Business Day (Nigeria)

How pension funds reel from negative real interest rates

- MICHAEL ANI & OLUWAFADEK­EMI AREO

Acollapse in yields on Nigerian assets is leaving pension fund administra­tors ( PFAS) with no choice but to plough back pensioners’ funds into assets offering rates below inflation.

Nigeria’s biggest institutio­nal investors, the PFAS, are reeling from a negative real interest rate environmen­t, after a host of Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN) policies aimed at boosting growth in a fundamenta­lly weak economy, restricted them alongside other local investors from investing in high yielding short- term OMO bills instrument­s.

That sparked a massive influx of liquidity into other asset classes, particular­ly T-bills and Bonds, sending the yields on these assets to lower lows below the rate of inflation.

Even though the PFAS are making a killing for sion.

According to Sadiku, as PFAS investment in OMO matures, they have to look for where to invest that money but they definitely

Average interest rates on short-term T-bills have tumbled to 1.3 percent from the high of 14 percent some two years ago, while yields on bonds are sitting as low as 7 percent, according to data from securities trading platform, FMDQ.

While the low-interestra­te environmen­t has become a major win for both the Federal Government and large corporates, providing them soft landing to borrow at low cost, it has come with so much pain for pensioners whose funds are collected largely by the government but are rewarded with returns below the country’s inflation.

Between April and July this year, the Federal Government raised N7.74 billion in bonds, down by 3

percent from the N7.94 billion raised in the first three months of the year.

As at August 29, a total of N559.77 billion had been raised by large corporates from commercial papers, which is about 103 percent higher than the N275.37 billion raised in March, according to data from the FMDQ.

The case of a low-interest rate may not have been a big issue for investors— since interest rates on assets are still high when compared with what is obtainable in other climes.

It would also have not been an issue for a country looking to boost spending and consumptio­n after suffering its deepest economic contractio­n in more than a decade by 6.1 percent in the second quarter of the year. But for the country’s spiralling inflation, which is eroding the real value of these assets, leaving investors and savers with nothing to cheer.

With commodity prices jumping to their highest levels in 29-month to 13.2 percent in August, real yields, arrived by deducting yields on an asset from the prevailing inflation rate, have largely been negative.

“With the negative real interest rate, it becomes the pensioners that will suffer because the fund managers will only pay out returns they get,” an investment expert, who has more than 25 years’ experience, said, noting that there was no guaranteed pension in Nigeria.

“In real terms, they are not making any money; instead they are losing because both inflation and market price are wiping out their investment­s.

“I suspect at this point, they are probably advocating to both CBN and the PENCOM regulator to relax the regulation that allows them to invest in non-nigerian instrument­s, which is their biggest to hedge their asset, or there is a quick launch of Nigeria’s infrastruc­ture fund to help give them some comfort,” the person said.

An inverse relationsh­ip exists between the price of an asset and the returns, meaning in a low yielding environmen­t, particular­ly on bonds and fixed income assets like treasury bills, prices are expected to be high and vice versa.

Pension funds invest in a variety of assets, but most, including defined benefit plans, use low-risk assets such as government bonds as the benchmark discount rate. While that means they have profited from the fixed-income rally, falling yields have also driven up future liabilitie­s — in turn threatenin­g their ability to meet oncoming obligation­s.

In nominal terms, pensioners have seen assets under management hit over N11 trillion. Such growth has been wiped out in real terms due to successive devaluatio­n of the naira.

With more than 56 percent of pension assets invested in Federal Government bonds, fund managers who spoke with Businessda­y said they have had to trade some portions of their bond holdings in line with their business policies, just so they could meet up with rewarding clients with returns higher than the country’s prevailing inflation rate of 13.2 percent.

Whichever the case is, they still can’t escape, since long- dated bonds which they have taken comfort in, is very sensitive to interest rate changes.

With average yields on bonds trading at their lower levels below 10 percent, analysts foresee either stagnancy or an upward reversal in the yield position.

That would mean a tapering of the bond rally, which fund managers and asset managers have cashed in on to reward high returns, according to Omotola Abimbola, a fixed income and macro analyst at investment and advisory firm, Chapel Hill Denham.

“It could also form the case for them to increase allocation to equities since returns on the bond side could be a lot more restrained next year, if there is no further downward push in the yields,” Abimbola told Businessda­y.

As expected, domestic participat­ion in the Lagos bourse has seen an uptick from 40 percent to 61 percent, Oscar Onyema, CEO, Nigerian Stock Exchange, said in one of his presentati­ons to clients.

The increased participat­ion of local investors in equities is due to the lowinteres­t-rate environmen­t, which has positioned the exchange as a haven and viable market for the destinatio­n of private capital, Onyema said.

 ??  ?? L-R: Oladele Odusote, commission­er, Lagos
State Ministry for Energy and Mineral Resources; Babajide Sanwo-olu, governor, Lagos State; Femi Hamzat, deputy governor, Lagos State; Solape Hammod, special adviser to the governor of Lagos State on SDGS and investment, and Tubosun Alake, special adviser to the governor of Lagos State on innovation and technology, at the grand finale of Lagos Smart Meter Hackathon 2020 in Lagos, at the weekend.
Pic by Olawale Amoo
L-R: Oladele Odusote, commission­er, Lagos State Ministry for Energy and Mineral Resources; Babajide Sanwo-olu, governor, Lagos State; Femi Hamzat, deputy governor, Lagos State; Solape Hammod, special adviser to the governor of Lagos State on SDGS and investment, and Tubosun Alake, special adviser to the governor of Lagos State on innovation and technology, at the grand finale of Lagos Smart Meter Hackathon 2020 in Lagos, at the weekend. Pic by Olawale Amoo

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