PENSION FUND REGULATION: UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES OF FOREIGN INVESTMENT RESTRICTIONS IN AN EMERGING MARKET ECONOMY

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Coert Frederik Erasmus ORCID logo, Johan van Huyssteen ORCID logo

https://doi.org/10.22495/rgcv6i4siart6

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Abstract

Retirement savings allow investors to earn income after retirement by saving while being part of the workforce. Retirement savings comprise the largest portion of retirement savings and should be safeguarded by effective regulation. To safeguard retirement savings, exposure to foreign asset investments is limited. However, in an emerging economy, limiting foreign asset investments, especially investment in developed markets, could hamper the potential investment returns due to the translation risk. To assess the effect of translation risk, a preservation provident fund was used in the present study to determine whether the returns of this preservation provident fund would be adversely affected by investment allocation regulation. The findings indicated how the translation effect affected the preservation provident fund, illustrating the adverse unintended consequences of investment regulation in emerging market economies. Consequently, regulators should reconsider the maximum allowed foreign asset investment in pension fund regulations to enhance investment returns from foreign asset investments.

Keywords: Asset Allocation, Investment Returns, Longevity, Regulation, Retirement Funds

How to cite this paper: Erasmus, C.F., & van Huyssteen, J. (2016). Pension fund regulation: Unintended consequences of foreign investment restrictions in an emerging market economy. Risk governance & control: financial markets & institutions, 6(4, special issue), 485-493. https://doi.org/10.22495/rgcv6i4siart6