NEWS

Funded ratio of U.S. corporate pension plans declines 1.2% in February: report

By Staff

After four consecutive months of improvement, the funded ratio of corporate pension plans dropped from 106.0% to 104.8%, as of February 28, according to a new report by Milliman Inc, an actuarial and consulting firm.

The report, which analyzes the 100 largest corporate plans in the U.S., found, overall, the funded status of plans listed in Milliman’s index declined by $13 billion in February.

Indeed, it noted a decrease in the benchmark corporate bond interest rates resulted in an increase in pension liabilities, with monthly discount rates dropping from 5.60% to 5.36% for the month. While pension assets increased by $18 billion as a result of January’s 1.90% investment return, the gains weren’t enough to offset the liability increase in the plans included in the study.


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“Gains in fixed income investments helped shore up the Milliman 100 pension assets but were not strong enough to counter the sharp discount rate decline,” said Zorast Wadia, a principal with Milliman, in a press release. “With more Fed rate cuts possibly coming in 2025, plan sponsors with prudent asset-liability matching strategies will be able to preserve their funded status improvement seen over the past year.”

The report noted, under an optimistic forecast with rising interest rates (reaching 5.86% by the end of 2025 and 6.46% by the end of 2026) and asset gains (10.4% annual returns), the funded ratio would climb to 115% by the end of 2025 and 129% by the end of 2026.

However, under a pessimistic forecast (4.86% discount rate at the end of 2025 and 4.26% by the end of 2026 and 2.4% annual returns), the funded ratio would decline to 97% by the end of 2025 and 88% by the end of 2026.