Britain’s $2.9 Trillion Pension Industry Yanks Money From Equities

  • Managers are required to lock in gains almost automatically
  • The aim is to make retirement plans less vulnerable to slumps
Elderly pedestrians walk using walking sticks on Eastbourne Pier in Eastbourne, U.K., on Monday, Aug. 22, 2016. Pensions are looking like an economic time bomb for Britain, meaning investors had better watch how the nation tries to defuse it.

Photographer: Matthew Lloyd/Bloomberg

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If the basic tenet of investing is knowing when to buy and sell, the stock market boom has taken that decision out of the hands of some money managers.

The $2.9 trillion British pension fund industry is yanking money at an accelerated pace as company valuations forge new records globally. The reason is that the gains are triggering sell orders to quickly lock in investment returns, a safety mechanism introduced after the financial crisis to reduce exposure to potential market bubbles and subsequent collapses.