Business Daily Media

Men's Weekly

.

how yours may have been affected by recent market turmoil

  • Written by Jonquil Lowe, Senior Lecturer in Economics and Personal Finance, The Open University
how yours may have been affected by recent market turmoil

The early signs are that the financial markets have been appeased by the government’s October 17[1] decision to reverse two-thirds of its September mini-budget[2] tax cuts.

Yields on gilts – which represent long-term borrowing costs for the government and became something of a financial weather vane during the panic – saw one of the biggest daily drops[3] on record immediately after the most recent U-turn on October 17. Yields have remained relatively low since then but are still jittery, due to uncertainty over whether the Bank of England will soon start selling gilts[4] as a way to control inflation.

Fluctuating returns on long-term bonds

Chart showing the volatility in returns on 30-year gilts -- or long-dated government bonds -- between the mini-budget announcement on September 23 and the government's reversal of the mini-budget on October 17.
Changing returns on government bonds. Author's chart based on data from Tradeweb and UK Debt Management Office

Sudden changes in the gilts market are rare, but when they do happen it can cause major problems for certain types of pension scheme, as UK pension savers have seen recently. In addition to raising borrowing costs for the government, the market mayhem following September’s mini-budget forced many pension providers to quickly cash in some of their holdings to try to weather the storm.

Whether or not this will have affected your pension depends on the type of scheme you have and how far you are from retirement.

There are two main types of pension scheme: defined contribution schemes, where you build up your own pot of savings, and defined benefit schemes, where you are promised a given amount of pension (usually a proportion of your pre-retirement pay).

The recent financial turmoil only affected defined benefit schemes offered by private sector employers, which build up a fund of investments from which to make pension payments. And even then, only the 60% or so[5] that use specific financial strategies called liability-driven investing (LDI) to protect their holdings from the effect of falling gilt yields.

Public sector defined benefit schemes were unaffected because most are financed out of taxation and the Local Government Pension Scheme, which is a funded scheme and only uses LDI on a small scale[6].

So what are LDIs and why were pension schemes using this financial strategy that seem primed to wreak havoc when gilt yields rose?

Explaining the crisis

The stream of payments a defined benefit pension provider promises to its members are its “liabilities”. It holds investments (or assets) to generate the returns needed to finance these pension payments.

To work out the value of assets the provider needs to hold for a particular scheme, it must calculate the value of its liabilities. It does this by estimating the lump sum which, if invested today in long-term gilts, would produce the returns needed to pay the pensions. If the yield on gilts is low, the lump sum would be large. Conversely, if the gilt yield is high, the value of the liabilities is low.

In theory, a pension provider could meet its pension promises by actually investing in long-term gilts whose returns exactly match the amount and timing of the pensions to be paid out.

But in practice, many pension funds also invest in equities, property and other assets that are likely to produce much higher returns than gilts, but are more risky. This creates “funding gaps” when the value of these assets is lower than the value of the liabilities (the current and future pension payments). LDIs are used to protect pension schemes from the risk of funding gaps.

When a pension fund uses an LDI, it puts a small part of its assets into derivatives[7] – financial products that can provide insurance against falling interest rates driving up the value of the scheme’s liabilities.

The pension fund must pay the LDI provider collateral to secure the product, which is typically a certain percentage of its value in cash. However, the flip side is that, if interest rates rise, pension funds have to increase the collateral they pay to the providers of these derivatives.

Interest rates rose rapidly after the government announced a package of unfunded tax cuts on September 23 2022. SewCream / Shutterstock[8]

Interest rates usually change gradually, allowing defined benefit schemes to plan ahead to make sure they can pay extra collateral if interest rates rise, say by up to 1% a month[9].

However, following the mini-budget, long-term gilt yields rose from 3.8% to 4.9%[10] in just a few days. Pension schemes were forced to sell the gilts they were holding to raise the extra cash needed to fund their collateral payments to derivative providers. This pushed up gilt yields even further, starting a vicious spiral.

As the Pensions Regulator[11] stated at the time: “Defined benefit pension schemes are not at risk of ‘collapse’ due to rapid movements in gilt yields.”

Indeed, it’s ultimately the employers that offer these schemes to their workers who have to stand behind them. So, your pension would only be at risk if your employer became insolvent and, in that case, your pensions would still be protected (up to a limit) by the Pension Protection Fund[12].

The Bank of England also supported the sector[13] by temporarily offering to buy gilts during the recent market volatility. This helped rates to fall back, but the Bank withdrew its support on October 14. This forced the government into its most recent tax cut U-turns rather than risk a resumption of turmoil in the financial markets.

Read more: How bonds work and why everyone is talking about them right now: a finance expert explains[14]

Pension performance

So, despite the alarming reports that pensions were at risk, the recent market turmoil was a “liquidity crisis”. This means the problem lay with pension schemes struggling to raise short-term cash for collateral. Now gilts yields have fallen back, this crisis has eased.

