Pension

A pension provides regular income payments that you would receive for the rest of your life when you stop working--typically when people retire. A pension plan is a large pool of savings grows over time through contributions from workers or plan participants and their employer or plan sponsor. The plan assets are managed by professional investment managers, and most of the risks (such as investment risk) associated with managing plan assets will be assumed by the plan sponsor rather than plan participants. Particulars will vary from plan-to-plan. For example, there are variables such as how the money or contributions are set aside, who makes contributions, how the income is generated, when payments are made, the types of payments that are made, and how long pension payments last. The basic idea is that the longer you work the higher the payout. There may be tax breaks for pension contributions and there are limits on how much can go into a plan. Many pensions are payable to a surviving spouse on the death of the policyholder, and some pension payments are inflation-adjusted. The term pension is most often associated with defined benefit pension plans that provide regular, annuity-like payments to retirees. This is in contrast to defined contribution plans such as the 401k that shift most responsibilities onto employees and do not provide guaranteed lifetime income.

Comparison Shopping for Annuities

A good question and answer piece from the Chicago Tribune. The reader had just purchased a $400,000 immediate annuity at a relatively young age. The purchase was also made from one insurer in a relatively low interest rate environment. Having both a pension and Social Security (both are lifetime annuities), I would not have committed half my portfolio to an income annuity at the relatively young age of 63 and during a period of low interest rates . It does not appear that the annuity came with...
Key Phrases: 

HSBC Retirement Report Discusses "Perfect Storm"

HSBC released its fifth annual "Future of Retirement" study. The study is the largest of its kind, covering over 15,000 people in 15 countries. The report suggests a perfect storm of demographic, individual and financial factors that have the potential to derail the retirement plans of millions of people around the world: Stephen Green, Group chairman of HSBC, said: "A perfect storm is confronting pensions planning, created by an ageing population, falling pension funds values, a drop in state...

Longevity Swap Market Developing Slowly

As reported earlier , a new derivatives market is evolving to deal with longevity risk. Longevity swaps allow corporations and other pension plans owners to offload the risk of their plan participants living longer than expected. The market for longevity swaps, however, has been developing very slowly. Only one deal has taken place this year. Industry participants note that there is a slight backlog of deals and that roughly a half dozen deals should take place during the remainder of the year...
Key Phrases: 

Pages