• 287 days Will The ECB Continue To Hike Rates?
  • 287 days Forbes: Aramco Remains Largest Company In The Middle East
  • 289 days Caltech Scientists Succesfully Beam Back Solar Power From Space
  • 689 days Could Crypto Overtake Traditional Investment?
  • 694 days Americans Still Quitting Jobs At Record Pace
  • 696 days FinTech Startups Tapping VC Money for ‘Immigrant Banking’
  • 699 days Is The Dollar Too Strong?
  • 699 days Big Tech Disappoints Investors on Earnings Calls
  • 700 days Fear And Celebration On Twitter as Musk Takes The Reins
  • 702 days China Is Quietly Trying To Distance Itself From Russia
  • 702 days Tech and Internet Giants’ Earnings In Focus After Netflix’s Stinker
  • 706 days Crypto Investors Won Big In 2021
  • 706 days The ‘Metaverse’ Economy Could be Worth $13 Trillion By 2030
  • 707 days Food Prices Are Skyrocketing As Putin’s War Persists
  • 709 days Pentagon Resignations Illustrate Our ‘Commercial’ Defense Dilemma
  • 710 days US Banks Shrug off Nearly $15 Billion In Russian Write-Offs
  • 713 days Cannabis Stocks in Holding Pattern Despite Positive Momentum
  • 714 days Is Musk A Bastion Of Free Speech Or Will His Absolutist Stance Backfire?
  • 714 days Two ETFs That Could Hedge Against Extreme Market Volatility
  • 716 days Are NFTs About To Take Over Gaming?
  1. Home
  2. Markets
  3. Other

The New Pension Legislation and a Challenging Market

Dear Subscribers and Old-Time Readers,

First, I want to "welcome" all our old-time subscribers who were a subscriber to MarketThoughts.com when it used to be a free commentary. As I had mentioned in our discussion forum, this week's commentary will also go to our old-time subscribers for the first time in 10 months. As well as to just let you all know that we are still around (although I have now moved from Houston, Texas to Los Angeles, California) - the primary reason for us sending this commentary out to as many people as possible is this: The impending passage of the Pension Protection Act of 2006.

Before we start our discussion, let us do some house-cleaning with regards to our DJIA Timing System: Our 50% long position in our DJIA Timing System that we initiated on the afternoon of July 18th (at a DJIA print of 10,770) was exited last Thursday morning (August 10th) at a DJIA print of 11,060. A real-time email was sent to our subscribers announcing this shift - and the justification for this shift was discussed in our mid-week commentary last week ("Is Our Short-Term Scenario Busted?"). At this time, this author is still long-term bullish on the U.S. domestic, "brand name" large caps - names such as Wal-Mart, Home Depot, Microsoft, eBay, Intel (which, as I have discussed over the last few months, will regain a significant chunk of microprocessor market share from AMD), GE, American Express, etc. But in the meantime, we are still going to sit on the sidelines, given a slowing U.S. economy (for the first time in 14 months, the ECRI Weekly Leading Index has ventured into negative territory), a tightening Fed (the effect of the latest rate hike campaign is still yet to be fully felt), horrible market technicals, the lack of an oversold condition in the major market indices, and the fact that we are way overdue for a 10% correction in the Dow Industrials or the S&P 500. Of course, if we are not careful - then the current economic slowdown we are experiencing may very well turn into a consumer-induced recession, but for now, it is still too soon to tell.

Let us now get to business. Once it is signed into law by President Bush, the Pension Protection Act of 2006 will include the most sweeping reforms in the pension world since ERISA was signed into law in 1974. A majority of US-based employees will soon see changes in their 401(k) or 403(b) provisions, such as a faster vesting schedule with regards to employer contributions (effective after December 31, 2006), and the ability to roll over your 401(k) or 403(b) distributions to a Roth IRA starting on January 1, 2008. In addition, employers (beginning January 1, 2007) must offer at least three different investment options besides employer securities, and 401(k) participants must be allowed to diversify their employer contributions to other investments besides employer securities (this apply to companies who grant employer securities for their employee match).

