Asset Allocation – Page 216
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Features
Unweighting fixed income logical
The scenario of a pick-up in growth, contained inflation and ample market liquidity suggest a continuation of the trends seen in recent months for financial markets and a preference for equities, particularly high risk markets, over bonds. We can also expect to see greater risks in the second half of ...
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Features
Philips focuses on the possible
Though the Philips Group as a worldwide electronics company operating in over 60 countries worldwide has a total workforce of 166,500 employees, it currently does not have any multinational pension plans. The pension plans the group has across the globe were established as the company grew its activities over the ...
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Features
France and Spain get on side
The announcement by France and Spain can be considered as a major breakthrough in the battle to achieve an internal market for occupational pensions. It also increases the pressure on member states whose tax legislation still discriminates against foreign pension funds (Finland, Sweden, Belgium, Portugal, Ireland, Italy, the UK and ...
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Features
Income generators in vogue
The traditional equity-versus-bond decision in asset allocation is becoming too simplistic. The clear trend is towards greater diversification, particularly into non-traditional asset classes, together with a shift from relative return to total return investment. In 2003, there were many opportunities for asset managers to generate positive investment returns. Given the ...
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Features
An uncomfortably hot seat
As Malcolm Wicks, UK Minister of State for Pensions, acknowledges, the world of pensions has changed from a “rather dusty but worthy corner of business and public policy” to a “big issue” that regularly makes front-page headlines in UK tabloid newspapers. “That can be uncomfortable for Pensions Ministers from time ...
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FeaturesHow the parliamentary pension scheme works
The pension scheme for Westminster MPs, the Parliamentary Contributory Pension Fund (PCPF) operates like most funded final salary arrangements by investing its members’ contributions and those from the Exchequer, which takes the place of an employer in an occupational scheme, in the financial markets.
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Features
Tapiola spreads its wings
The investment environment has been very challenging, says Hanna Hiidenpalo, who is investment director for Tapiola Mutual Pensions Insurance, based in Espoo. The guaranteed rate of return Finnish investors need to receive is currently at 4.5%. “The decision about the guarantee rate is not very closely related to the realities ...
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Features
Lure of sound regulation
Rightly or wrongly, offshore jurisdictions are associated with light regulation, and the main job of offshore regulators is perceived to be placing as few obstacles as possible in the way of multinational companies wishing to set up pension schemes for their employees. Guernsey, for example, has specifically exempted international pensions ...
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Features
Slow task of rebuilding
Like the adverts for Carlsberg beer, the Danes believe that they probably have the best system in Europe when it comes to pensions coverage. Granted the Dutch will have more in terms of funded assets per head, but Denmark’s second pillar occupational membership at an estimated 95% of the workforce ...
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Features
US to dictate Europe's 2004
Two developments in the US hold the key to how the Euro-zone equities market is likely to perform in 2004. One is the recovery of the US economy and the other is depreciation of the US dollar. The questions the European markets are asking are – will the fall in ...
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Features
Getting the pensions message across
Good communication is essential in the pension fund business, according to a panel of leading figures in the European pensions industry. Panellists at the third annual IPE Awards in Amsterdam agreed that communication with plan members was an important part of the job of a pension fund manager. And with ...
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Features
Why ALM still has a role
In a market environment where the funding ratios of pension funds have suffered severely, asset liability management (ALM) is still a very helpful tool in understanding the various ways a pension fund might restructure its financial position and to repair its balance sheet. ALM is still particularly helpful and useful ...
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Features
TAA alpha there for the taking
Fixed asset weightings in a portfolio are not optimal when risk premiums and volatility vary over time. This renders tactical asset allocation (TAA) a useful supplement to strategic asset allocation. The institutional investor considering the investment process for TAA should consider the spillover effects to other parts of the investment ...
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Features
'Pension funds better investors than asset managers'
European pension funds should manage the core of their business internally, and outsource only the specialist areas of asset management to external managers. This is because pension funds understand their liabilities better than anyone else. Broadly, this was the conclusion of six managers in the pension industry when they debated ...
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Features
Benchmarking - back to basics
The European pensions industry faces major challenges, some of which will likely lead to significant, if not dramatic, changes. At the broadest level there is growing awareness of the issues raised by long-term demographic trends, especially in those countries where reliance continues to be primarily on the state for retirement ...
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Features
IMF critical of Belgacom move
The Belgian government’s takeover of the Belgacom pension fund has been criticised by the International Monetary Fund as an “ad hoc” measure which masks the country’s true fiscal position. “The current framework that relies on maintaining balanced budgets has served as a valuable policy communication tool,” the organisation said in ...




