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Here are a couple of clippings from the
Wall Street Journal 26th July 2000.
By Ellen E. Schultz, Staff Reporter of The Wall Street Journal
When International Business Machines Corp. announced the latest
changes in its pension plan last year, David Finlay, a senior engineer
in Colorado, went to his basement and hauled out boxes of benefits
brochures collected since he joined IBM in 1972. It wasn't too hard for
him to figure out that through the 1970s and 1980s, various changes had
been for the good. It took a lot longer to figure out what happened in
the 1990s.
When he was done, months later, what he discovered dismayed him. In
the past decade, the company made change after change to its pension
plan, reducing Mr. Finlay's future benefits each time, by his reckoning.
According to the 55-year-old engineer's calculations, he will retire in
10 years with a $57,700 annual pension, compared with $71,200 it would
have been without the revisions of the 1990s.
IBM, which declines to comment on Mr. Finlay's analysis, is a case
study in the manifold, complex ways large companies have been whittling
away pensions over the past decade, a pension-paring spree that hasn't
ended yet. An examination of hundreds of federal filings reveals such
cuts at a host of big companies, including Ameritech Corp., Duke Energy
Corp., Dow Chemical Co., Kmart Corp., Lucent Technologies Inc. and
Southern Co. The upshot of the pension changes, which are often poorly
explained to employees, is that millions of people will retire with
pensions that are sharply lower than they once would have been.
"If your pension has changed in the 1990s, it probably changed for
the worse," says Norman Stein, a pension-law professor at the University
of Alabama at Tuscaloosa.
Sometimes companies cut pensions when business is bad, but that isn't
what's happening here. Employers are imposing the pension cuts at a time
when profits are lush and when most pension funds are fully funded or
overfunded, thanks to the long-running bull market. Paring future
payouts, in such an environment, renders plans even more overfunded.
This isn't just a comforting feeling to companies. For some, it is
also a new profit center. That's because accounting rules allow excess
pension income to flow to the bottom line, where it can boost operating
income and smooth earnings.
Some of the changes are so complicated that even government pension
experts aren't sure how they work. Created by consulting firms and
companies' finance departments, the maneuvers flourish with little
oversight. They go well beyond the "cash balance" system that caused an
outcry last year after The Wall Street Journal reported that the
new-style plan could cut older workers' pensions as much as 50%.
Some companies make subtle changes to the benefit-calculation
formulas of traditional pension plans. Others take advantage of
pension-law loopholes to eliminate early-retirement subsidies, and still
others adjust compensation formulas to lower the amounts that count
toward a pension. Says Brooks Hamilton, a lawyer who runs a pension
consulting firm in Dallas: "Never have so few plundered so much from so
many."
Federal law bars employers from retroactively cutting benefits an
employee has earned. But it is perfectly legal to cut the rate at which
benefits are to be earned in the future, or to eliminate future benefits
altogether.
A company that is reducing future pension accruals of its employees
is supposed to make this clear to them. Few do. In regulatory filings,
companies typically cite "changes" or "modifications," not "cuts" or
"reductions," and the brochures given to employees are typically vague.
In IBM's case, a brochure for some 1995 changes did contain a reference
to "lower value" for certain workers. Still, in 1999, even while IBM
employees were complaining bitterly to lawmakers about adoption of a
cash-balance plan, almost none realized that the 1995 changes had
already transformed their plan.
One of the most common ways companies cut pensions is by changing the
formula they use to calculate monthly retirement checks. Under
traditional plans, payments generally are based on three items: years of
service, an average-salary figure and a multiplier, such as 1.5%. All
three can be changed. Southern Co., for instance, reduced its multiplier
to 1% from 1.7%. Benefits were reduced 25% to 33%, by a Southern
official's calculation, although employees of the Atlanta utility age 35
or older could remain subject to the old formula.
It might seem the years-of-service and average-salary elements would
be immutable, but in fact, companies can manipulate these elements, too.