However, the most sweeping changes did not apply to defined contribution plans (which consists of 401(k) plans), but to defined benefit pension plans. The declining popularity of defined benefit pension plans among corporate America over the last couple of decades has been well publicized. Defined benefit pension plans obviously has a place in corporate America, but in this day and age, it is quickly being recognized as a dinosaur - by finance as an unnecessary drag on earnings consistence and by the HR department as an ineffective tool in talent retention. For readers who are over age 40 and who participate in a defined benefit pension plan, you should know this:

  1. In general, defined benefit pension plans tend to reward long-time employees (by the basis of their formulas) - especially those who have been steadily promoted through the ranks and who ultimately retire from the same company. In other words, the accruals in defined benefit plans are essentially "backloaded." The exception to this rule is if the defined benefit is in the form of a cash balance or a pension equity plan.

  2. For long-term employees (those who spent 25 to 30 years of their working lives with the same company), the "income replacement ratio" could get as high as the 45% to 60% range if one stays until normal retirement age and if benefits are above average. That is, the pension benefit that one will receive from the company after one retires could essentially "replace" 45% to 60% of their average income over the last three or five years preceding his retirement. Coupled with Social Security benefits, and one essentially does not need to save too much of his or her money for retirement during his or her working life. In other words, defined benefit pension plans can be very rich for long-timers.

In light of the declining popularity of defined benefit pension plans in corporate America, readers who are close to retirement or who anticipate staying with the same company until you retire should find out more about the provisions of your defined benefit pension plan - should your company offers one. IMHO, the Pension Protection Act of 2006, should further serve as an incentive for corporate employers to terminate or freeze their pension plans, given the following:

  1. The new law would tighten the screws on the ability of pension plans to "smooth" their liabilities (e.g. using a four-year average interest rate to discount future cash outflows to calculate liabilities) and assets. Going forward, the smoothing period will generally be limited to a maximum of 24 months. We could argue all day whether this represents better disclosure, but what we know is this: The new limitation on smoothing liabilities or actuarial value of assets will increase the volatility of required pension contributions and pension expense, and this will further discourage CEOs and CFOs from starting new or keeping their current defined benefit plans.

  2. As of the beginning of this year, the required annual insurance premiums to be paid to the PBGC from defined benefit pension plans had been increased from $19 per participant to $31 per participant. Going forward, this new $31 per participant premium will be indexed to inflation. Not only will this increase represent a higher opportunity cost for employers who do possess a defined benefit pension plan, this will increase administrative costs as well.

  3. Other provisions of the new law includes adopting different interest rates to discount liabilities depending on the timing of the cash flows and the shape of the corporate yield curve - not to mention more disclosure items such as an expansion of the IRS Form 5500 and an additional "funding notice" to the PBGC 120 days after the end of the plan year. In other words, the administrative costs of keeping a defined benefit pension plan are set to increase significantly going forward.

Of course, there are always ways to mitigate volatility and uncertainty in pension plan contributions and pension expense (please email me at hto@marketthoughts.com if you are a pension plan sponsor and want to find out more about this) - such as utilizing liability-driven investing strategies (e.g. immunization) or diversifying your asset strategies into "portable alpha," hedge funds, private equity funds, or by utilizing a combination of derivative instruments. But at the same time - many of these strategies can get quite complex, and many CFOs (especially those who are administering small plans) may not have the expertise to deal with them at the end of the day. Bottom line: In light of what I have just discussed, there is a good chance that the decline of defined benefit pension plans will continue going forward.

Again, for those readers who are age 40 or over and who participate in a defined benefit retirement plan, please find out more about the provisions of your plan and please discuss this with your fellow co-workers. Know your options, and definitely plan ahead since there is a real chance that your defined benefit pension plan may not be there for you when you retire (unless you are working for one of the big oil & gas companies). In virtually all cases, a company will provide more incentives in their 401(k) plans should they choose to freeze their defined benefit pension plans, and in the majority of freezes, older workers who are approaching retirement will always be worse off under the new "scheme." Should you find out that the company you are working for are undergoing HR or benefit changes, definitely strive to learn more or even actively partition for the continuation of your defined benefit pension plan (e.g. some companies have created a "two-tier" system where "grandfathered" workers can continue to stay in the defined benefit pension plan while new hires only receive benefits in their 401(k)s).

