U.S. pension plan funding levels jump

The pension funded status of the largest corporate sponsors in the United States increased sharply in 2013 due primarily to rising interest rates (which lowered liabilities) and a strong stock market.

The analysis by Towers Watson indicates that the aggregate pension funded status is estimated to be 93% at the end of 2013, a sharp jump from 77% at the end of 2012 but still well below the 106% funding at the end of 2007.

Overall, pension plan funding improved by US$285 billion ($303.1 billion) last year, leaving a deficit of US$99 billion ($105.3 billion) at the end of 2013.

“The strong stock market and higher interest rates last year gave plan sponsors the one-two punch they needed to cut the funding deficit of their corporate pension plans by nearly 75%,” says Alan Glickstein, a senior retirement consultant at Towers Watson. “As a result of the funded status improvement, funding ratios are now at their highest levels since the financial crisis of 2008 but still well below 100%, a level reached only three times since 2000.”

The companies analyzed represent 418 Fortune 1000 firms with December fiscal year-end dates for which complete data were available. The 2013 figures are estimates of U.S. plan assets and liabilities. The earlier figures are actual. Actual year-end 2013 results will not be publicly available until the spring.

The Towers Watson analysis estimates that companies contributed US$48.8 billion ($51.9 billion) to their pension plans in 2013—23% less than in 2012.

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