They can cap the years of service that count toward a pension. And on
salaries, instead of taking the employee's highest three years of pay,
they can take an average of 10 years or even an entire career.
Kmart and Manpower Inc. froze their pension plans, so that neither
future salary increases nor added years of service could increase the
benefit. When Kmart froze its pension plan in 1996, it quickly turned it
from underfunded into overfunded -- and pumped $63 million of pension
income into its bottom line for 1998. A spokeswoman for Kmart says
employees have the opportunity to participate in 401(k) retirement plans
that supplement the pension. Manpower, which froze its plan at the end
of February 2000, has no comment.
When a company changes its pension formula, employees can face months
or years before their expected future retirement benefit gets back up to
where it was before the change. In the meantime, they are essentially
earning no benefit. "Wearaway," pension designers call this phenomenon.
Duke Energy made a complex adjustment in the early 1990s to the way
it incorporates Social Security into its pension formula, a move that
halted the accruals for the oldest workers for months or even years, the
company acknowledges. Duke later converted to a cash-balance plan, again
reducing accruals for some, although this time the change didn't affect
those closest to retirement. Wearaway doesn't violate the law against
cutting already-earned pensions so long as the employer provides the
original, larger benefit to anybody who departs before working his or
her way through the wearaway period.
At IBM, pension cuts began in 1991 when the company lowered the
multiplier in its traditional plan to 1.35% from 1.5%. Mr. Finlay
calculates that this and other 1991 changes reduced the pension he would
draw at 65 to about $69,500 a year from $71,200. IBM also capped the
pension, meaning that years worked beyond 30 wouldn't increase it.
Asked about Mr. Finlay's conclusions, IBM said in a written
statement: "We are not saying your information is correct. We are saying
only that we have decided not to participate" in an article about the
changes.
IBM's next significant move came in 1995. The company wanted to drop
an early-retirement subsidy, which it had added to the plan in 1991 to
encourage older workers to leave. The subsidy, which let 55-year-olds
retire with nearly the pension they would have at 65, "encouraged
departures," so it "served us well," Donald Sauvigne, then head of
retirement benefits at IBM, told an actuaries' conference in Vancouver,
British Columbia, in 1995, according to a transcript. But IBM found it
also had the unwelcome effort of encouraging people to stick around
until at least age 55. "So we had to design something different," Mr.
Sauvigne said.
What they came up with was, indeed, very different: a pension-equity
plan. This is a hybrid that consultants Wyatt Co. (now Watson Wyatt
Worldwide of Bethesda, Md.) devised for RJR Nabisco Holdings Corp. in
January 1993, when Louis V. Gerstner Jr. headed RJR. In April 1993, Mr.
Gerstner arrived at IBM, and soon it, too, began planning a shift to the
new structure, though it isn't clear what Mr. Gerstner's role was.
Ameritech, Dow Chemical, Motorola Inc. and U S West Inc. (now part of
Qwest Communications International Inc.) all have adopted similar plans
since then.
Like its better-known cash-balance cousin, a pension-equity plan
wipes out any early-retirement subsidy and produces smaller retirement
payments for many older workers. Both plans differ from traditional
pensions, under which employees earn as much as half their ultimate
benefits in their last five to 10 years on the job. In contrast, under
these newer types of pensions, the value of a worker's benefit grows at
a more level rate throughout his or her employment.
A cash-balance plan provides employees with hypothetical accounts
that grow with an annual company contribution, usually based on salary
plus interest on the hypothetical balance. In contrast, the "accounts"
in a pension-equity plan grow each year when the company contributes an
amount representing the multiplication of a person's average pay over
the prior five years or so by a factor that increases with service.
There's also usually interest credited to the account, but it is
embedded in the calculation and isn't evident to employees. "The plan
took me months to understand," IBM's Mr. Sauvigne told his actuarial
colleagues at the conference -- and he was a 25-year benefits veteran.
