Abstract

The introduction of pan-European pension products in 2020 is associated with an ongoing debate on prescribing predefined saving strategy that would both deliver adequate performance and limit the down-side risk at the end of the saving horizon. Dynamic life-cycle saving strategies are generally accepted as a good risk-mitigation tool that can be individually set. Many research papers confirm the ability of life-cycle strategies to deliver high risk-reward outcomes. Objective of our paper is to test the ability of one-factor life-cycle saving strategies based on the age and/or the remaining saving horizon to deliver the promised value for PEPP savers. We constructed 18 saving strategies divided into three groups – static saving strategies with fixed proportion of equities, dynamic life-cycle strategies based on the age and/or remaining saving horizon, and quasi-active strategies combining two factors – the remaining saving horizon and price movement. We employed the model based on moving-block bootstrapping technique and performed simulations for various economic conditions. We have tested the expected saving performance combined with the down-side risk during the saving horizon. Our findings do not confirm the general findings on life-cycle saving strategies. We claim that having the age as the only factor defining the proportion of equities in the pension saving portfolio would not be optimal. However, we found that two-factor saving strategies look promising in delivering both lower down-side risk and higher performance over the saving horizon.

Highlights

  • Several years of EU-wide discussion on bringing a portable pension product to the market has led to the creation of pan-European pension product (PEPP) regulation that inter alia enables the creation of a personal pension product which will have a long-term retirement nature and will take into account environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors, will be simple, safe, reasonably-priced, transparent, consumer-friendly and portable and will complement the existing pension systems in all EU member states

  • We have performed more than 3,3 mil. simulations under the various economic conditions including unemployment rates, equity and bond returns

  • Quasi-active strategies (MaxMin and RiskTolerance) that take into account the age of a saver delivered quite exceptional performance compared to the other life-cycle or static strategies

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Summary

Introduction

Several years of EU-wide discussion on bringing a portable pension product to the market has led to the creation of pan-European pension product (PEPP) regulation that inter alia enables the creation of a personal pension product which will have a long-term retirement nature and will take into account environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors, will be simple, safe, reasonably-priced, transparent, consumer-friendly and portable and will complement the existing pension systems in all EU member states.A PEPP is an individual non-occupational pension product subscribed to voluntarily by a PEPP saver in view of retirement. Several years of EU-wide discussion on bringing a portable pension product to the market has led to the creation of pan-European pension product (PEPP) regulation that inter alia enables the creation of a personal pension product which will have a long-term retirement nature and will take into account environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors, will be simple, safe, reasonably-priced, transparent, consumer-friendly and portable and will complement the existing pension systems in all EU member states. One of the objectives of regulating PEPPs is to create a safe, cost-friendly long-term retirement savings product. Because the investments concerning personal pension products are long-term, special regard should be given to the long-term consequences of asset allocation. For this sake, the predefined option of simple PEPP includes pure gradual investment process that should ensure adequate returns over the long-term

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