Assets managed by pension providers and in public pension reserve funds are invested primarily in bonds and equities. The proportions of equities and bonds in the portfolios vary considerably across countries. There is generally a greater preference for bonds.
Allocation of assets
Copy link to Allocation of assetsKey results
Copy link to Key resultsIn most countries, bonds and equities where the two main asset classes in which pension providers invested the assets of pension plans at the end of 2024. Bonds and equities accounted for more than half of investments in 34 out of 38 OECD countries, and in three reporting non-OECD G20 jurisdictions. The combined proportion of bonds and equities was the highest (relatively to the size of the portfolio) in Poland (96.1%), Estonia (95.1%), Norway (94.3%) and Latvia (94.3%) among OECD countries (Figure 9.3). Pension plan assets may have been invested in these instruments either directly or indirectly through collective investment schemes (CIS). For some countries, the look-though of CIS investments was not available, such as for Slovenia (where 30.4% of assets were invested in CIS), Sweden (58.8% of investments) and the United States (29.5% of investments). Only the direct investments in bonds and equities are available for these countries (e.g. 65.6% for Slovenia, 34.1% for Sweden, 51% for the United States). The actual overall exposure of pension plan assets to bonds and equities is probably higher in these countries.
The respective proportion of equities and bonds varied considerably across countries at end‑2024. Although there was in general a greater preference for bonds, the reverse was true in 14 OECD countries and in South Africa where equities outweighed bonds (e.g. by 48.9% to 15.6% in Australia, by 70.5% to 22.8% in Lithuania).
Within bond investments, public sector bonds, as opposed to corporate bonds, represented a larger share of the combined direct bond holdings (i.e. excluding CIS investment) in a number of countries at end‑2024. For example, public sector bonds accounted for 92.1% of total direct bond holdings in Czechia, 91% in Israel, but only 21.9% in New Zealand and 21% in Norway.
Cash and deposits also accounted for a significant share of pension plan assets in some OECD countries and in Indonesia at end‑2024. For example, the proportion of cash and deposits was 44.8% of pension plan assets in Korea, 16.3% in Indonesia, 15.2% in Czechia and 11.5% in Greece.
In most reporting countries, loans, real estate (land and buildings), unallocated insurance contracts and private investment funds (shown as “other” in the chart) only accounted for relatively small shares of the investments of pension plan assets at end‑2024 despite some exceptions. Real estate was a significant component of the portfolios of pension providers (directly or indirectly through CIS) in some countries such as Canada (10.6% of total assets) and Switzerland (21.9%).
Bonds and equities were also the predominant asset classes within the portfolios of public pension reserve funds (PPRFs). The reporting PPRFs invested 42.5% of their assets in bonds and 40.5% in equities on average (Figure 9.4). There was a stronger appetite for equities in some reserve funds. Australia’s Future Fund, the Canada Pension Plan Reserve Fund, New Zealand Superannuation Fund and Sweden’s AP Funds invested more than half of their portfolio in equities, while their bond holdings varied between 0.3% of their portfolio (for Sweden’s AP6) to 27.6% (for Sweden’s AP2). By contrast, reserve funds in Chile, Portugal and Poland for instance invested much more in bonds than equities. The extreme case is the one of the US PPRF, which is by law fully invested in government bonds.
Some PPRFs also invested in real estate and non-traditional asset classes like hedge funds or other instruments. For example, New Zealand Superannuation Fund held 4% of its assets in land and buildings, 3% in hedge funds and 11% in private equity funds.
Definition and measurement
The term “pension plans” refers to plans that individuals access via their employer or a financial institution, and in which they accumulate rights or assets. Assets belong to plan members and finance their own future retirement. These assets may accumulate in pension funds, through pension insurance contracts or in other savings vehicles offered and managed by banks or investment funds. Employers may set up provisions or reserves in their books to finance the retirement benefits of occupational pension plans.
PPRFs are reserves established with the primary goal to support unfunded / pay-as-you-go public pension arrangements.
Data on asset allocation include both direct investment in equities, bills and bonds and cash and deposits, and indirect investment through Collective Investment Schemes (CIS) when possible. The OECD Global Pension Statistics exercise collects data on the investments in CIS, as well as the look-through of these investments in equities, bills and bonds, cash and deposits, and other. When the look-through was not provided by reporting countries, only the direct investments in equities, bills and bonds and cash and deposits are known and shown; investments in CIS are shown separately in that case.
Figure 9.3. Asset allocation of pension providers at the end of 2024 or latest year available
Copy link to Figure 9.3. Asset allocation of pension providers at the end of 2024 or latest year availableAs a percentage of total investment
Figure 9.4. Asset allocation of public pension reserve funds, at end‑2024
Copy link to Figure 9.4. Asset allocation of public pension reserve funds, at end‑2024As a percentage of total investment
Note: See Statlink.
Source: OECD Global Pension Statistics and websites of public pension reserve funds.