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Pension Liquidity Risk

Working paper 801
Working Papers

Published: 10 February 2024

Pension funds rely on interest rate swaps to hedge the interest rate risk arising from their liabilities. Analyzing unique data on Dutch pension funds, we show that this hedging behavior exposes pension funds to liquidity risk due to margin calls, which can be as large as 15% of their total assets. Our analysis uncovers three key findings: (i) pension funds with tighter regulatory constraints use swaps more aggressively; (ii) in response to rising interest rates, triggering margin calls, pension funds predominantly sell safe and short-term government bonds; (iii) we demonstrate that this procyclical selling adversely affects the prices of these bonds.

Keywords: Pension funds; fixed income; interest rate swaps; liability hedging; liquidity risk; margin calls; price impact
JEL codes E43; G12; G18

Working paper no. 801

801 - Pension Liquidity Risk

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Research highlights:

  • Little is known about liquidity risk in the global pension system, but the stress in the UK pension market in September and October 2022, triggered by a sudden spike in British interest rates, highlights the vulnerabilities inherent in pension funds’ interest rate hedging strategies.
  • Using unique data on Dutch pension funds we show that interest rate hedging with swaps exposes pension funds to margin call risk that can be as large as 15% of a pension fund’s total assets, exceeding their cash holdings by several orders of magnitude.
  • Our analysis uncovers three key findings: (i) pension funds with tighter regulatory constraints use swaps more aggressively; (ii) in response to rising interest rates, triggering margin calls, pension funds predominantly sell safe and short-term government bonds; (iii) we demonstrate that this procyclical selling adversely affects the prices of these bonds.
  • Our findings challenge the conventional wisdom that pension funds, in their role as long-term investors, are immune to liquidity risk. This liquidity risk is the unintended consequence of the combination of capital requirements for defined benefit pension funds – aimed at making these funds safer - and collateral requirements of interest rate swaps.

 

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