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If you want illiquidity, don’t expect a free bar.

Everything has it’s price, there is no such thing as free lunch- or if we’re talking “liquidity” – a free bar.

We don’t talk “liquidity” in everyday conversation, it’s a term that is mainly used in financial circles and put simply, it’s the measure of how easy it is to turn an investment into cash. If you invest in a public market, you can expect your money in a couple of day, if you put your money in a bank, a couple of seconds but if you invest in a toll road or a start-up company, getting your money out might take years. There is no liquidity in shares of my company AgeWage right now.

DC savers are used to being able to get cash out of their savings when they’re allowed. For most people that currently means when they’re 55 , they can have their savings back as a lump sum , a series of lump sums or as an income. There is no free bar, that liquidity comes at a price, you only get to invest in liquid markets. That is fine for most people.

But it’s not fine for Government, who wants our savings tied up in long-term projects such as the financing of start-ups or the building and maintenance of toll roads. We are asked to look to Australia as an example of a place where you can have illiquidity and a free bar.

Except it turns out, you can’t. It seems that many savvy Australians are drinking at someone else’s expense . Australian Jo Cumbo takes up the story.

Thanks to Jeremy Cooper, not just for the comments but for the phrase “pure silly” – which I hope migrates to the UK. Thanks to Jo for an excellent summary of an excellent article.

We have to learn about the trade-offs that happen when you want the benefits of illiquidity and of a free bar – when it comes to consumption. It’s one or the other – but not both.

In the short-term we can accomodate people taking their money when they want it as they want it, but if we are to move to a pension system where the underlying savings are free for encashment without notice, then there will be trouble ahead

Speaking at a Local Government Conference in Leeds last month, Debbie Fielder, whose-Clwyd LGPS fund is very well funded as a result of long-term diversification into illiquids, told the audience that she was currently having cashflow problems meeting unexpected demands on the fund. We’re in DB land here – where “unexpected” is a lot more “expected” than where pension freedom applies. I spoke with her and about the fund’s dilemma, put simply, those who want large amounts of cash from the fund have to wait and are paid according to rules, otherwise assets are sold in a hurry “a fire sale” and the valuation of the assets falls.

Protecting the value of the assets till “redemption” is at full value is known as “gating” and is part and parcel of the deal that institutional investors sign up to.

Debbie’s job is to order the disinvestments to meet the needs of pensioners and employers moving in and out of the LGPS fund. DC managers need to understand the discipline she applies and need to create redemption strategies that meet the cashflow calls of the DC funds they run. If there is no cashflow plan, because everyone is drinking at the pension freedom bar, then illiquids don’t work, or at least give rise to the kind of problems Jeremy Cooper is talking of.

We either need rules and illiquidity or freedoms and liquidy.  We can’t drink at the free bar and expect the higher and smoother returns that come from diversifying into illiquid assets. This is a critical lesson and one that in its Mansion House reforms, the Government seem to have recognised.

 

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