By
Feb 28, 2023 (Gmt+09:00)
South Korea’s National Pension Service (NPS), with 920.4 trillion won ($694.6 billion) in assets as of November 2022, faces growing concerns over inflation as payments to beneficiaries are increasing faster this year.
Market watchers say that NPS, the world’s third-largest pension fund, needs to be better prepared by amending its benchmarks to reflect volatility and increasing exposure to inflation-hedging investments such as alternative assets.
The pension fund’s payments to beneficiaries will jump 5.1% in 2023 from 2022, even as they rose 2.5% last year from the previous year. Such an increase this year equals 1.7 trillion won ($1.3 billion), further burdening the pension fund that is expected to be depleted by 2055 under the current fund management system.
The public pension fund has been seen as slow to take significant countermeasures even though it feels that an inflation crisis is coming. Despite changes in the consumer price index (CPI) to the alternative asset benchmark; the other asset classes, public equity and bonds in Korea and overseas, use market indices instead of any inflation-linked ones.
NPS invests 850 billion won, or only 0.28% of its domestic bond values, in inflation-linked Korean government bonds as of end-September 2022. The low percentage is due to NPS’ in-house benchmark reflecting Korea's overall Treasury bond market, of which inflation-protected securities make up a very small percentage.
Compared with NPS, California Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS) manages more than 5% of its assets in US Treasury inflation-protected securities (TIPS).
Raising allocation for alternative assets isn't easy either. As stock and bond markets plunged last year, the value of the two asset classes dropped and the proportion of other assets in the overall portfolio sharply jumped. NPS' alternative asset portion in its entire portfolio reached 16.1% as of last end-November, exceeding the target of 13.8%.
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