Perversely, the more general situation of rising gilt yields may even have benefited some pension schemes. Rising yields reduce the value of defined benefit schemes’ liabilities, because they use these rates to calculate the value of what they will owe people when they retire.

Remember, as described above: if the gilt yield is high, the value of the liabilities is low. So, despite this short-term liquidity crisis, many pension schemes’ longer-term funding position has actually been improving.

However, the liquidity crisis has called into question whether pension schemes should be using LDI strategies. The Pensions Regulator[15] says that LDIs have reduced the pension schemes’ risks in previous crises, such as the 2008 global financial crisis and the 2020 pandemic.

But critics[16] argue that LDI users failed to question what would happen in extreme but plausible scenarios such as the recent spike in gilt yields. In particular, they point out that LDIs caused pension providers to have to liquidate some of their assets to meet rising collateral payments as the market fell.

Ultimately, the failure of LDIs to reduce risks as intended could further accelerate the long-established trend of employers pulling back from offering defined benefit schemes. This would be a shame since a defined benefit pension is still one of the best ways[17] of providing for your retirement.

References

  1. ^ October 17 (www.youtube.com)
  2. ^ mini-budget (www.gov.uk)
  3. ^ one of the biggest daily drops (www.reuters.com)
  4. ^ selling gilts (www.reuters.com)
  5. ^ 60% or so (committees.parliament.uk)
  6. ^ uses LDI on a small scale (www.room151.co.uk)
  7. ^ derivatives (www.investopedia.com)
  8. ^ SewCream / Shutterstock (www.shutterstock.com)
  9. ^ 1% a month (committees.parliament.uk)
  10. ^ 3.8% to 4.9% (reports.tradeweb.com)
  11. ^ Pensions Regulator (committees.parliament.uk)
  12. ^ Pension Protection Fund (www.ppf.co.uk)
  13. ^ supported the sector (www.bankofengland.co.uk)
  14. ^ How bonds work and why everyone is talking about them right now: a finance expert explains (theconversation.com)
  15. ^ The Pensions Regulator (committees.parliament.uk)
  16. ^ critics (www.professionalpensions.com)
  17. ^ best ways (www.fca.org.uk)

Read more https://theconversation.com/pensions-how-yours-may-have-been-affected-by-recent-market-turmoil-192801

AI is Changing Trademarking Forever

The launch of ChatGPT in 2022 marked a turning point for AI. In three short years, AI has been integrated into everything from our phone cameras to ...

Times Media Australia Launches Times Australia Today

A New National Digital Publication Designed to Make Sense of Modern Australia Sydney, Australia — 26 November 2025 — Times Media Australia today an...

The Future of Ozi.com.au

Ozi.com.au: The New Benchmark in Australian Digital Services In a digital landscape evolving at breakneck speed, Australian businesses are demand...

Brisbane’s brightest recognised: Daniel Mikus and James Rolph win Specialist Services Award at the 2025 Brisbane Young Entrepreneur Awards - again

Young Brisbane entrepreneurs Daniel Mikus and James Rolph, cofounders of MR Group, have been officially crowned winners of the Specialist Services...

Members greenlight merger of Regional Australia Bank and Summerland Bank

Regional Australia Bank and Summerland Bank will proceed with a merger after members approved the move at their Annual General Meetings this week...

DesignStreet marks 27 years with a bold rebrand

In a fast-moving industry defined by continuous disruption, one independent creative agency is proving that longevity and innovation can go hand i...

hacklink hack forum hacklink film izle hacklink หวยออนไลน์betsmovejojobetVozol TürkiyePusulabet Girişสล็อตเว็บตรงgamdom girişpadişahbetMostbetlotobetjojobetcarros usadospin upMostbetdizipalultrabetnn888enjoybet girişultrabetpusulabetcasibompusulabetjojobet girişgobahisbets10kavbetkavbetjojobetelon musk ポルノ映画padişahbetnakitbahisgrandpashabet 7020jojobetjojobetjojobetsahabetYakabet1xbet girişholiganbetGrandpashabetmatadorbet girişvbetgobahisgobahiskingroyalpusulabetgiftcardmall/mygiftaresbetcasibombets10betebetmamibetkingroyalcasibom giriştaraftarium24betcioslot spacemaniptvcasibomcasibomJojobetmeritkingselçuksportscasibom girişsweet bonanzameritkingwinxbetcasibomcasibombetkolikbetkolikyakabetMarsbahisVdcasinomadridbethttps://www.newstrendline.com/DinamobetrestbetCasibomVdcasinoSekabetyakabetgalabetpasacasinokingroyalpaşacasinotrgoalscasibombetkolikbetkolik girişbetkolik güncel girişmarsbahisbetkolikrestbetsahabetmr pachocasibomcasibomcolor pickerholiganbetgobahisbetkolikholiganbetgalabetvaycasinobetsmovepadişahbetmatbetmavibetคลิปหลุดไทยCasibomcasibomHoliganbet girişcasibomonwinmatbetizmir escortpulibetAntalya escortenjoybetbahsegelbetnanobetnanobetnanobetnanoultrabetbetnanobets10as