Title: OECD secretariat
1 Investment Regulation of Pension Funds in OECD
countries
- Juan Yermo
- OECD Administrator
2The OECD study on Investment regulation
- What is the role of investment regulation?
- conflicts of interest (fraud, X-inefficiency) -
investors as principals - moral hazard of government guarantees
- specific government objectives (debt financing,
social investing, corporate governance,
macrostability, savings) - What side-effects can investment regulations
have? - Diversification and performance
- Capital market imperfections
- What determines asset allocation and performance
- Regulations (governance, funding, investment,
performance, etc) - Type of plan and individual choice
- Pension fund liabilities (maturity)
- Local savings and investment culture
- Macroeconomic performance
3Two main approaches to Investment Regulation
- Regulation of investment decisions
- traditional quantitative portfolio approach
- different types
- list of admissible assets
- minimum diversification requirements
- global asset allocation limits (by liquidity,
credit risk, asset class) - ownership concentration limits
- Regulation of investment decision-making
- prudent person approach
- governing structure and representation
- fit-and-proper requirements
- responsibilities - duty of prudence, SIP,
disclosure - member rights - information, representation,
portability, and litigation - legal implementation
- common law
- civil law
4Quantitative Rules in the OECD
- Used in most OECD countries to
- limit self-investment (all between 0 and 30)
- ensure minimum diversification (single
security/issuer) - limit investment in property
- Used in some OECD countries to
- limit investment in equities and other higher
risk assets - limit investment in foreign securities (non-OECD)
- prevent excessive concentration of share
ownership - Used rarely in OECD countries to
- ensure minimum investment in government bonds
(France only) - limit use of derivatives (but hedging purposes
rule common) - but in general lighter than for life insurance
companies
5Self-investment limit ( assets)
6Limit on investment in equities ( assets)
7The Prudent Person Rule
- Section 404(a)(1)(B) of ERISA requires that a
fiduciary - discharges his duties with respect to a plan
solely in the interest of the participants and
beneficiaries and - (B) with the care, skill, prudence, and diligence
under the circumstances then prevailing that a
prudent man acting in a like capacity and
familiar with such matters would use in the
conduct of an enterprise of a like character and
with like aims. - Courts and DOL regulations have clarified the
rule - there has been a thorough consideration of the
issues - there has not been blind reliance on experts.
- the fiduciary did not ignore or fail to
investigate any relevant facts that would have
altered the decision taken.
8The Prudent Person Approach in the US
- The prudent person rule is based on three main
concepts - Duty of Prudence
- Exclusive purpose rule
- Duty to diversify
- But it is supported by a range of governance and
investment regulations stemming from ERISA, DOL,
and court resolutions - Trustee fit-and-proper conditions
- Conflicts of interest regulation (including 10
self-investment limit) - Independence of custodians
- Reporting and disclosure rules
- Individual right of action/litigation
9The Prudent Person Approach in the UK
- Self-regulation in the UK up to 1995 Pensions
Act - Duty of skill and care on trustees
- But until 1995
- No self-investment limits
- No independent custodians
- Few disclosure requirements
- No minimum funding requirement
- Main consequences
- Few incentives for fund managers to overperform
(herding) - Lack of internal funding controls (Maxwell
1992-4) - 1995 Pensions Act has corrected these failings
- Member-nominated trustees
- SIP, 5 self-investment limit, and third-party
admin rules - Minimum Funding Requirement (annual funding
certificates) - Disclosure trustees to members and auditors
actuaries to OPRA
10The Prudent Person Approach in other EU
countries
- Regulation of pension fund governance in the
Netherlands - Investment policy pursued should be sound and
transparent and based on diversification of
assets - Equal representation of employers and employees
(trade unions) - Self-investment limit of 5
- Minimum funding rule
- Standardised actuarial rules to permit full
portability - Annual, comprehensive disclosure
- Broad supervisory and sanctioning powers (from
1999 supervisor can test board members
suitability and disqualify people) - The EU draft directive is based on a similar
approach - testing the responsibility, competence, and
integrity of managers - effective supervision of prudential (e.g.
self-investment, MDR) and disclosure requirements
(SIP, actuary and auditor certification) - use of modern diversification and ALM techniques
11Selected OECD Principles
- Regulatory policies for employer/occupational
pension plans - Strict enforcement of an institutional and
functional licensing system on the basis of
adequate legal, accounting, technical, financial,
and managerial (competence and honourability)
criteria - Strict limitations on self-investment, unless
appropriate safeguards exist - Liberalisation of investments abroad subject to
prudent management objectives - Transparent accounting methods based on
comparable standards - Enhancement of on-going supervision of the funds,
including through the transmission of information
to the authorities - Setting up standards for adequate information and
disclosure to the beneficiaries - Promotion of self-regulatory practices for asset
managers - Levelling of the playing-field among operators
12Selected OECD Principles
- Principles for the Regulation of Investments by
pension funds - The regulation of investments must
- simultaneously pursue the twin goals of security
and profitability - be integrated in the overall approach to ensure
the financial soundness of the fund - incorporate both institutional and functional
considerations - find adequate balance between external rules and
internal controls - Strict adherence to basic principles irrespective
of instrument (quantitative restrictions and/or
prudent person rules) - Diversification and dispersion
- maturity matching (including the liquidity
principle) - currency matching, in the broad sense
- Recommendations relating the application of
quantitative rules - No minimum level of investment
- limits on self-investment and minimum
diversification requirements - list of admitted/recommended assets
13Pension funds in the OECD
14Equity investment by pension funds 1980-1998
15Investment in foreign securities (1997)
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