(END) DOW JONES NEWS 07-26-00 11:41 PM
WSJ(7/27): Cos Find Subtle Ways -2: IBM's Partial Retreat
The brochure did note that employees "will see varying effects" and
that those retiring early will "see lower value." Mr. Finlay didn't
think much about the change at the time, and neither did many of his
colleagues. "I did not realize the significance," says software engineer
Ken Buckingham, 44, a 20-year, second-generation IBM employee in
Charlotte, N.C. "I had not a clue that this wasn't a traditional pension
plan. They have a right to make these changes, but I resent the
surreptitious nature in which they made them."
Companies sometimes communicate pension reductions so poorly they're
mistaken for enhancements. Consider the changes Lucent made in 1998. It
cut the multiplier in its traditional pension plan to 1.4% from 1.6%,
reducing future accruals. Yet a company brochure given to employees
said: "For most employees, these changes will provide a greater annual
pension benefit than the amount currently provided by the plan."
A Lucent spokesman says the brochure wasn't misleading because of
other modifications, such as a 401(k) change and an updating of the
salary part of the pension formula. But that update was a routine one
made periodically to advance the period on which the salary average
would be based, and would have been made even if the multiplier hadn't
been cut.
Other companies improve their 401(k) savings programs when they cut
pensions, obscuring the cuts by emphasizing "total" retirement benefits,
including whatever an employee might save in his or her 401(k). On this
front, Lucent did something more complicated in 1998. It reduced the
amount it matches when employees put money into their 401(k) accounts to
50 cents on the dollar from 66.6 cents, but it added a "variable" match
based on earnings-per-share growth. "We took the base down but gave
employees more upside potential," the spokesman says, adding that in the
past two years, the combination has resulted in a larger corporate
contribution.
Employers rarely say that the reason they are changing their
retirement plan is to save money. Instead, no matter what kind of change
they are making, companies generally tell employees roughly the same
things. "The changes keep us competitive with others in our industry,"
noted Lucent in an employee brochure that is typical. "Lucent's success
depends on attracting, retaining and motivating top performers." A
Lucent spokesman says the changes were intended to take away a "sense of
entitlement" among employees and to reward performance.
Similarly, when IBM converted to the pension-equity plan in 1995, it
sent a memo to managers saying the goal was "to attract and retain the
people we need for the future" and to "align more with industry
practices and trends." When IBM switched to a cash-balance plan four
years later, its brochure for the staff said the change was to help
"attract, retain, and motivate" employees.
Later, at the annual shareholders' meeting last April, Mr. Gerstner
stressed that the company's most recent pension maneuver was accompanied
by various compensation enhancements. The combined moves eliminate "a
sense of entitlement," he said. IBM also has a 401(k) retirement plan,
but the chairman said that its pension plan had been "woefully out of
date. It did not address the realities of employee mobility in the new
marketplace. Our old pension plan was created at a time when employees
joined IBM for life," he said. But "we anticipate that only 10% of our
new hires are likely to reach 30 years of service with IBM."
Most of IBM's leading competitors "do not provide a pension plan at
all," Mr. Gerstner added. "We must find a balance between the needs of
our shareholders and the needs of all our employees."
Certainly, the shareholders have fared well. At the actuaries'
conference in 1995, IBM's Mr. Sauvigne said the adoption that year of
the pension-equity change had some immediate payoffs. "The new plan is a
lot less expensive than the predecessor plan," he said. "We took a lot
of dollars out of the liability line on Day One just by flipping the
switch."
Indeed, the year before, IBM had reported pension expense of $11
million. In 1995, the year it converted, it reported pension income of
$252 million, of which about half was attributable to the stock market
and the rest to the pension change. Over the next four years, pension
income boosted the company's operating income by $1.8 billion, according
to federal filings.
Then came the 1999 announcement of a switch to cash- balance, a
system that by this time had become controversial. The move caused such
an uproar among middle-age staffers that IBM made a partial retreat,
increasing the number of older employees it let remain in the old plan.
Still, the move paid off for IBM; last year, it saved an added $184
million -- 6% of pretax income -- through reduced pension expense,
according to government filings.
