In May, the funded status of the 100 largest corporate
defined pension plans increased by $31 billion as measured by the Milliman 100
Pension Funding Index (PFI). The funded status deficit fell to $280 billion at
the end of May, primarily due to an increase in the benchmark corporate bond
interest rates used to value pension liabilities. As of May 31, the funded
ratio rose to 84.1%
, up from 82.6% at the end of April.
The projected benefit obligation (PBO), or pension
liabilities, decreased by $34 billion during May, lowering the Milliman 100 PFI
value to $1.756 trillion. The change resulted from an increase of 15 basis
points in the monthly discount rate to 3.97% for May. Discount rates of under
4.00% have now persisted for seven consecutive months.
Over the last 12 months (June 2014 to May 2015), the
cumulative asset return for these pensions has been 7.91% and the Milliman 100
PFI funded status deficit has improved by $2 billion. The discount rate as of a
year ago on May 31, 2014, was 4.06%, nine basis points higher than where it
stands as of May 31, 2015.
Source: MillimanUS
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