We’re Reaching the Beginning of the End of the Pension Fund Crisis

From Birch Gold Group

The pension crisis has been escalating for quite some time, and accounting for pension shortfalls seems next to impossible for state governments.

The shortfall between pension assets and liabilities is a major problem. But another problem may be spelling the beginning of the end for public pensions altogether.

The Beginning of the “End”

Typically, public pensions assume a 7-percent discount rate so they need to generate a return higher than that. But according to Bloomberg, they aren’t getting those returns often enough.

The Bloomberg article states that the average returns for pension-fund-like portfolios have only generated returns of 7 percent or greater for 50-year periods twice since 1871.

The article continues, saying the problem is worse because of two primary reasons:

  1. “Cumulative returns are lower than the averages.”
  2. “An extended period of bad returns cannot be made up even with astronomical returns later.”

For example: Over a 50 year period, if a fund were to have zero returns in the first 15 years, and goes broke, it wouldn’t matter what it did (or could do) after that. If that seems obvious, that’s because it is.

And this example applies even if a fund started in June 1949 and earned an average of 7.99%, according to Bloomberg. Even if the pension is fully funded, “there is no chance existing assets are enough to pay already-contracted liabilities.”

If that sounds dire, once the base of assets start to decline it’s game over, because shrinking assets can’t keep paying increasing liabilities. And according to Pew Research, they have been in decline since 2016.

So worrying about the next 50 years is “pointless”, says Bloomberg:

Worrying about the next five decades is pointless, because there’s also no chance the current system will survive long enough to discover what the next 50-year average returns will be.

Bloomberg puts the beginning of the “end” at 2023 on a national aggregate level, calling it an extrapolation, not a prediction. Pretty serious, but not surprising. And of course, the exact “end date” isn’t certain, nor how it will end.

Is there any hope for public pensions?

Well, even the best extrapolations have a small chance to fail, and a funding miracle could happen. But even if a miracle were to happen, the uncertainty would remain the same.

Especially for state pension programs.

The State Public Pension “Report Card” Tells the Tale

A full pension report by Pew Trusts, titled The State Pension Funding Gap: 2016, tells a rather dark tale. It starts by issuing a warning (emphasis ours):

There is no one-size-fits-all solution to the pension funding shortfall and the budgetary challenges facing individual states, but without new policies that commit states to fully funding retirement systems, the impact on other essential services—and the potential for unpaid pension promises—will increase.

According the report, states had an average of 66% of the assets needed to pay pension promises as of 2016. Only 4 states had at least 90% of the assets required (see graph below):funded ratios for state pensions

And negative cash flow for both state and local pension programs is still increasing (see chart below):

state operating cash flow

This means payments are increasing faster than contributions. If a business has expenses that increased faster than revenue, eventually it would go out of business.

So will state and local pensions start “going out of business” over the next few decades? No one knows for sure, but it does look like they are on borrowed time. And as we’ve reported before, corporate pensions aren’t far behind.

The Pew Trust report finished with the dire outlook that doesn’t leave a secure feeling about state funded pension programs (emphasis ours):

The funding gap for the state pension plans studied reached $1.4 trillion in 2016—an increase of $295 billion from 2015. State contribution policies proved insufficient to deal with the unfunded liabilities already on the books. Even if all assumptions had been met, the funding gap would have grown by $13 billion. Instead, investments fell short of assumptions for the second year in a row, leaving state pension debt at historic highs.

States may look to increase taxes to try and meet the funding gap, which could include property taxes. Not an ideal solution.

One Thing is Certain: Public Pensions Are Uncertain

Benefit cuts and funding gaps mean your own pension plan isn’t “guaranteed” to be stable any longer. It’s important for you to start making your portfolio as resilient as possible, so you can relax as much as possible in retirement.

You can start by looking at whether you should pay down your mortgage, cut spending, and diversify your assets. And even if you don’t have any retirement savings yet, the best time to start is now.

After 8 long years of ultra-loose monetary policy from the Federal Reserve, it’s no secret that inflation is primed to soar. If your IRA or 401(k) is exposed to this threat, it’s critical to act now! That’s why thousands of Americans are moving their retirement into a Gold IRA. Learn how you can too with a free info kit on gold from Birch Gold Group. It reveals the little-known IRS Tax Law to move your IRA or 401(k) into gold. Click here to get your free Info Kit on Gold.

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15 Comments
Ned
Ned
January 21, 2019 3:55 pm

Sounds just like Social Insecurity.

Bob P
Bob P
January 21, 2019 4:33 pm

I’m pretty sure the Canada Pension Plan will continue to pay out benefits for years. I’m also pretty sure that, with all the money printing, the entire monthly check will soon barely suffice for a coffee and a donut.

unit472
unit472
January 21, 2019 4:34 pm

Beyond the difficulty of a large pension funds being able to generate any alpha on their investments due to their sheer size being a large portion of the ‘markets’ they also cannot liquidate those investments to pay benefits without tanking the value of the remainder. Calpers, e.g. makes Warren Buffett seem a small player in the markets and Calpers is just the largest of a number of gigantic public pension funds. They can’t all generate 7% plus annual returns any more than a stock market with 100 Warren Buffett’s could all outperform the ‘market’! Trading shares or bonds is a zero sum game. Winners and losers have to cancel each other out.

