Recently, many defined benefit plan sponsors have opted for various de-risking strategies, including buy-outs, buy-ins, and liability-driven investing. Today, there is an increased focus on the segment rates used to determine lump-sum payouts for retiring or terminated participants.
Here we explain segment rates and the impact they have on lump-sum payments. Now is an opportune time to consider lump-sum payouts, as the current high-rate environment may help plan sponsors cash-out participants at a lower cost.
Most traditional defined benefit plans offer two types of payouts: annuities for life or a one-time lump sum. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) releases monthly Minimum Present Value Segment Rates. Plan sponsors identify which IRS segment rates to use for their lump sums by defining a stability period and a lookback period in their plan documents. These rates then are used for lump sums over a set period of time (typically each plan year).
The interest rates set by the IRS are based on the value of corporate bond yields, which have increased considerably over the past year. According to Pitasky, many plan documents determine lump sums for the full 2023 Plan Year using IRS rates between August and December 2022. Those rates increased from 1.8% to as much as 2.8% as compared to the prior year.
Rising interest rates can markedly affect lump-sum payouts in both directions: When rates are low, lump-sum payouts are high and vice versa. In a pension, where expected annuity payouts occur over a long period of time, a change in rates can have a significant effect on lump sum determinations. For example, a 2.5% increase in rates could lower lump sums by 30%−40%.
Plan sponsors who have a high-interest rate in place for valuing lump-sum payments should be focused on the following:
Many factors play into the decision to terminate a plan. Even though lump sums may have decreased, plan assets may have also decreased, which could affect the ability of a plan to afford a termination. In addition, the process to terminate may take a year or more, so the rates used to calculate lump-sum payments in 2024 may not be what the plan applies in 2023. Therefore, higher payouts may result. Finally, even though participants can be offered lump sums in a plan termination, they always must be offered annuity payments from an insurance company, which usually come at higher costs to the plan when compared to lump sums.
One way to shore up a plan’s volatility and remain active is to review the plan documents and see how the lump sum cash-out rate may help. While annuities may be a good option, plan sponsors will need to pay a premium for insurers to take on participant pension liabilities. In a high-interest rate environment, lump sums could reduce the number of participants in the plan with payouts that are lower than what was previously expected.