Tuesday, December 3, 2013
Risk And Return Detroit Style
A judge ruled that Detroit
can proceed with its bankruptcy, a ruling allows the largest municipal
bankruptcy in U.S. history to go forward. And while we don't want to
discuss many of the decisions that led to bankruptcy, Detroit's general
pension board certainly didn't help. One of the key tenets of finance is
that risk are return are related. Detroit had an annuity plan that
allowed city employees to contribute as much as 7 percent of their pay
and receive a guaranteed annual return of 7.9 percent, a guarantee we would love to receive ourselves! And in 2002 and 2007, the total return paid in these accounts was 21.4 percent and 22.9 percent, respectively.
To fund the return, the pension managers took money from the general
retirement funds used for pensions to pay the 7.9 percent return, even
in 2009 when the annuity account lost 24 percent. In all, the payments from the pension plan cost about $1.9 billion.