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			 Large companies' pension plans are reporting among their best 
			returns on record in 2013, dramatically closing funding gaps that 
			had opened up because of losses in the 2008-2009 stock market 
			collapse, and as government bond yields sank. 
 			All told, companies in the S&P 500 saw an aggregate improvement of 
			more than $300 billion in their pension plans, a gain that brought 
			assets to around 93 percent of expected obligations, according to 
			International Strategy & Investment, a New York research firm. That 
			is a robust recovery from 2008, when they hit an all-time low of 
			only 70.5 percent.
 			For investors, the performance of corporate pension plans is a small 
			but under-appreciated side effect of the bull market that has now 
			lasted for nearly five years. It will free up corporate cash for 
			dividends, stock buybacks, and new investments, while helping to 
			drive earnings growth, which could give a further nudge up to stock 
			prices, analysts say.
 			Some companies may also see upgrades to their bond ratings, lowering 
			their future borrowing costs.
 			David Zion, an analyst at ISI who co-authored the report, estimates 
			that the strong performance of pension plans will save companies in 
			the S&P 500 a total of $26 billion in the current fiscal year, 
			resulting in a 1.6 percent boost for the 2014 earnings per share of 
			the index. Analysts tracked by Thomson Reuters currently expect 
			earnings per share to rise 10.7 percent this year. 			
 
 			The benefits mostly accrue to older industrial companies, or those 
			who were traditionally unionized, as some of their workers and many 
			of their retirees tend to have the more generous defined-benefit 
			plans that are directly funded by the companies. The newer 
			technology and service companies, who tend to rely on 401K plans 
			that are largely the responsibility of workers to fund, are mostly 
			not affected.
 			Some companies reporting their fourth-quarter earnings in the past 
			few days have already said their results are benefiting from reduced 
			pension costs.
 			Business jet manufacturer Textron Inc, for instance, saw its shares 
			jump to a five-year high Wednesday after its earnings beat analyst 
			estimates. Along with a rebound in the business jet market, the 
			company is riding the performance of its pension plan. In 2010, it 
			contributed about $417 million to the plan as its funding ratio fell 
			to 77 percent, while in 2014, it expects to contribute just $80 
			million — a decline of nearly 81 percent. And now its pension plan 
			is funded at an estimated 101 percent level, according to ISI.
 			The same day, AT&T Inc said it expects to record a pre-tax gain of 
			about $7.6 billion in the fourth quarter from its pensions and 
			post-employment benefit plans. A day earlier, Verizon Communications 
			Inc reported fourth-quarter 2013 earnings of $5.07 billion, $3.7 
			billion of which was due to increases in the value of its pension 
			and other benefit plans.
 			"These kind of cost-savings over a three-to-four year span don't 
			happen often," said Eugene Stone, chief investment strategist at PNC 
			Asset Management, referring to the decline in pension costs at 
			companies since the end of 2009. "This is going to provide a 
			tailwind to earnings for 2014 that hasn't been there lately," he 
			said.
 			The gains have largely come from the stock market. The S&P 500 
			soared 32.4 percent, including dividends, last year, and has			climbed nearly 170 percent since its low in 2009. 			
 
 			In addition, the so-called discount rate — which serves as a proxy 
			for the interest rate a company could expect on a bond today to fund 
			its future obligations — increased as the yield on the 10-year 
			Treasury note rose off of historic lows in the second half of last 
			year. A higher discount rate means that companies do not have to 
			contribute as much to pension plans.
 			COST SAVINGS
 			Gains in defined benefit plans had an impact on many S&P 500 
			companies in 2013, ISI analyst Zion said. Only 58 companies in the 
			S&P 500 now have pensions that are less than 80 percent funded, 
			compared with 197 a year ago, and some recorded pension gains that 
			totaled more than 10 percent of their market caps.
 			United States Steel Corp, for instance, saw its pension assets rise 
			more than $1 billion (not including the company's contributions), an 
			improvement that brought its pension plan to a 92 percent funded 
			level. The gain was the equivalent of almost 31 percent of its 
			market value at the end of 2012 of $3.4 billion. The Goodyear Tire 
			and Rubber Co, Northrop Grumman Corp and Owens-Illinois Corp saw 
			gains of 15 percent or more of their end-2012 market caps. 
            Because most Wall Street analysts typically focus more on a 
			company's ongoing business than its pension obligations, those cost 
			savings could result in earnings surprises, Zion said. 
            
