Dr. Sandi
Dr. Sandi's picture

This article makes a very creepy statement to me.

Low yield bonds are bad because the pot doesn't grow as fast as it might.

But what if the ratings are wrong, wrong, wrong, as they are on debt? What if the high yield bonds are defaulted? Isn't this the bigger problem?

Seems to me that slow growth backed up by less shaky bonds makes a lot more sense than an exploding bond that WOULD HAVE been worth a lot more, if only it hadn't gone belly up.

Or are things better in Europe than I've been reading?

I sleep better on a mattress than a balloon.

Sat, 09/04/2010 - 23:11 | 564246 Kapital Xposure
Kapital Xposure's picture

smoke and mirrors, but in this case more like....

 

smoke and a pancake..

 

 

Sat, 09/04/2010 - 23:07 | 564243 Gromit
Gromit's picture

Intelligent people I talk to know our problems are serious.

They feel like passengers in a crashing airliner - who are sure that many will die but they'll make it down the escape chute just fine.

Sat, 09/04/2010 - 23:03 | 564238 traderjoe
traderjoe's picture

There's not enough money in the world to pay off all of the debts, interest, and funded/unfunded obligations. 

Sometime, somewhere, the default domino will start. Once started, there will be no end to the capital destruction.  

Sat, 09/04/2010 - 22:02 | 564164 Gromit
Gromit's picture
Regulators should scrutinize CalPERS

 

,

Saturday, September 4, 2010 at midnight

This editorial page has on several occasions observed that the California Public Employees’ Retirement System’s own financial reporting doesn’t live up to the high standards it demands of the corporations it invests in. CalPERS dismisses this and just about all criticism. But what’s happening in another state with a nighmarishly underfunded pension system suggests CalPERS may yet have the day of reckoning that it deserves.

In a case with similarities to the action it brought against San Diego over the city’s pension deceit in 2002 and 2003, the Securities and Exchange Commission formally charged New Jersey with deceiving buyers of state bonds, saying “its misrepresentations and omissions created the fiscal illusion that [the state’s two pension funds] were being adequately funded.” New Jersey settled the charges without admitting guilt. But the SEC’s action was a welcome reminder that state governments and their agencies have an obligation to be honest in their financial affairs.

As assemblyman-turned-Stanford professor Joe Nation pointed out this week, CalPERS’ misrepresentations to the Legislature in 1999 appear as egregious as what was done in New Jersey. In lobbying for SB 400 – a bill that ended up being the vehicle for enormous retroactive pension increases for hundreds of thousands of public employees – CalPERS put out a 17-page brochure that made the hallucinatory assertion that such a vast gift of public funds would have little or no long-term cost for taxpayers. But as former U-T reporter Ed Mendel revealed in July on his calpensions.com blog, at the same time CalPERS put out the brochure, its actuaries were warning that if CalPERS’ investment returns flagged, SB 400 could end up costing the state nearly $4 billion in 2010-11. That’s pretty much what happened.

Sat, 09/04/2010 - 21:56 | 564158 Fred Hayek
Fred Hayek's picture

Thank you very much Mr. Van Dalen (and you as well, Leo!).  That was very interesting.

I wonder what the Dutch would make of the farcical assumptions for CALPERS of 8+% returns ad infinitum.

Sat, 09/04/2010 - 21:40 | 564148 RockyRacoon
RockyRacoon's picture

Is this a template or an omen? 

Sat, 09/04/2010 - 22:51 | 564218 masterinchancery
masterinchancery's picture

Not mentioned, but of great importance, are the demographics of Holland, which are just bad.  There won't be enough little Dutch kids to continue funding a pay as you go system, or likely any kind of system where retirees outnumber workers.  But I'm sure something will turn up.....like CB money printing.

Sun, 09/05/2010 - 00:08 | 564292 whatsinaname
Sat, 09/04/2010 - 21:25 | 564137 deadparrot
deadparrot's picture

Ridiculously low interest rates can cause problems? Impossible. Greenspan and Bernanke taught us that there is no problem that can't be solved without lower interest rates.

Sun, 09/05/2010 - 00:01 | 564287 whatsinaname
whatsinaname's picture

they should buy Chinese solars - problem solved.

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