Title: Unfunded Pension Liabilities
1Unfunded Pension Liabilities The Corporate CDS
MarketRonan GallagherFinance PhD
CandidateQueens University Belfast
2Introduction
- PhD Essays on Unfunded Pension Liabilities
Financial Markets - 2nd of 3 Essays
- Co-authored with Professor Donal McKillop
- Focus on Defined Benefit schemes and the Credit
Default Swap market - Does a firms pension deficit play a significant
contributing role in its overall default risk as
measured by the Credit Default Swap market?
3Context
- Perfect Storm (2001 - 2002)
- Falling equity markets
- Falling discount rates
- Prevalence of significantly underfunded schemes
- Triggers regulatory perfect storm
- Enhanced role of pension regulator
- Widespread reform to pension accounting
- FRS17, IAS19, FAS87/158
- Deficits brought on balance sheet
4Context
- Secondary wave of Perfect Storm
- Credit crunch
- Onset of global recession
- Equity market declines
- Falls in Central Bank Interest Rates
- Accounting Quirk
- Standards advocate using the AA (/ high
quality) corporate bond yield as discount rate
for pension liabilities - Credit crunch has exposed a frailty in this
approach
5Context
- Yield spread widened significantly
- AA rated yield at 31/12/2008 was 111 basis points
higher than its 5 year average - Historically high discount rates serve to lower
reported liabilities below their true economic
value - Yield Risk
- Improving conditions in credit markets
- Effect of Quantitative Easing
- Reform to accounting standards
- Longevity Risk
6Context
Source DataStream Authors Calculations
7Some Striking Statistics
- Estimated Aggregate Deficit (07/08/2009)
8Some Striking Statistics
- Company Level Data (2008 Fin Year)
9The Pension Plan The Firm
- Theoretical Literature
- Two schools of thought
- Traditional balance sheet separation
- Integrated balance sheet augmentation
- Our study is an implicit test of the integrated
perspective - Empirical Literature
- Corporate Equity Mixed results
- Tests conducted on raw returns, betas and
portfolios - See Feldstein Morck (1983), Jin et al (2006)
and Franzoni Marin (2006) - Pension accounting veil particularly in US
- Corporate Debt More support for integrated
school - Tests conducted on credit ratings and bond
spreads - See Carroll Niehaus (1998) and Cardinale (2007)
- Asymmetry between surplus and deficit effects
10The CDS Market
- Credit Default Swaps (CDS) are credit derivatives
- Swap contracts in which
- buyer makes series of payments to seller
- in exchange receives payoff if credit instrument
goes into default - Created in 1997 by JP Morgan Chase
- Designed to shift risk of default to a
third-party - Exponential growth until onset of credit crunch
- Spread (premium) expressed in basis points of
notional principal per annum - Ceteris paribus, spread is a direct measure of
the default risk of the reference entity
11The CDS Market
- Why focus on this measure of default risk?
- Competing with credit ratings and bond spreads
- Free from conflicts of interest associated with
ratings - Continuous variable avoids discrete
categorisation bias - CDS market is much more liquid than the bond
market - Price discovery is faster (Blanco et al 2003 )
- Unburdened by choice of a reference risk free
yield curve in order to extract a spread
12Modelling Default Risk
Traditional Models
Structural Models
- Based on fundamental analysis
- Examine factors such as cash flow adequacy, asset
quality, earning performance and capital adequacy - Draw a small set of accounting variables,
financial ratios and other information into a
quantitative score. - In some cases this score can literally be
interpreted as the probability of default where
in others it is used as some sort of
classification system (e.g. credit ratings). - e.g. Beaver 1966, Altman 1968,1975
- Contingent claims analysis
- If at time T the firms asset value exceeds the
promised payment, D, the lenders are paid the
promised amount and the shareholders receive the
residual asset value - If the asset value is less than the promised
payment the firm defaults, the lenders receive a
payment equal to the asset value, and the
shareholders get nothing - ET max(AT D, 0)
- Similar to option payoff
- Merton (1974) model emerged from early work
utilising Black Scholes framework - Continual revision Moodys KMV model
13The Merton (1974) Model
- Equity limited liability
- ET max(Residual Asset Value, 0)
- Equity Call option on firm assets with strike
price equal to the face value of debt - Iteratively solve system of simultaneous
equations such that the Black Scholes option
price equals the market value of the firms equity
- Solver routine jointly implies an asset value and
volatility which is used to generate a default
probability with respect to a default point - CONVENTION Default Boundary Point ST Debt
(0.5 LT Debt) - The distance to default is the number of
standard deviations by which the expected asset
value exceeds the default point (and is a
function of the implied asset value and
volatility).
