Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published bySteven Simmons Modified over 9 years ago
1
FCERA Board of Retirement and Fresno County Board of Supervisors Joint Meeting – April 30, 2009 Contribution Volatility and Asset Smoothing FCERA Board of Retirement and Fresno County Board of Supervisors Joint Meeting - April 30, 2009 Paul Angelo, FSA & Andy Yeung, ASA The Segal Company San Francisco 5032871
2
Slide 2 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 Actuarial Value of Assets (AVA) Unfunded Actuarial Accrued Liability (UAAL) Amortization of UAAL Normal Cost Present Value of Future Normal Costs Current Contribution
3
Slide 3 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 Managing Contribution Volatility Asset allocation – volatility at the source Asset smoothing Specific to investment return volatility UAAL amortization – assets and liabilities More than just asset volatility control Direct contribution rate smoothing Contribution collar – limits increases Contribution rate phase-in – delays full impact
4
Slide 4 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 Actuarial Value of Assets To reduce the impact of short term asset volatility, plans use an Actuarial Value of Assets (AVA) which “smoothes” returns Each year, take the difference between: Actual return on Market Value of Assets (MVA) Assumed return on MVA (currently 8.00%) Difference is spread over (typically) five years Reduces volatility without reducing long term expected return
5
Slide 5 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 Example: one good year
6
Slide 6 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 Example: one good, then one bad year
7
Slide 7 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 The one thing to remember: Actuarial valuation determines the current or “measured” cost, not the ultimate cost Assumptions and funding methods affect only the timing of costs C + I = B + E Contributions + Investment Income equals Benefit Payments + Expenses
8
Slide 8 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 Asset Smoothing Mechanics When MVA return is greater than assumed Smoothing “defers gains” Smoothed value (AVA) is less than MVA UAAL and contributions are larger When MVA return is less than assumed Smoothing “defers losses” Smoothed value (AVA) is greater than MVA UAAL and contributions are smaller
9
Slide 9 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 FCERA Actuarial Value of Assets as of June 30, 2007 (Market G/L measured in six month increments)
10
Slide 10 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 FCERA Actuarial Value of Assets as of June 30, 2008 (Market G/L measured in six month increments)
11
Slide 11 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 FCERA Actuarial Value of Assets as of June 30, 2009 ESTIMATED 2008/2009 Market Value return = -28%
12
Slide 12 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 Asset Smoothing and “MVA Corridor” Many plans (incl. FCERA) limit how far the AVA can get from the MVA by limiting the AVA ratio Typical 20% “MVA corridor” means the AVA must be between 120% and 80% of MVA Maximum deferred gain or loss is 20% of MVA Hitting the MVA corridor effectively stops smoothing MVA corridor will have major impact starting in 2009 For FCERA, 6/30/2009 AVA is 150% of MVA Immediate cost increase with MVA corridor: 15.0% Immediate cost increase w/o MVA corridor: 3.3%
13
Slide 13 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 FCERA Historical MVA and AVA Ratio of AVA to MVA (before 20% MVA Corridor) 86% 86% 95% 95% 116% 116% 106% 100% 97% 92% 108% 150%
14
Slide 14 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 Actuarial Standards of Practice #44 ASOP 44 focuses on two key features How close does AVA stay to MVA Ratio of AVA to MVA (“AVA Ratio”) How long before AVA returns to MVA Smoothing period ASOP 44 also provides some structure If “likely” to be “reasonable”, both are required If “sufficiently close” or “sufficiently short” then only one or the other is required
15
Slide 15 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 Longer Asset Smoothing Period? Possible Systemic Reasons Longer business/economic cycles Greater actual market volatility (assets) Greater sensitivity to contribution rate volatility Greater asset volatility relative to payroll Higher funded percentages More mature plan, larger benefit levels Practical Reasons Reduce immediate impact of market losses Delay full impact of market losses
16
Slide 16 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 5 year Smoothing and MVA Corridor Under ASOP 44, is 5 years “sufficiently short”? Widespread use, industry opinions Also consider cash flow, employer ability to pay If any action taken, consider wider MVA corridor Considerations beyond just complying with ASOP Maintains policy of some control on AVA vs MVA Important if also considering longer smoothing Use actual 5 yr smoothing AVA ratio as a guide For FCERA, consider 130% or 140% Fully aware of current and future implications
17
Slide 17 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 Longer Smoothing and MVA Corridor Longer smoothing means larger AVA ratios Longer period increases need for MVA corridor Possible framework for policy alternatives 5 year smoothing: corridor based on actual AVA ratio Longer periods: use this corridor or narrower Allows more time to get to ultimate contribution rate Does not lower immediate rate impact For longest periods (10 - 15 years) use 120%-130%
18
Slide 18 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 Q U E S T I O N S
19
Slide 19 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 5 Year Smoothing Period (Exhibit 3-1) 108%150%144%128%113%101%100% Ratio of AVA to MVA (No Corridor) Shown Above -28% return for 2008/2009, 0% for 2009/2010 and then 8% per year Employer Contribution Rates
20
Slide 20 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 7 Year Smoothing Period (Exhibit 3-2) 108%153%150%137%124%114%107%101%100% Ratio of AVA to MVA (No Corridor) Shown Above -28% return for 2008/2009, 0% for 2009/2010 and then 8% per year Employer Contribution Rates
21
Slide 21 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 10 Year Smoothing Period (Exhibit 3-3) 108%155% 144%132%123%117%112%107%104%100% Ratio of AVA to MVA (No Corridor) Shown Above -28% return for 2008/2009, 0% for 2009/2010 and then 8% per year Employer Contribution Rates
22
Slide 22 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 12 Year Smoothing Period (Exhibit 3-4) 108%156%157%146%135%127%121%116%112%108%105%102%100% Ratio of AVA to MVA (No Corridor) Shown Above -28% return for 2008/2009, 0% for 2009/2010 and then 8% per year Employer Contribution Rates
23
Slide 23 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 Various Smoothing Periods – No Corridor (Exhibit 6) -28% return for 2008/2009, 0% for 2009/2010 and then 8% per year Employer Contribution Rates
24
Slide 24 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 Various Smoothing Periods – 120% Corridor (Exhibit 7) Employer Contribution Rates -28% return for 2008/2009, 0% for 2009/2010 and then 8% per year
25
Slide 25 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 Various Smoothing Periods – 130% Corridor (Exhibit 8) Employer Contribution Rates -28% return for 2008/2009, 0% for 2009/2010 and then 8% per year
26
Slide 26 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 Various Smoothing Periods – 140% Corridor (Exhibit 9) Employer Contribution Rates -28% return for 2008/2009, 0% for 2009/2010 and then 8% per year
27
Slide 27 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 Various Smoothing Periods – No Corridor (Exhibit 6) -28% return for 2008/2009, 0% for 2009/2010 and then 8% per year Employer Contribution Rates
28
Slide 28 FCERA Asset Smoothing – April 30, 2009 Q U E S T I O N S
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.