NEPC’s Aaron Chastain was quoted in a recent Pensions & Investments article to weigh in on how corporate pension plan portfolios in the U.K. & U.S. have been distorted by upheaval. View the article on Pensions & Investments’ site here.
Corporate pension fund portfolios in the U.K. and U.S. that have been distorted by recent market events are set for an asset allocation overhaul. A combination of rising interest rates leading to falling liabilities, plus increased needs for liquidity in portfolios means asset allocations are, in some cases, no longer serving their intended purpose on either side of the pond. Sources said pension fund sponsors now have an opportunity to further derisk portfolios, with a view to completing a risk transfer or achieving self-sufficiency.
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There are also conversations among U.S. plans on what constitutes an appropriate interest rate hedge, since it “now takes less dollars to achieve the same interest rate hedge,” said Aaron Chastain, Atlanta-based senior consultant at NEPC LLC.
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NEPC’s Mr. Chastain is also seeing some clients reducing commitment sizes but not stopping investments altogether. They “definitely don’t want to eliminate those relationships (with fund managers) for a shorter-term market event in terms of an asset allocation perspective,” he said.
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