Confero Spring 2014: Issue 6 | Page 21

Stable Value Funds Today the underlying strength developing in the U.S. economy flows into higher real growth this year. Household net worth has largely recovered, quality of consumer and corporate balance sheets has improved significantly, and gains in real GDP inputs are solid, so it is our opinion that real growth has upside potential relative to forecasts. Because corporate balance sheets are healthy, because consumers have deleveraged, and because there is increasing access to credit, I believe real demand will support higher-thanexpected growth in 2014. Offsetting higher interest rates is a tighter spread environment, so that increasing earned rates in a portfolio will be a very gradual outcome of rising Treasury rates. The composition of SVF, as well as cash flow generated from the SVF that will participate in a rising rate environment, are factors that also determine credited rate movements. Why SVF today? An investor nearing retirement or in retirement may want to preserve principal and minimize risk. SVF may be more appealing to this type of investor for several reasons. Management fees for SVF are typically less expensive than those of bond mutual funds, SVF can be used as a low-risk tool to diversify overall portfolio risk, and credited rates typically do not fall below 0 percent. The SVF crediting rate smoothing formula relative to the actual return earned on a bond mutual fund, which can be negative in a rising interest rate environment, may also be more appealing for these types of investors. In a rising rate environment, managing duration exposure and cash flow reinvestment is critical to performance. With an improving economy as a backdrop, the Federal Reserve Board taper program underway and the Fed Funds rate expected to increase in 2015, opportunities to increase yield and SVF credited rates will grow. Current positioning is important so that cash and SVF cash flows can be targeted to these opportunities, participate in the higher rate environment, and grow asset balances over time. n Catharine Tocher is the Senior Vice President & Chief Investment Officer, Separate Accounts at Great-West Financial® www.conferomag.com | 19