Defined contribution plan sponsors have shied away from putting inflation-sensitive investments in their plan menus, but with inflation still high, some are starting to re-evaluate their thinking.
Katie Hockenmaier, Mercer's San Francisco-based U.S. defined contribution research director, for example, reports an increase in the number of plan sponsors evaluating or even adding fund options designed to soften the blow of inflation.
Multiasset real asset funds, often called diversified inflation funds, in particular, have piqued plan sponsor interest, she said.
These funds provide a mix of assets, such as Treasury inflation-protected securities, real estate investment trusts and commodities, giving participants different types of hedging mechanisms against various types of inflation, Ms. Hockenmaier said.
Over the past 18 months, more than a dozen large defined contribution plan sponsors have evaluated adding these funds to their investment lineup. Ms. Hockenmaier could not determine how many had in fact implemented the option.
While interest in stand-alone inflation-protected investments is triggering conversations, most plan sponsors remain reluctant to add them to their plans, choosing to keep their investment menus simple, even as the Federal Reserve struggles to tame inflation.
"Plan fiduciaries are balancing simplicity with diversity of choice in designing their lineups," said Mike Volo, a principal at CAPTRUST Financial Advisors LLC in Boston.
Data from Pensions & Investments' latest survey of the largest plan sponsors bears out the hesitancy toward stand-alone inflation-sensitive investments. Of the total $2.84 trillion in defined contribution assets for the 200 largest retirement plan sponsors, only $12 billion was reported in the three best-known inflation-fighting asset classes: TIPS, REITs and commodities. TIPS held $8 billion, while REITs held $3.2 billion and commodities held $800 million.