Friday, August 18, 2006
CFA Level 3
Thursday, August 17, 2006
Pension Protection Act
Edited to add link to a PPA blog
http://qualifiedpensionconsulting.com/ppablog/
Monday, August 07, 2006
IBM Decision Overturned
A three-judge panel of the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago yesterday ruled IBM did not discriminate against its older employees in 1999 when it converted its pension plan to cash balance. The decision reverses a 2003 federal court ruling that the change discriminated against older workers. The decision also saves IBM from having to pay up to $1.4 billion to 140,000 older employees and retirees who were affected by the conversion. In its ruling, the appeals court acknowledged that older workers were correct in perceiving "that they were worse off under the cash balance approach" than the defined benefit approach, but "removing a feature that gave extra benefits to the old differs from discriminating against them." The plaintiffs intend to ask the full appeals court to reconsider the ruling.
Maybe if this decision had come down in 2003 IBM wouldn't have frozen their plan.
Tuesday, June 27, 2006
Thursday, June 22, 2006
Drug prices rose sharply
Imagine that. Dramatically increasing demand by instituting Medicare drug coverage caused prices to go up dramatically. Who could have predicted such a thing? Certainly not me. I mean, it's not like they explain this in Economics 101 or anything.
Monday, April 03, 2006
PBGC settles with Rennert
Monday, February 20, 2006
Seeds of Private Health Care in Quebec
Friday, February 03, 2006
PBGC May Take Rennert Hamptons Estate
Wednesday, February 01, 2006
ACS Affirms No Sale to Private-Equity Investors
PBGC to sell half its stake in UAL
Source: WSJ
Monday, January 23, 2006
Sprint-Nextel Freezing Pension Plan
That's the third big plan this month. This could end up being the worst year ever for defined benefit plans.
Tuesday, January 17, 2006
Alcoa closing its plan to new members
Monday, January 16, 2006
Medicare a mess out of the gate
The Medicare prescription drug plan is two weeks old, and the going has been rocky especially for the nation's sickest and poorest elderly and disabled. The general consensus is the government has botched the start-up of the program. If it could go wrong, it probably has. No one seems to have definitive answers to questions. Patients are being turned away or overcharged at pharmacies. At least 20 states have stepped in to say they will cover the drug costs of low-income people who have been turned away because of federal foul-ups. On Friday, the intervention of the states led the federal government to tell insurers they must provide a 30-day supply of any drug that a beneficiary was previously taking. The government also stressed that poor people may not be charged more than $5 for a covered drug.
Sources: The Washington Post and The New York Times
Friday, January 06, 2006
IBM Freezing Pension Plan
Sources: NYT and AJC
Statistical Notes:
1. In 1979 around 62% of active workers were covered by DB plans. Today, around 18% of active workers are covered.
2. From 1986 to 2004, over 100,000 single-employer plans with about 7.5 million participants were terminated.
Sunday, January 01, 2006
More Changes in HR Outsourcing Landscape?
Hang on, it's going to be a bumpy 2006 in the outsourcing industry.
Tuesday, September 20, 2005
More on Delta and Northwest
This is slightly misleading for a couple of reasons. First, use of the word "deficit" makes it sound like that's an annual shortfall in revenues against outflows, which is not correct. The $23.3 billion figure is the sum total of the PBGC's unfunded liabilities. Further, the PBGC includes in its estimates of its liabilities an allowance for "probable" plan terminations. So some portion of the Delta shortfall is already reflected in that $23.3 billion unfunded liability.
Additionally, the PBGC also would be hit with a huge loss if Northwest Airlines, which also filed for bankruptcy on Wednesday, terminates its pension plans. The three Northwest plans, have $5.8 billion in assets and liabilities of $11.5 billion, according to PBGC preliminary estimates. Of the $5.7 billion funding shortfall, the PBGC estimates it would be liable for $2.8 billion.
Source: Business Insurance
Thursday, September 15, 2005
Delta and Northwest file for bankruptcy
[DUH! Fixed embarrassing typo in post title.]
Thursday, August 18, 2005
Sunday, August 07, 2005
The New E&E System
VEE
My original objection to VEE was that it would weed career changers out of the profession before they even start. I had a math degree, but I had never taken 6 courses (Macro Econ, Micro Econ, Intro Finance, Corp Finance, Time Series, Regression). If I had had to go back to school to take courses to get credit for this stuff, I would have never entered the career. I know many who feel the same way.
It now seems that they have solved this problem, but introduced a different one. One of the options for getting VEE credit is through NEAS coursework. However, here's one student's opinion on a NEAS course: I just sat for VEE Regression and Time Series through NEAS, and thought the finals were an insult to the actuarial profession. I appreciate that it's the easiest path to completing the VEE requirements but at the same time if we are just looking for the "easiest" method, then why bother? If material is important enough for us to know it, put it back in the test. If it's not important enough, then leave it out of the mix completely and give me a "recommended reading" list.
At least one board member has already acknowledged that, "PD was just one failed element of the 2000 restructuring. It was well-intentioned but turned out to be something of a joke in practice." And now it looks like they are making the same mistake with VEE. I can see the assessment now ... "VEE was just one failed element of the 2005 restructuring. It was well-intentioned but turned out to be something of a joke in practice."
Modules
In the first place, replacing Exams 5 + 6 with eight modules doesn't seem like a fair trade at this point, especially with two large exams (instead of just one) to come after the modules.
More ominously, board members are already warning us that the modules were more work than anyone anticipated, and it will be a challenge to have everything in place in time. So, we are probably going to be treated to a half-baked system that will be tweaked, prodded, improved and otherwise messed with for a couple of years.
At the end of a couple of years of tinkering, they will leave us with a system that is as much a joke as PD turned out to be and VEE is already proving itself to be.
Monday, July 25, 2005
Almost half of employees cash out 401(k) at termination
The highest incidence of cash distributions was among young employees (66%) age 20-29. Employees who were older and more tenured were more likely to preserve their retirement wealth, either keeping their assets in their current employer's plan or rolling it over. Still, more than 42% of workers age 40-49 elected to cash out of their plans upon leaving their jobs.
Balance was a factor when it came to workers' tendencies to cash out of their plans. Nearly three-quarters (72.5%) of workers with balances under $10,000 took a cash distribution. When plan balances were between $10,000 and $20,000 at termination, cash-out rates were much lower. Still, nearly a third (31%) of these employees elected to take their distribution in cash.
Source: Hewitt Associates