14Adjusting The Merton Model
- Traditional default point is ST Debt (0.5 LT
Debt) - Does not include pension liabilities which as a
result of FRS17 / IAS19 / FAS87-158 are on
balance sheet - Adj Default Point ST Debt (0.5 LT
DebtPDEF) - Pension deficits drive firm closer to default
- Re-solve for asset value and implied volatility
- Newton-Raphson iterative simulation
- Generate PADTD
- DTD PADTD Pension Risk
- New pension risk measure
15Dataset Estimation
- Matched CDS data from Datastream and accounting
data from ThomsonReuters One Banker by hand - 1, 5 and 10 year CDS instruments
- Constrained to 2003 due to pension disclosure
- 5 years data, roughly 500 pension sponsors,
unbalanced panel - US, UK and European coverage
- Employed a hybrid structural and traditional
credit risk model - Modelled in a fixed effects panel due to
unobserved heterogeneity
16The Model
- Dependent Variable
- Log(CDS Premium)
- Structural Variables
- Distance to Default, Pension Risk
- Traditional Variables
- Firm Size, Return on Assets, Income growth
- Interest Coverage, Quick Ratio, Sales Growth,
- Book Leverage, Retained Earnings
17Principal Findings
- See table 1
- Traditional and Structural variables are
complements - Defined benefit pension risk is a highly
significant determinant of 1 and 5 year CDS
premia - CDS market participants price pension risk such
that it is a legitimate contributing factor in
default risk - A unit increase in the distance by which the
pension plan pushes the firm closer to its
default point increases 1and 5 year CDS premia by
6 and 2 respectively - This supports the integrated balance sheet
perspective of the pension plan - Does the relationship apply equally to surplus
and deficits? - This and other studies show that the company is
indeed responsible for a pension deficit but can
it reap the rewards of an overfunded scheme?
18Testing For Asymmetry
- Empirical Expansion
- Create subdivided pension risk variables
(PRISKSUR PRISKDEF) - If surplus, PRISKSUR PRISK, otherwise 0
- If deficit, PRISKDEF PRISK, otherwise 0
- If there is zero asymmetry the coefficients on
each pension risk subdivision should be
significant and equal in magnitude - See table 2
- Companies running a pension surplus do not attain
a reduction in their default risk as measured in
the CDS market - Deficits increase 1 and 5 year CDS premia to a
similar extent as in the initial specification - Why the asymmetry?
- Mandated sharing of excess pension assets with
scheme members - Benefit Improvements, contribution holidays etc
- Enshrined in prevailing legislation
19The Models Explanatory Power
- Distance to default is a key driver of models
performance - Pension risk and traditional variables such as
firm size, return on assets and book leverage are
incrementally informative - Performance Metrics
20Cumulative Accuracy Profiles
- Formed by creating cumulative percentile bins of
the actual and predicted log-premia and charting
the overlap between bins - Examine rank order predictive ability of default
risk models - Accuracy Ratio 2(Area between CAP and 45
degree line)
21Conclusions
- Perfect storm in defined benefit pension plans
- Further pain on the horizon
- Sponsors responsible for funding
- Deficits on balance sheet
- CDS premia is a market measure of default risk
- Pension risk significantly increases sponsoring
firms CDS premium - Defined benefit pension plan underfunding
contributes significantly to default risk - Implications for investors and sponsoring firms
- Contributions
- New structural PR measure
- First study on the CDS market