Age-Dependent Investing: Optimal Funding and Investment Strategies in Defined Contribution Pension Plans When Members are Rational Life Cycle Financial Planners

Pensions Institute, Discussion Paper PI-1111

46 Pages Posted: 8 Mar 2016

See all articles by David P. Blake

David P. Blake

City, University of London

Douglas Wright

City University London - The Business School

Yumeng Zhang

Solutions Group, Legal & General Investment Management

Multiple version iconThere are 2 versions of this paper

Date Written: September 7, 2011

Abstract

A defined contribution pension plan allows consumption to be redistributed from the plan member’s working life to retirement in a manner that is consistent with the member’s personal preferences. The plan’s optimal funding and investment strategies therefore depend on the desired profile of consumption over the lifetime of the member. We investigate these strategies under the assumption that the member is a rational life cycle financial planner and has an Epstein-Zin utility function, which allows a separation between risk aversion and the elasticity of intertemporal substitution. We also take into account the member’s human capital during the accumulation phase of the plan and we allow the annuitisation decision to be endogenously determined during the decumulation phase.

We show that the optimal funding strategy involves a contribution rate that is not constant over the life of the plan but is age-dependent and reflects the trade-off between the desire for current versus future consumption, the desire for stable consumption over time, the member’s attitude to risk, and changes in the level of human capital over the life cycle. We also show that the optimal investment strategy during the accumulation phase of the plan is ‘stochastic lifestyling’, with an initial high weight in equity-type investments and a gradual switch into bond-type investments as the retirement date approaches in a way that depends on the realised outcomes for the stochastic processes driving the state variables. The optimal investment strategy during the decumulation phase of the plan is to exchange the bonds held at retirement for life annuities and then to gradually sell the remaining equities and buy more annuities, i.e., a strategy known as ‘phased annuitisation’.

Keywords: defined contribution pension plan, funding strategy, investment strategy, Epstein-Zin utility, stochastic lifestyling, phased annuitisation, dynamic programming

JEL Classification: G11, G23

Suggested Citation

Blake, David P. and Wright, Douglas and Zhang, Yumeng, Age-Dependent Investing: Optimal Funding and Investment Strategies in Defined Contribution Pension Plans When Members are Rational Life Cycle Financial Planners (September 7, 2011). Pensions Institute, Discussion Paper PI-1111, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2743264 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2743264

David P. Blake (Contact Author)

City, University of London ( email )

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HOME PAGE: http://www.pensions-institute.org/

Douglas Wright

City University London - The Business School ( email )

106 Bunhill Row
London, EC1Y 8TZ
United Kingdom

Yumeng Zhang

Solutions Group, Legal & General Investment Management ( email )

United Kingdom

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