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Pension: “Almost no bonds” – 80 percent of generation capital should go into stocks

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Pension: “Almost no bonds” – 80 percent of generation capital should go into stocks

Economy Government pension strategy

“Almost no bonds” – 80 percent of generation capital should go into stocks

Status: 06.04.2024 | Reading time: 2 minutes

Anja Mikus is chairwoman of the fund for financing nuclear waste disposal

Source: Marlene Gawrisch/WELT

The federal government wants to pay at least twelve billion euros into the state pension fund over the next few years. The plans of the administrator of the money, Anja Mikus, are concrete, as WELT AM SONNTAG learned. Sustainability should also play a major role.

The generation capital planned by the federal government is to be invested predominantly in stocks. “Due to the return requirements, the share share should go towards 80 percent,” said Anja Mikus, CEO of the responsible Kenfo Foundation, to WELT AM SONNTAG. The portfolio will have “almost no bonds.” The federal government wants to use generation capital to stabilize the statutory pension system.

Mikus rejected the accusation of gambling on the stock market with the statutory pension. “We don’t gamble. “I can reassure everyone,” she said. It’s not about investing money in the short term and selling the securities again quickly. The entrusted funds would be invested in a long-term and diversified manner around the world.

“The German state is finally starting to use the capital markets more for itself and its citizens’ retirement provision,” said Mikus. Other countries have been doing this successfully for decades. They conservatively expect an annual return of an average of six percent, from which interest costs of three percent for the federal government’s debt would have to be deducted.

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Mikus announced a “return-oriented sustainability strategy” for generation capital with a focus on the areas of environment, social issues and good corporate governance. “And not to look good to the outside world, but because investments in companies that are constantly improving in these three areas bring higher returns in the long term,” said Mikus.

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Mikus left it open to what extent investments in individual sectors would be excluded. However, the foundation chairwoman does not expect politics to have too much influence on investment decisions.

“The broad will of the responsible ministries and political representatives is that we are not hindered by political influence when investing capital and can invest flexibly,” she said.

Administration hardly requires any staff

In their view, the current 50-strong team, which has been managing the Kenfo nuclear fund since 2017, is largely sufficient to manage generational capital. “With the generational capital, only five to seven employees should be added,” said Mikus.

The federal government’s draft pension package II stipulates, among other things, that the federal government will pay at least twelve billion euros into the new sovereign wealth fund over the next few years. The income will then be used to prevent an even greater increase in pension contributions from 2036. However, the law has not yet been passed by the Bundestag and Bundesrat. “I hope we can do this by the summer break,” said Mikus.

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