Abstract
AbstractFirms have attempted to de-risk their pension obligations by offering its pension beneficiaries a lump-sum distribution instead of the guaranteed payments to be paid to retirees in a defined benefit pension plan. We examine the stock market reaction to the announcement of these offerings using event study methodologies. We find a statistically significant positive cumulative abnormal returns for the 20-day period prior to the event, the 20-day period after the event, and for the entire 41-day event period surrounding the announcement. We also find that the cumulative abnormal returns are higher the more liabilities a firm has and increases with the level of funding of the pension plan. Our results contribute to the literature on pensions by finding that firms that buy out their pensioners’ defined benefit payments via a lump-sum distribution experience an increase in firm value. There is a significant amount of analysis of such buyouts in the literature and in the press, but our results are the first to examine and document the increase in value derived from such pension changes. We also more fully develop the motivations for such events from a cost/benefit perspective.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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