Let us now get back to the markets. As the title of this commentary suggests, the market has certainly been very challenging since the May 9th to May 10th top - as exemplified in the "volatility" of our DJIA Timing signals over the last few months. The good news is that our DJIA Timing System has "made money" overall - even though we were definitely too early when we started to establish a short position back in late January (our final short position was established on May 9th at DJIA 11,610). Last week at this time, this author was looking for a significant rally after the Fed has signaled it was pausing - but it was not to be. Since the market has always rallied *initially* after the end of a Fed rate hike campaign, this author had concluded that a rally was inevitable - especially given the bearish sentiment that had been prevalent among retail investors. But alas, the rally we had been looking for did not emerge - and it is now back to the drawing board for this author. Since our number one priority is capital preservation, this author also decided to take our 50% long position in our DJIA Timing System off the table and stay on the sidelines for now.

As we have mentioned many times in our past commentaries and in our discussion forum, it is now a battle between two strong opposing forces - one being the analysts and strategists (such as TrimTabs) who are calling for an inevitable 15% to 20% rally from current levels and the other being the folks who are calling for the beginning of a cyclical bear market (such as Lowrys). One service is citing the unprecedented levels in corporate buybacks and cash acquisitions in supplying liquidity to the stock market, while another service is citing the all-time high spread between its buying power and selling pressure indices. From this and from all the indicators that this author is watching, there is no doubt that we are seeing significant capitulation among retail and pension fund investors (the latter "diversifying" away from domestic equities into emerging markets, commodities, hedge funds, etc.) - even as both corporations and private equity investors are snapping up these same shares en masse.

Throughout history, the latter group has nearly always been right - but the $64 billion question is: At which point will they be proven correct, and can the capitulation among retail and pension fund investors get any worse?

Answer: It can always get worse. Consider the following:

  1. Based on the valuation of the popular large-caps and retailing shares, there is no doubt that the market has already priced in a significant economic slowdown for these shares - a slowdown which this author has been looking for since the beginning of 2006. But should the Fed go far (and we still do not know if the Fed has gone too far yet), there is a chance that we may actually see a consumer-induced recession. In such a scenario, the market and retailing shares can definitely decline much further than they already have (more to come on the risks of a recession later in this commentary).

  2. Even though our sentiment indicators have been flashing several bearish readings over the last few weeks (which is bullish from a contrarian standpoint), this has not totally been confirmed by some of our other overbought/oversold indicators, such as the equity put-call ratio, the NYSE ARMS Index, the McClellan Summation Index (for both the NYSE and the NASDAQ Composite), and so forth. In order to sustain a 15% to 20% rally going forward, one will need to have a very solid bottom in place, and we have not had that so far.

  3. The rallies off the mid June and late July bottoms have been very weak - both in breadth and in volume. One of the greatest speculators of all time, Jesse Livermore, once said that to never try to short or sell at the top, but only at points where the rallies have failed or are weak. Based on Livermore's shorting methodology, the rallies off the mid June and late July bottoms were good shorting opportunities - and these signals have not been reversed yet at this time (either through a "fully oversold" condition or a significant increase in "buying power").

Again, the number one priority when it comes to investing or trading is capital preservation. And based on this philosophy, this author is going to stay on the sidelines for now (for those who don't trade on margin and who have a very long-term investing horizon, etc., this is now a good time to start nibbling on the domestic large-cap brand names such as those I mentioned above).

Let us now look at what - in this author's mind (as of tonight) - will constitute a "fully oversold" situation. Firstly, let's consider the NASDAQ McClellan Summation index. Historically, both the NYSE and the NASDAQ McClellan Summation Indices have best been used as an overbought/oversold indicator (particularly as an oversold indicator). The following is a historical weekly chart of the NASDAQ Composite vs. the NASDAQ McClellan Oscillator vs. the NASDAQ McClellan Summation Index courtesy of Decisionpoint.com:

The NASDAQ McClellan Oscillator vs. the NASDAQ McClellan Summation Index - A McClellan Summation index reading of -1,000 would at least put it on par with the oversold readings that we got in August 2004 and April 2005. This author would not consider going long until we have hit that level.

As mentioned on the above chart, the NASDAQ Composite McClellan Summation Index is now sitting at a highly negative/oversold level of -715.83. But given the horrible action in the NASDAQ ever since April, this author is going to hold off until this indicator gets oversold - preferably until it gets near the -1,000 level. This would put it on par with the oversold readings experienced during the August 2004 and April 2005 bottoms. In terms of points on the NASDAQ Composite, I would not be surprised if it declines a further 100 or 150 points before we experience a significant bottom.

More follows for subscribers...

 

Back to homepage

Leave a comment

Leave a comment