The dramatic rise in life
expectancy has improved human well-being but future longevity
uncertainty also poses a real challenge to pension funding levels that
plan sponsors will need to proactively manage, says a report by PGIM,
the global investment management businesses of Prudential Financial,
Inc.
The report, “Longevity and Liabilities: Bridging the Gap,”
highlights that longevity risk has often taken a backseat to investment
and interest rate risk. The underestimation of human life spans by
forecasters and the potentially sharp unanticipated increases in
longevity resulting from medical breakthroughs, such as anti-aging
genetic treatments, poses a real risk to pension funding levels. This
risk is compounded by the “lower for longer” interest rate environment
that has burdened plan sponsors with low discount rates.
“We have
had a century of underestimating actual longevity experience,” says
Taimur Hyat, PGIM’s chief strategy officer. “These annual forecasting
errors can compound over time to be quite significant. Understanding,
quantifying the true magnitude, and responding to the challenge of
longevity risk is an important step for plan sponsors.”
“We
evaluated the potential impact of further increases in life expectancy
on liability values and found that longevity risk can be significant for
certain plan profiles,” says Karen McQuiston, head of PGIM’s
Institutional Advisory and Solutions team. “We would encourage plan
sponsors to incorporate these potential dynamics into their risk
management processes and recommend that plan sponsors measure and manage
longevity risk, inflation risk, and interest rate risk in an integrated
framework.”
While changes in longevity can materially affect the
pension liabilities of all sponsors, the impact is magnified for
pension plans with cost of living adjustments or inflation indexation,
including many U.S. public pensions and U.K. public and corporate plans.
In total, unmanaged longevity risk has the potential to worsen a plan’s
risk profile, reduce funded status and lead to unforeseen costs, PGIM
says.
NEXT: Suggestions for managing longevity riskPGIM suggests taking a three-pronged approach to managing longevity risk:
- Develop a robust framework to understand the problem:
Plan liabilities should be evaluated on the richest set of longevity
information available. Given the uncertainty around the timing and
magnitude, asset-liability analyses should be stress tested based on
different longevity improvement scenarios.
- Assess the investment and protection actions that can dampen the impact of longevity risk:
In many cases assets, already straining to keep up with liabilities,
must work even harder. It may be worth re-evaluating the portfolio’s
allocation to growth assets, including real estate, private assets,
diversified equity, and higher yielding fixed income. At the same time,
plans will want to address the longer duration of their liabilities as
their retiree pension payments stretch further into the future than
initially assumed, looking both at ways to lengthen duration or find
synthetic solutions.
- Evaluate the case for potential risk transfer actions:
No investment strategy fully insulates against future longevity risk.
Some plan sponsors may consider fully hedging against longevity-driven
uncertainty by using longevity insurance or pension risk transfer for a
portion of their plan.
PGIM’s latest paper builds on insights in “A Silver Lining: The Investment Implications of an Aging World,” which describes investment opportunities arising from an aging global population.
To download a copy of the new report, visit www.PGIM.comlongevity.