Friday, May 16, 2008

Northrop Grumman Closing Pension Plan

Northrop Grumman will stop offering its cash balance plan to new employees (generally effective 7/1/2008) but instead is moving them into an existing defined contribution plan with a matching contribution. New employees will receive an automatic company contribution of 3% to 5% of base pay per pay period based on age to a retirement account in the Northrop Grumman Savings Plan. Existing employees still have the cash balance plan, but the company is decreasing the pay-based credit component of the payout formula depending on the employee’s age.

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

HP and EDS discussions complete

Hewlett-Packard will buy EDS for $13.9 billion in a deal that will turn it into a more-formidable rival to IBM but will also likely entail significant job cuts in order to achieve the necessary cost savings. The combination would make HP the second largest global provider of IT services after IBM. Under terms of the deal, H-P will pay $25 a share in cash for EDS and expects the deal to close in the second half of 2008.

Again, I am wondering where ExcellerateHRO measures up in all this.

Edited (6/9/09) to add: Towers Perrin has sold its 15% stake in ExcellerateHRO to HP. I wonder if HP will keep the company as a division of its business or spin it off?

Monday, May 12, 2008

HP and EDS in "advanced discussions"

HP and EDS confirmed that they are in "advanced discussions" that could result in HP acquiring EDS to create a more formidable competitor to IBM. Such a deal could be worth between $12 billion and $13 billion. The news sent EDS shares surging $5.27, or almost 28%, before a halt closed trading at $24.13. The rumored value of the deal would imply a price between $24 and $26 a share for EDS, a level the stock has not traded at since last August. HP's stock fell $2.48, or 5%, to $46.65 [before also being halted, something the story doesn't mention].

Source: MarketWatch

This could be interesting for the HR outsourcing industry. EDS owns 85% of ExcellerateHRO; I doubt this is a business HP wants anything to do with that particular business. I'd wager they will put their interest in ExcellerateHRO on the block as soon after buying EDS as their contractual obligations allow.

Monday, May 05, 2008

Khan Leaves Hewitt - You Heard It Here First

Rohail Khan, Leader of North America Benefits Outsourcing, is no longer at Hewitt. The prediction in this blog that he would be gone within a year turned out to be correct with a margin of error of one week.

Friday, February 29, 2008

Wachovia Fires Hewitt BPO

Wachovia is shifting HR functions that it outsourced in 2005 to Hewitt Associates back in-house or to other vendors. HR head Shannon McFayden said the bank will transition tasks such as payroll, pay-related customer service and human resources technology back to Wachovia or to other vendors. Benefits administration and benefits customer service will stay with Hewitt. Moving HR functions back in-house will take up to 18 months. Bank spokeswoman Christy Phillips-Brown could not comment on Hewitt's performance, but Wachovia and Hewitt "agreed this was the best decision for our companies." Hewitt spokeswoman Amy Wulfestieg said the company will work closely with Wachovia in the transition and looks forward to "building on our long-standing partnership together."

Wachovia is taking back a number of HR processes it had outsourced to Hewitt Associates, a potential blow for the BPO provider. The contract, which was one of a slew of wins for Hewitt in the wake of its Exult acquisition, was valued at $450 million. The deal was consummated in Hewitt’s glory days, when both buyers and vendors had high expectations of BPO. “I believe that this was one of those deals signed in the heyday with entirely too much optimism on both sides,” says Naomi Bloom, an industry consultant. Since then, Hewitt has admitted to struggling with its HR BPO business. “They haven’t made a mystery of the fact that they had gotten bogged under by a number of the contracts that they signed in the months after the Exult deal,” IDC analyst Lisa Rowan says. Many of these deals were “lift and shift” transactions, where the buyers expected the vendor to just take over all of their HR processes and do them at less cost. The Wachovia contract was one of these deals, according to one person familiar with the arrangement. It might actually be a relief for Hewitt to be able to offload some of this work and focus on what it does best, which is benefits administration, Rowan says. “If I had to get out my crystal ball, I would say they are going to go back to their sweet spot and just do benefits administration going forward,” she says. But Hewitt maintains it is sticking to the business. But whether Hewitt will be able to turn around its HR BPO business at the pace that shareholders want still remains to be seen.

Monday, February 11, 2008

AIG Headlines

AIG says needs to clarify disclosures regarding CDOs - MarketWatch
AIG still calculating loss on some credit products - MarketWatch
AIG unsure of value of some of its credit derivatives - MarketWatch
AIG auditors cite "material weakness" in financial reporting - MarketWatch

That can't be good. Stock has been pretty much in freefall since the opening bell, as of 10:30 it is down 11.2% at $45, although the last few ticks indicate that might actually be the bottom.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Beck v PACE

The Supreme Court unanimously reversed the ridiculous 9th Circuit decision in Beck v PACE which stated that a merger is a permissible means of plan termination, much to the amazement of the Department of Labor, and that the company therefore had a fiduciary obligation to seriously consider a merger proposal, which it had failed to do.

Justice Scalia, writing for the Court, started off by presenting the fiduciary issue and then went on to acknowledge the plausibility of PACE’s argument. He immediately sidestepped the interesting fiduciary issue and launched into a non-fiduciary analysis from which it would never return. The Court restricted its analysis to whether a plan can be terminated through a plan merger. Ultimately, the answer was no.

