Planning to Retire

The 4 Pension Plans with the Steepest Losses

By Emily Brandon

Posted: January 27, 2009

If you thought your 401(k) statement was painful to look at, your pension plan (if you’re lucky enough to still have one) is probably doing even worse. The 200 largest U.S. pension plans collectively dropped 16.5 percent during the year that ended September 30, according to a survey of large plan sponsors by Pensions & Investments released yesterday. More than 30 of the 200 largest U.S. pension plans experienced asset declines of 20 percent or more, the worst drop recorded in the 20 year history of the survey.

These 4 pension plans suffered the steepest losses.

Verizon Communications Inc. experienced a decline of 30.7 percent to $51.8 billion

Northwest Airlines Inc. is down 25.9 percent to $8 billion

SUPERVALU Inc. fell 25.2 percent to $6.6 billion

Wachovia Corp. lost 23.9 percent to end the period with $13.2 billion

Source: Pensions & Investments

Only one large U.S. pension plan in the survey experienced an increase in assets in the year that ended September 30. The Austin-based Texas Municipal Retirement System's assets increased 2.7 percent to $14 billion. Why was this fund the only one to show a positive return last year? Over 90 percent of the fund is allocated to domestic fixed income investments.

Check out how the 200 largest pensions performed here.

Pension Plans with the Steepest Losses

I beleived that most of all people who have any pension plans invested through brokerage firms either in mutual funds, stocks, bonds, annuties have lost close to 50% value in the previous 6 to 8 months from today and at the same time all brokers are charging over and above high fees plush their high salary and this lost can't claim for income tax deductions and people have to pay tax on any divident. Why the government,specially the SEC do not take actions to charge high fee and commision of brokers? Many brokers are miss leading to many senior retired persons and government is not looking after the people to whom they are seveing? If the federal government help the big banks, big business and finance institute for wrong doing, why the government is not helping many people lost their investment for no foult of their own?

Natu S. Patel of MD @ Jan 27, 2009 15:43:34 PM

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Planning to Retire

Planning to Retire

Reporter Emily Brandon tells you how to get ready financially for retirement and to make your golden years the best they can be.

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