Invisible Pension Investments

Peter J. Wiedenbeck, R. Hinkle, Andrew D. Martin
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Abstract

A large share of the more than $5.5 trillion in private pension plan assets is held in certain types of indirect investment vehicles. If those vehicles file their own annual return with the Department of Labor they are called "direct filing entities" (or DFEs), and pension plans that invest in them are excused from providing detailed information concerning the assets, liabilities, and investment performance of the DFEs. Consequently, the publicly-available summary financial information reported by pension plans investing through one or more DFEs is seriously incomplete: while a plan must identify the categorical nature of its direct investments (for example, as common or preferred stock, corporate or government debt, real estate, etc.), indirect investments through a DFE are reported only as interests in the DFE, without regard to the underlying nature of the DFE‘s assets and liabilities. Matching the DFE‘s return with the returns filed by plans that invest through the DFE is theoretically possible, but it is technically difficult and has not been comprehensively achieved.This study undertakes the task of linking returns filed by large private pension plans and DFEs in 2008. After explaining the types of DFEs, summary statistics on the extent of pension plan investment through DFEs and the composition of DFE portfolios are reported. The process employed to link the holdings of each DFE to its investor plans is described, followed by description and analysis of the results. Important differences in the asset allocations of pension plans of various types are revealed, and the portfolio compositions of plans that do and do not invest through DFEs are compared. Because 35 percent of plans that invest in a DFE are found to file internally inconsistent returns which preclude successful linking of DFE financial information to the investor plan, the plan characteristics associated with such deficient filings are investigated. Although the composition of DFE portfolios is currently invisible to plan participants and the general public, we find little evidence that DFEs have been systematically exploited to obscure the identity of pension plan investments. Finally, the results of this study are reviewed in light of the purposes of pension plan financial disclosure. Even if routine, accurate, and comprehensive matching of DFE financial information with investor plans were available, ERISA‘s text and policies support the regulatory formulation of a far more detailed digital disclosure regime.
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无形养老金投资
在超过5.5万亿美元的私人养老金计划资产中,有很大一部分是由某些类型的间接投资工具持有的。如果这些工具向劳工部提交自己的年度报表,它们就被称为“直接申报实体”(dfe),投资于它们的养老金计划不必提供有关dfe的资产、负债和投资业绩的详细信息。因此,通过一个或多个DFE进行投资的养老金计划报告的公开财务信息摘要严重不完整:虽然计划必须确定其直接投资的分类性质(例如,普通股或优先股,公司或政府债务,房地产等),但通过DFE进行的间接投资仅报告为DFE的权益,而不考虑DFE资产和负债的潜在性质。将DFE的回报与通过DFE投资的计划提交的回报相匹配在理论上是可能的,但这在技术上是困难的,并且尚未全面实现。本研究承担了2008年大型私人养老金计划与DFEs申报收益的关联研究任务。在解释了DFE的类型之后,总结统计了通过DFE进行养老金计划投资的程度和DFE投资组合的构成。描述了将每个DFE的持股与其投资者计划联系起来的过程,然后对结果进行了描述和分析。揭示了不同类型养老金计划在资产配置上的重要差异,并比较了通过dfe进行投资和不通过dfe进行投资的计划的投资组合构成。由于35%的投资于DFE的计划被发现提交了内部不一致的回报,这阻碍了DFE财务信息与投资者计划的成功联系,因此对与此类缺陷提交相关的计划特征进行了调查。尽管DFE投资组合的构成目前对计划参与者和公众来说是不可见的,但我们发现很少有证据表明DFE被系统地利用来模糊养老金计划投资的身份。最后,根据养老金计划财务披露的目的对研究结果进行了回顾。即使DFE财务信息与投资者计划的常规、准确和全面匹配是可用的,ERISA的文本和政策也支持更详细的数字披露制度的监管制定。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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