Global Retirement Assets See Growth in 2009

Global retirement assets stood at $24 trillion in 2009, up from $21.4 trillion the year before, according to Cerulli’s Quantitative Update: Global Markets 2010.

Cerulli projects retirement assets will grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 7.2% between 2009 and 2014 to $34.3 trillion.  

According to a press release, Cerulli’s data showed global assets under management rose 12.3% in 2009 to $49 trillion as fiscal and monetary stimulus triggered a stock market surge, but Europe’s sovereign debt crisis is clouding the outlook for money managers in 2010. The rise in assets followed an 18.6% (or $10 trillion) slide in 2008.   

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Global assets under management remain short of 2007’s peak of $53.6 trillion but are projected to exceed it by the end of 2011, reaching $56.5 trillion. Cerulli projects global assets under management are projected to grow at a CAGR of 7.6% to $70.6 trillion by 2014, the announcement said. 

Global mutual fund assets grew 16.3% in 2009 to $21.3 trillion, but Cerulli noted market appreciation mostly accounted for the rise, with net inflows contributing just 1.1% to the $3 trillion increase. Cerulli projects that mutual fund assets will also exceed their 2007 peak by 2011, hitting $24.5 trillion, and will grow at a CAGR of 7.9% to $31.1 trillion by 2014. 

Regionally, Asia ex-Japan made the swiftest recovery from the financial crisis and is forecast to post 14.5% growth in assets under management between 2009 and 2014 to $3.8 trillion. The United States and Europe together, however, will continue to dominate the asset management industry, accounting for 78% of global assets, Cerulli said.  

More information is at http://www.cerulli.com.

House Passes “Doc Fix” Bill With Pension Relief

The House of Representatives has, by a margin of 417-to-1, passed a bill containing pension relief.

 

Of course, that got second billing in the Preservation of Access to Care for Medicare Beneficiaries and Pension Relief Act (H.R. 3962).  More commonly known as the “doc-fix” bill, the legislation was designed to stave off a 21% pay cut for Medicare doctors until December, instead providing a 2.2% pay increase for doctors who treat Medicare patients.  The Senate passed the measure unanimously last week. 

That said, “Congress provided a boost of economic stimulus today, when it passed critical pension funding relief as part of the ‘doc fix’ legislation,” according to American Benefits Council President James A. Klein. “These relief provisions, included as a revenue offset for the Medicare elements, will help many large American employers manage artificially inflated pension obligations and reduce layoffs,” Klein said.

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The ERISA Industry Committee (ERIC) also weighed in.”  While this bill is not perfect, it is an important step in providing urgent relief to plan sponsors — many of whom continue to be strapped for cash and must choose between funding their plans or delay hiring and capital investments or even further cut back on jobs,” said ERIC President Mark Ugoretz in a press release.

“As we have said all along, pension plan sponsors were not asking for a taxpayer bailout; we were not asking that the government provide plan sponsors with money or to take on plan sponsors’ pension liabilities; nor were we asking that plan sponsors be excused from funding their plans; we were merely asking for more time to meet those obligations.” 

The American Benefits Council said that the measure will help save jobs across the country by allowing companies “more time to repay the huge losses brought about by a “perfect storm” of economic factors, including depressed financial markets, low interest rates and the 2006 pension funding rules. “This legislation will allow employers to responsibly fund their retirement plans while also driving economic growth.”  .

“We applaud the efforts of House and Senate lawmakers, particularly those who have worked on a bipartisan basis to champion this important relief throughout the legislative process. This kind of constructive, collaborative approach will be essential for addressing future retirement security challenges,” Klein said.

Ugoretz said “We look forward to the President signing this bill, providing much-needed relief and certainty to help companies meet their long-term pension obligations and transition out of the recession and into the economic recovery.  ERIC will continue to be actively engaged in monitoring how effective the relief is and advise Congress if further relief is necessary.”

To that point, Klein cautioned that “Congress will soon have to address the volatility and unpredictability now inherent in funding traditional defined benefit retirement plans. The current funding regime should be improved to encourage employer sponsorship of retirement plans, ensuring long-term financial security for employers and employees,” Klein said. “Today’s enactment of funding relief is a step in the right direction.”

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