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Companies brace for hit as pension plans suffer

Air Canada is among several Canadian companies whose pension plans  have taken a beating in the stock market.

JOHN MAHONEY / POSTMEDIA NEWS Enlarge Image

Air Canada is among several Canadian companies whose pension plans have taken a beating in the stock market.

Companies that offer defined-benefit pensions may face rising costs this year and could end up asking regulators for relief, according to a report by human resources consulting firm Aon Hewit on Friday.

The firm's assessment is just the latest to predict a tough time for defined-benefit pension plans in 2012 as a result of lower returns on investments and rock bottom interest rates, which increase liabilities for plans.

Andre Choquet, an investment consultant with Aon Hewitt, said there is already talk in Quebec and Manitoba of the provincial governments providing funding relief for pension plans in those provinces.

He said some companies will be in more difficulty than others because of the pension plan may have "a significant impact on cash flows and balance sheet formation."

"Even if those plans are closed, they have a legacy liability that has accumulated over the past and they might be in a deficit situation too."

Choquet said that 96 per cent of the roughly 150 pension plans included in the Aon Hewit review were in a deficit, regardless of industrial sector, and the deficits were bigger than a year earlier.

Aon Hewitt said the median pension solvency funded ratio -- the ratio of the market value of a plan's assets to its liabilities -- is approximately 15 per cent lower this year than at the start of 2011

As a result, plan sponsors that file an actuarial valuation this year will need to add more cash to comply with minimum funding rules.

Several of corporate Canada's biggest names have spent hundreds of millions to shore up defined-benefit pension plans in recent years.

In November, Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd. (TSX:CP) issued US$500 million in debt securities in the United States to help reduce its Canadian defined-benefit pension deficit, while Canadian National Railway Co. (TSX:CNR) said in October it would make a $350-million pension contribution for 2011.

Because pension contributions are tax deductable, CP said at the time the net impact of the debt offering and the voluntary prepayment was expected to add to its earnings.

BCE (TSX:BCE) made a $750 million voluntary payment on its defined benefit pension plan in December, while Telus (TSX:T) said it would make a $100-million voluntary contribution to its pension fund early in 2012.

Air Canada (TSX:AC.B) required a special regulation from the federal government allowing it to eliminate its pension deficit over a longer period than usual during its restructuring under court protection from creditors.

Choquet noted that funds with more bonds than stocks did better than those that were more aggressive last year, which saw the S&P/TSX composite index drop more than 10 per cent.

The poor stock market performance contributed to a reduced solvency position for the pensions in Aon Hewit's study.

Increasing investment in bonds to 60 per cent from 40 per cent would have meant a drop to only a 71 per cent solvency ratio, rather than 68 per cent. The solvency ratio had been about 83 per cent a year ago.

"Defined-benefit plans are viable and affordable options for employers, but because of today's economic uncertainty it requires employers to be clear about the amount of risk they are willing to assume," he said.

"If you're taking less risk, there is less chance of being in a worse situation going forward, but you may not be benefitting from an upside much going forward as well ... If the stock market increases by a significant amount you may not benefit as much as you would have had, had you taken more risk."

 

--The Canadian Press

Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition January 7, 2012 B9

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