The Telegram (St. John's)

Canadian pensions fared well in 2017 thanks to strength of stock markets: Mercer

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The Mercer consulting group says defined-benefit pension plans in Canada generally ended 2017 in better financial condition than they’ve experience­d for most of the past decade.

The firm says many of the Canadian defined-benefit pension plans that it tracks were fully funded, or very close to fully funded, at the end of the year.

It says defined-benefit pension plans were helped by surging stock markets, particular­ly in the fourth quarter.

However, a decline in longterm interest rates offset some of the gains in equities.

According to Mercer estimates, a typical balanced pension portfolio with a combinatio­n of equity and fixedincom­e investment­s would have returned 5.3 per cent during the fourth quarter of 2017.

Mercer says the median solvency ratio for its 604 pension clients in Canada was 97 per cent — meaning half of the pension plans had enough assets to cover at least 97 per cent of their obligation­s.

That’s an improvemen­t from the end of 2016, when the median solvency ratio for Mercer clients was 93 per cent.

Defined-benefit pension plans have become less common in recent years because of the cost and financial risk they pose to employers if investment­s perform poorly.

To address the risk, many employers have opted for other retirement options, and two provinces — Quebec and Ontario — have moved to relax the rules for definedben­efit pension plans under their jurisdicti­on.

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