Mr. Finlay wasn't affected because he decided to stay in the prior
plan. But if he hadn't made that choice, he calculated, IBM's latest
switch would have cut his annual pension to about $45,800. He says he
recruited volunteers around the office to test-drive his spreadsheets.
For employees, bad news can continue even after a conversion to a
cash-balance plan. What has happened at some big companies illustrates
the variety of ways managements continue to pare pension benefits.
For instance, six years after Interpublic Group of Cos. converted to
a cash-balance pension plan, the ad agency went further and froze the
plan. CBS Inc. adopted a cash-balance plan but closed it to new
employees. MCI Communications converted to cash-balance but later,
following its merger into WorldCom Inc., stopped providing contributions
to the hypothetical accounts in the plan. And retailer Casual Corner
Group changed the compensation formula in its cash-balance plan to
exclude bonuses.
Casual Corner acknowledges it made its move to save money. CBS says
that it increased its contribution to 401(k) plans and that many
employees will now get stock options that can be used for retirement
savings. WorldCom and Interpublic decline to comment.
Companies can cut pensions even as employees walk out the door. If a
plan allows departing employees to take a lump sum instead of a lifelong
stream of monthly payments, the lump sum can be worth 30% to 50% less
than the present value of the monthly pension. That's because federal
law allows lump-sum payments to exclude the value of an early-retirement
subsidy, provided employers give employees a choice between a lump-sum
payment and the monthly annuity.
This helps explain why hundreds of large employers began offering
lump sums in the 1990s. The savings got even greater after employers
successfully lobbied Congress in 1994 to let them use a bigger discount
rate when calculating the lump sums. The change results in lower
lump-sum payouts.
Last week, the House passed a pension bill with a variety of
provisions that would make further pension reductions possible,
including one that gives companies greater leeway to cut
early-retirement subsidies. The bill would also allow companies with
already-overfunded pension plans to put more money in the plans, even as
their pension obligations shrink. That makes it more likely that the
pension plan will contribute to the company's bottom line.
Increasingly, companies are asking employees to make irrevocable
decisions about their pensions, such as whether to remain in an old plan
or choose a new one. Motorola, for instance, allowed 70,000 employees to
make a one-time choice in April of whether to move into a new
pension-equity plan, which started July 1, or stay in the old plan.
If employees can't compare the value of the options, they can't make
an informed choice. Mary Fletcher, a marketing-services trainer and
14-year veteran of IBM, was presented with a lump-sum option last year
when IBM prepared to sell a unit with 3,000 U.S. employees to AT&T Corp.
Only after she hired a financial adviser to help with the calculations
did she realize that the lump sum was worth 30% less than the monthly
pension. The annuity's present value: $101,000. The lump sum she was
offered: $71,500.
Still, Ms. Fletcher, 47, took the lump sum. Almost all employees do,
figuring they can invest the money and eventually end up with more.
Ms. Fletcher is simply glad to be off on her own. Even though she is
"a numbers person," she says, when it came to IBM's pension plan, "they
were always changing things. So we were always confused."
Journal Link: For more on how businesses are cutting into pension
plans
Common Ways Companies Cut Pensions
An annual benefit under a traditional pension plan generally
multiplies three factors: years of service, final average pay and a
multiplier.
For example:
25 years of service
x $50,000 average salary over past three years
x 1.5% multiplier
= $18,750 annual pension at age 65
To reduce the pension, change one or more of the three items. Here's
how:
- Cut pension multiplier from, say, 1.5% to 1.0%.
- Change the definition of compensation to exclude bonuses or make
the pay more 'variable,'so less might qualify for a pension.
- Calculate the final average pay using the past 10 years or five
years of compensation, instead of the final three years. Or use the
average of all years - a `career average' formula.
- Cap the number of years of service counted, at 25, for instance.
- Freeze the plan, so future years of service and compensation
increases won't boost the pension.
(END) DOW JONES NEWS 07-26-00
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