Old Shoe
Old Shoe
January 21, 2019 4:46 pm

If I read it at Zero Hedge correctly, whatever pension money that remained in cash or cash equivalents was dumped into the stock market at the end of December to give stocks a boost.

“Annnnnnnnd……..it’s gone.”

starfcker
starfcker
January 21, 2019 6:05 pm

There is no pension crisis. Each entity is going to have to deal with the reality of how much money they have available. Simple renegotiation is all that needs to happen, be it with the pensioners or the taxpayers in each case. I guess it depends on the pain threshold of each group.

starfcker
starfcker
  starfcker
January 21, 2019 8:57 pm

Why the downvotes? Let me make an example. If the city of Fort Lauderdale has an underfunded pension program, at whatever point it becomes necessary, wouldn’t the answer be for the city to decide how much of a haircut the pensioners get versus how much of a tax hike the residents get. At some point, it’s a finite number, but it’s not a crisis. And I don’t know why it would be of any interest to anybody who is not a pensioner or a taxpayer in the city of Fort Lauderdale. It’s their business, let them handle it. And every other city, county and state can handle theirs as well. The only losers in this scenario are The Wall Street banks, as they don’t get a bailout from anywhere, and pension funds are necessary in the scheme of killing money in the securitized bond market.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  starfcker
January 21, 2019 10:01 pm

Why all the no votes?

Because your thick as a brick.

The government doesn’t give a rats ass about the people. They only care about themselves here and now.

They are going to bleed the people of Illonois to death. When the sheep such as yourself get the message and try to leave . It will be too late because there won’t be any other sheep to buy their homes.

The homes they hoped to sell when they retire will be worthless.

starfcker
starfcker
  Anonymous
January 22, 2019 5:16 pm

And why would I give a fuck about anybody dumb enough to live in Illinois? Read my post again, dumb fuck. It’s a local problem

TampaRed
TampaRed
  starfcker
January 22, 2019 5:44 pm

because politicians being politicians,they will bail out the 1st few municipalities to go bust,thus setting an example that can’t be undone–
the dems have a plan 4 this,it came out during the o8 campaign,leaked by a cali congressman who was quickly shut up,& it has never been brought up again–
they want to bail all pensions,public/private into social security–

robert h siddell jr
robert h siddell jr
January 21, 2019 6:41 pm

I’m reminded of the second Governor of the Pilgrims who changed the failed Socialist Policies of his predecessor to “You will eat what you grow”. Time for a lot of State Workers to start a garden and canning.

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
  robert h siddell jr
January 21, 2019 8:56 pm

If only.

Overthecliff
Overthecliff
January 21, 2019 10:19 pm

The pensions will be made whole. The politicians will print money to do it. Then as Bob P. Points out REALINFLATION. They have no choice. They are riding a tiger and don’t know how to dismount.

WE Are screwed
WE Are screwed
  Overthecliff
January 22, 2019 10:04 am

You can become wealthy, very wealthy, if properly positioned just before hyper inflation. Let me explain. In 2020 i decide to load up my credit cards with gold and silver coin purchases. I decide to use my savings as down payment on many apartments, rental houses, land, or high rise building and i leverage these with a mortgage at low rates today. I leverage and buy say $10 million of property. At Fixed low rates. Within 10 years Govt does batshit crazy and starts printing money and our currency becomes Venezuela and an peach cost a hundred dollars and within a few months the peach costs $1,000. I use my 401k etc and buy silver or gold etf’s etc. Now i convert the one ounce coin of gold i paid $1200 for and get $100,000 for it. I take that $100,000 and pay off my house. I continue to convert coins until one day i convert one ounce of gold for $100,000,000 million and pay off all rental houses and high rise etc. i keep enough gold and silver to stay wealthy and pay the increased taxes if needed. The govt always wants people like me to go broke and not pass on inheritance to create a dynastic competition for the rothschilds. They expect only their cronies to be doing these things. especially the banks. The banks will own eveything and try and limit the sale of assets to their friends doing this exact thing. So keeping these assets will be key to generational planning. Having my retirement funds in silver gold etfs they will have to capitulate its worth in dollars. Always being able to convert to local currency to pay their bullshit increased taxes allows me to keep these other real property assets. So, in short smart leveraged debt is low fixed intetest rates backed with precious metals and stk mkt (fiat precious metals etf’s) to play their game. Otherwise they could just outright steal it all and then the citizens will give them their bullets first…..there is an opportunity to get wealthy in times of fast monetary changes. You just have to understand these changes and study history and apply the scenario to history to guage how correct you are with the expected outcomes.

Peaknic
Peaknic
  WE Are screwed
January 22, 2019 2:03 pm

Yes, but timing is everything in this scenario and “the market can stay irrational longer than you can stay liquid!”

WE Are screwed
WE Are screwed
January 22, 2019 9:45 am

Wanna see a real “yellow vest” protest, wait until pensions and/social security is bust. They fear food stamp shortages but they havent seen anything until ss is gone bust….