ING see scope for a continued steepening of the EUR 20s30s curve, helped by Dutch pension fund demand. In addition to demand for fixed receiver swaps (particularly 20y tenors) stemming from the transition from a defined benefits to defined contribution system in 2026, the recent sell-off in global equities and lowering in global rates has placed pressure on pension fund’s funding ratios.
- “The sell-off in equities lowers the funds’ assets, whilst lower interest rates increase liabilities”.
- “Our modelling suggests that the impact so far on the average funding ratio is around -4%, which would bring the ratio down to 114%”
- “Several large funds, including the largest ABP (€500bn+ AUM), have a lower funding ratio than the average, and thus risk seeing their funding ratio fall too close to 100% for comfort”.
- “The added headwinds and volatility therefore incentivise funds to hedge risk, either through fixed receiver swaps, equity puts or swaptions”.
- “The period leading to the transition dates could see increased demand for fixed receiver swaps, particularly in the 20y space. The 30y tenor is less attractive given that longer-dated hedges will become obsolete after transitioning to defined contributions. As such, the steepening of the 20s30s curve could run longer, helped by Dutch pension fund demand.”