Northern Trust Pension Universe Data: Canadian Pension Plan Returns Boosted by Robust Financial Markets During the Third Quarter
24 Oktober 2024 - 4:15PM
Business Wire
Canadian pension plans benefited from a strong finish to the
quarter by both stocks and bonds, according to the Northern Trust
Canada Universe. The median Canadian Pension Plan returned 4.8% for
the quarter and 8.4% year-to-date as of September 30.
The Northern Trust Canada Universe tracks the performance of
Canadian institutional defined benefit plans that subscribe to
performance measurement services as part of Northern Trust’s asset
service offerings.
A number of events triggered volatility in the third quarter,
including elections in the UK and France, the Bank of Japan’s
hawkish policy narrative, periodic selloffs across the technology
sector and pockets of weak economic data, all of which weighed on
investor confidence. Notwithstanding this backdrop, most major
central banks, the curators of monetary policy, continued to focus
on the fundamentals underpinning the economy, particularly
inflation. A commonality across most developed regions was the
trending decline in inflation, leading monetary policymakers to
maintain or embark upon a less restrictive tone.
The U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed), gaining confidence in its
progress to combat high inflation, initiated a 50-basis point rate
cut as it begins to unwind its restrictive policy. Although the
financial markets endured pockets of volatility during the period,
both equities and bonds welcomed this policy shift along with the
announcement of China’s massive stimulus package and concluded the
quarter with solid positive performance.
“As major central banks around the globe seek a path to
neutrality, Canadian pension plans remained in solid financial form
supported by healthy solvency ratios. Throughout the interest rate
journey, plan sponsors exercised vigilance through the lens of
balancing risks and adopting sound strategies that position plan
investments for a successful and sustainable retirement future,”
said Katie Pries, President and CEO of Northern Trust Canada.
During the third quarter impressive returns across both stocks
and bonds were observed as the headwinds felt by monetary policy
showed signs of moderating. Equity markets marched higher on the
heels of the Fed’s first interest rate cut since 2020, with
Canadian equities leading the path and posting a double-digit
return. This positive sentiment echoed across the Canadian bond
market as yields moved lower with the Canadian Bond Universe
closing the period with strong results.
- Canadian Equities, as measured by the S&P/TSX Composite
Index, advanced 10.5% for the quarter. All sectors within the index
posted positive performance, led by Real Estate followed by
Financials, Utilities and Health Care sectors.
- U.S. Equities, as measured by the S&P 500 Index, returned
4.5% in CAD for the quarter, with 10 of the 11 sectors generating
positive returns, led by the Utilities sector and followed by Real
Estate. The Energy sector was the only segment posting negative
returns for the period.
- International developed markets, as measured by the MSCI EAFE
Index, recorded 6.0% in CAD for the quarter. Most sectors advanced
during the period with Real Estate being the top performer and the
Energy sector posting the weakest results.
- The MSCI Emerging Markets Index generated 7.5% in CAD for the
quarter. Most sectors posted positive returns led by the Consumer
Discretionary and Health Care sectors, while Information Technology
and Energy sectors declined over the period.
The Canadian economy saw downward pressure on inflation
throughout the quarter impacted by excess supply. As the job data
continued to show signs of softening, this led the Bank of Canada
(BoC) to continue its monetary easing cycle.
The U.S. economy continued to exhibit signs of resilience
despite some of the pockets of underwhelming economic data releases
throughout the quarter. As inflation continued to decline coupled
with moderation in the labor market, the Fed cut its overnight
interest rate by 50 basis points to a range of 4.75% - 5.00%. This
marked the first reduction since March 2020 and also highlighted
the Fed’s confidence regarding the path of inflation.
International markets witnessed a cooling of Eurozone inflation
and concerns of an economic slowdown which led the European Central
Bank (ECB) to lower the deposit rates to 3.5%, marking its second
interest rate cut this year. The Bank of England (BoE) chose to cut
interest rates by 25 basis points to 5.0%, noting inflationary
pressures had eased. This represented its first interest rate cut
in four years. Meanwhile the Bank of Japan (BoJ) raised its
benchmark rate for the second time this year to 0.25%, the highest
it has been since 2008. In addition, the BoJ announced its plans to
scale back its monthly bond buying program.
Emerging markets observed solid gains during the third quarter.
The People’s Bank of China (PBoC) announced a massive stimulus
package in an effort to support its economy. The Central Bank of
Brazil raised its key Selic rate by 25 basis points to 10.75% to
bring inflation closer to target. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI)
held its benchmark rate at 6.5% as it seeks to tame inflation.
The Bank of Canada (BoC) in its September meeting cut interest
rates by 25 basis points to 4.25%, marking the second cut of the
quarter, and the third consecutive rate cut since June. The Bank
stated that the extension of its rate cuts was warranted as excess
supply in the economy continued to put downward pressure on
inflation.
The Canadian Fixed Income market, as measured by the FTSE Canada
Universe Bond Index, advanced 4.7% for the quarter. Provincial
bonds witnessed the strongest gains followed by Corporate and
Federal bonds. All bond durations witnessed gains for the quarter,
with long-term bonds leading followed by mid and short-term
bonds.
About Northern Trust
Northern Trust Corporation (Nasdaq: NTRS) is a leading provider
of wealth management, asset servicing, asset management and banking
to corporations, institutions, affluent families and individuals.
Founded in Chicago in 1889, Northern Trust has a global presence
with offices in 24 U.S. states and Washington, D.C., and across 22
locations in Canada, Europe, the Middle East and the Asia-Pacific
region. As of September 30, 2024, Northern Trust had assets under
custody/administration of US$17.4 trillion, and assets under
management of US$1.6 trillion. For more than 135 years, Northern
Trust has earned distinction as an industry leader for exceptional
service, financial expertise, integrity and innovation. Visit us on
northerntrust.com. Follow us on X (formerly Twitter) @NorthernTrust
or Northern Trust Corporation on LinkedIn.
Northern Trust Corporation, Head Office: 50 South La Salle
Street, Chicago, Illinois 60603 U.S.A., incorporated with limited
liability in the U.S. Global legal and regulatory information can
be found at https://www.northerntrust.com/terms-and-conditions.
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