It's a shame that the Court chose not to take up the fiduciary question. I swear more bad law comes out of the 9th Circuit than all the other courts of appeal put together. I would have liked the Court to go on record that BOTH parts of the decision were ludicrous, rather than restricting themselves to just one part of the decision.

Reference: http://www.thompson.com/public/headlines.jsp?id=71

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Acquisitions Gone Bad

Hewitt Associates To Sell Cyborg Unit To Vista Equity

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Worst. Idea. Ever.

Borrowing against your nest egg is becoming as easy as stopping at an ATM. A growing number of companies now offer employees the option of being issued a debit card that taps a 401(k) loan. The card, called ReservePlus, allows workers to withdraw funds from their 401(k)s.

What happens when the idiots who do this have $0 in their 401(k)? Are they going to tax those of us who don't have shit for brains to "help the poor"? Seriously, I feel like just tattooing sucker on my forehead.

Tuesday, January 01, 2008

Hang on ... it's going to be a rough ride!

The first baby boomers start collecting Social Security benefits today!

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Marsh CEO Out

Marsh & McLennan has ousted its CEO, Michael Cherkasky, as part of a review that could lead to a break-up of the scandal-laden group. Mr Cherkasky was brought into Marsh & McLennan in October 2004 after Eliot Spitzer accused the company of colluding with competitors. The group in 2005 reached a settlement with insurance regulators and Mr Spitzer. The settlement caused Marsh & McLennan's profitability to collapse. Its shares have fallen by a fifth this year, while those of rivals such as Aon have advanced.

Investors such as KJ Harrison & Partners have been urging Marsh & McLennan to spin off some of its consulting businesses, including its Mercer human resources consulting unit and Oliver Wyman management consulting unit, arguing that they do not fit well with insurance broking.

Source: The Australian

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Loss at Hewitt

Hewitt Associates reported a fourth quarter loss of $266 million, or $2.51 per share, compared with a profit of $23 million, or 21 cents per share, in the previous year. Total operating expenses grew to $1.05 billion from $685 million. Quarterly revenue was $768 million, compared to $728 million a year ago.

For the fiscal year 10/1/2006-9/30/2007, Hewitt posted its second consecutive yearly loss. This year's loss was $175 million, or $1.62 per share, compared with a loss of $116 million, or $1.08 per share last year. Full-year sales were $2.99 billion, versus $2.86 billion in the prior year.

Monday, November 05, 2007

Pensions Can Be Outsourced

From the LA Times...

Citigroup got the green light from the Federal Reserve for an unusual deal to take over the $400-million retirement plan of a British newspaper company. In exchange for getting its hands on all that cash, Citigroup will run the pension plan - investing the money, paying the benefits and taking on the liability previously borne by Thomson Regional Newspapers. And it's eyeing similar moves stateside. Other banking investment and financial companies, including JPMorgan Chase, also are exploring the idea of taking pension plans - and their billions of dollars of assets - off the hands of employers. At least three federal agencies are considering aspects of the idea, including its basic legality and safeguards for workers.

Advocates say such changes would be a win-win for retirees and employers, retaining all the protections of current law, while putting plans in the hands of sophisticated financial stewards. Plus, large banks are less likely to go out of business or face severe financial strains than smaller employers.

Yet other people worry that such setups could subject retirement benefits to new risks and jeopardize decades-old worker protections. They're concerned that the would-be pension managers are more interested in profit than in the security of retirees. Further, they fear that unwise investments could bring a crisis for which there is no simple solution.


And from the industry magazine Pensions & Investments...

Bradley Belt, the former PBGC chief, wants to take over your frozen pension plans — and he’s betting he can wring enough money out of the hundreds of millions of dollars now sitting in frozen plans in the US to pay off the existing liabilities and turn a tidy profit for his new company and other investors. “We’re very comfortable with our ability to manage the assets against the liabilities in a way that will allow us to earn a consistent return above the liabilities, but without taking inordinate risk in doing so,” said Mr. Belt, now chairman of Palisades Capital Advisors LLC, in an interview in the firm’s Washington office. There’s no precedent for pension plan liability buyouts in the US. So over the past several months, Mr. Belt has been meeting with federal regulators, pension plan sponsors and representatives of investment firms to encourage support for a concept that he argues could serve the best interests of plan sponsors, plan participants and the PBGC alike.

Of course, this isn't really news. The big banks have been making their plays in this space for years now, as seen in this story from January 2006 ...

Recruiters in New York and London say corporate pension deficits are driving demand for actuaries who can help match pension fund assets to ever mounting pension liabilities. As the problem becomes more acute, so demand is likely to rise. “Banks are keen to strengthen their offering in this space,” says Kim Yates, a director at London-based search firm Principal Search. She says, “There are several clear leaders, and others are seeking to challenge them.” The leaders are Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, which formed so-called ‘pension advisory groups’ in the late 1990s and now have large teams devoted to the business. More recent entrants include ABN AMRO, which founded its pension advisory group in 2004.

Monday, October 22, 2007

Start New Job Today

I start a new job today as an honest-to-goodness actuary at a major management consulting firm.

Friday, October 05, 2007

Quit my job

I quit my job in the outsourcing arena. Today is my last day.