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			US Steel, for example, should see a benefit of 74 cents in earnings 
			per share directly from the improvement in its pension funding, a 
			level that amounts to 65 percent of consensus estimates of $1.15 per 
			share for 2013, Zion said. Alcoa Inc, meanwhile, should get a 
			pension benefit of 16 cents per share, a level that equates to 40 
			percent of consensus estimates of 41 cents per share. It is unclear 
			how much of the benefit has already been factored into those 
			earnings estimates by analysts.
 			HELP ON THE MARGINS
 			To be sure, few investors say they would invest in a company simply 
			because its pension costs are falling.
 			For example, Matthew Kaufler, a co-manager of the $1 billion 
			Federated Clover Value Fund, has held a position in Macy's Inc for 
			several years. He was pleased to see the department store chain 
			announced on January 8 that it had decided to forgo a $150 million 
			contribution to its pension plan in the fourth quarter because of 
			better-than-expected returns.
 			The pension plan savings "was a positive but in the list of 
			positives it was not at the top," Kaufler said. "People 
			fundamentally want Macy's to sell lots of clothes and home goods. 
			That's what drives the business, not the pension plan performance."
 			But higher funding levels do make these companies seem safer bets 
			over the long run because it means their balance sheets look better, 
			portfolio managers say.
 			"For so many of these companies, the magnitude of the downturn was 
			so great that they were kicked in the shins," said Scott Lawson, an 
			analyst who works on the $178 million Westwood LargeCap Value Fund. 
			"Now, with the plans back to their prior funding levels, it lowers 
			the risk profile."
 			TAKING RISK OFF THE TABLE
 			Several companies are heading into 2014 with pensions plans that are 
			in dramatically better shape than a year ago. Harley Davidson Inc, 
			for example, saw a 36 percentage point gain, to 118 percent of 
			obligations, in its funding levels over the past twelve months, 
			according to ISI estimates.
 			Yet despite the gains in pension assets, companies may still face 
			some risk in the long-term, analysts say. Any sudden reversal in the 
			stock market is one concern. Workers living longer is another. 			
			 
 			A 60-year old worker who retires today is expected to live 26.7 
			years longer on average, a 1.8-year improvement over previous 
			lifespan estimates released by the Society of Actuaries in 2000. 
			That nearly two year increase will result in a 6 percent increase in 
			pension obligations, said Karin Franceries, an executive director at 
			J.P. Morgan Asset Management.
 			In the past, companies often cited overfunding as a reason to 
			terminate their pension plans. More recently, companies such as 
			General Motors Co and Ford Motor Co, cut their pension risks by 
			offloading their plans onto insurance companies, which then offer 
			annuities to plan participants.
 			Now, though, many companies may find it more attractive to keep 
			their own plans, said Zorast Wadia, a principal at actuarial 
			consulting firm Milliman, which produces an annual study of pension 
			funding. Insurance companies typically want plans to have a funding 
			rate of 115 percent or more before they will take on their risks, 
			Wadia said.
 			"A lot of these companies are going to find it's cheaper to keep 
			(it)," Wadia said, referring to the pension plans.
 			Equities now typically make up about 40 percent of plan assets, 
			though some companies, such as Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway 
			Inc, had as much as 72 percent of pension plan assets in stocks as 
			recently as 2012.
 			"These plan sponsors are coming off the best year in their careers, 
			and I expect many of them are going to be happy to take some risk 
			off the table," Wadia said.
 			It may be the final paradox of a 2013 market rally that few saw 
			coming: stocks have helped pension plans so much that they decide to 
			sell them and buy bonds instead.
 			(Reporting by David Randall; editing by 
			Linda Stern, Martin Howell and Grant McCool) 
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