I’m afraid I can’t share the enthusiasm for IBM’s new “cash-balance” pension plan as described in Brooke Masters’ column “Could a US pensions revolution be on the cards?” (Opinion, February 22).
Cash-balance pensions are technically defined benefit plans, because unlike 401k defined contribution pensions, members have the right to convert their cash balance into a lifetime pension.
But they are a million miles away from US and UK defined benefit pensions — based on salary and years worked, guaranteed by the company — because the rate at which the cash balance is converted into a pension is decided at retirement, so members have no guarantee about how much they will be getting.
In the case of IBM, the only guarantee from the company is that pension contributions will earn a 6 per cent notional “return” until 2027, and the 10-year US Treasury yield beyond that — much lower than the likely return on an individual 401k defined contribution pension, holding a mix of bonds and equities. And more importantly, IBM’s annual pension contribution is just 5 per cent, which compounded at the Treasury yield, just isn’t enough for a half decent pension.
Other US companies with large DB surpluses may follow IBM, but it should be seen as financial engineering — mainly avoiding tax on withdrawing surpluses — not a “pension revolution”.
John Ralfe
John Ralfe Consulting
Hognaston, Derbyshire, UK