Wilshire Data Highlights Impressive Market Growth for Q3

Pension funds have benefitted strongly in the last quarter—and the last several years—from strong stock market performance. 

Institutional assets tracked by the Wilshire Trust Universe Comparison Service delivered a median return of 3.25% for all retirement plan types in the third quarter of 2017.

As Wilshire lays out, this implies a median one-year gain of 11.40%, markedly higher than the low- to mid-single digit returns that had been forecasted by many.

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“This quarter marked the eighth consecutive positive quarter, the longest string of positive quarterly returns for all plan types since June 1998, which marked a string of 14 positive quarters in a row,” explains Robert Waid, managing director, Wilshire Associates. “This quarter’s return boosted the one-year return to 11.40% for the year ending September 30, 2017, compared to 11.31% for the year ending June 30, 2017.”

Wilshire’s data shows this was the best one-year return since the year ending June 30, 2014. That year ended with a 15.51% median return and a third consecutive quarter to post an annual return above 10%.

For context, the Wilshire 5000 Total Market Index returned 4.59% for the third quarter and 18.89% for the year ending September 30, 2017, while the MSCI AC World ex U.S. for international equities rose 6.16% in the third quarter and 19.61% for the year. At the same time, the Wilshire Bond Index also gained 0.63% in the third quarter and 0.96% for the year.

“This resulted in a positive range of median plan-type returns in the second quarter, as the low median return was 2.03% for Taft Hartley Health and Welfare Funds and the high median return was 3.63% for public funds with assets greater than $5 billion,” Waid reports. “For one-year returns, the low median return was 7.15% for Taft Hartley Health and Welfare Funds and the high median return was 12.81% for public funds with assets greater than $5 billion.”

Other data from Wilshire shows, for the third quarter in a row, large public funds outperformed small public funds. Large foundations and endowments continued to have significant exposure to alternatives, with the median exposure rising slightly to 37.94% in the third quarter. All plan types with assets greater than $1 billion experienced median returns of 3.28% for the third quarter and 11.83% for the year ending September 30, 2017, compared to plans with assets less than $1 billion, which experienced median returns of 3.23% for the third quarter and 11.19% for the year.

As Waid further observes, in the third quarter, only Taft Hartley Health and Welfare Funds experienced median returns worse than the 60/40 portfolio, which returned 3.01%. This pulled the median return for all plan types down slightly to 3.25%, but it remained above the 60/40 portfolio for the third consecutive quarter.

“The first quarter of 2017 was notably the first time this happened since the quarter ending June 2015,” Waid notes.

Wilshire TUCS is a cooperative effort between Wilshire Analytics, the investment technology unit of Wilshire Associates Incorporated, and custodial organizations. More research and information is available here

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