We all know that Eastman Kodak (KODK) is in trouble. The iconic photography brand filed for bankruptcy protection in 2012, and has spent the last 13 years shedding businesses and performing a series of financial contortion acts to keep things up and running.
Kodak’s latest victim: its 97-year-old pension plan.
The company’s desperately trying to shore up $477 million worth of debt. To wipe the slate clean, Kodak has decided to terminate its pension plan over the coming months. The reversion will generate $500 million in cash after the company sells off investment assets, which should be enough to ensure Kodak stays afloat.
But what about the pension scheme’s 35,000 employees?
This is where it gets a bit complicated.
Existing plan participants will have to choose between settling through an annuity or taking a lump sum on their balance. At this stage, retirees aren’t going to see a change in the value of benefits they’d been promised. In the meantime, Kodak’s still trying to work out what kind of pension it’ll introduce for new and current employees moving forward.
Regardless of the type of scheme Kodak comes up with, this move is undeniably another nail in the coffin for the traditional pension plan.
To explain why, let’s pump the brakes and talk about what pension plans are. We’ll also cover what companies are still offering pensions, and why Kodak’s move to terminate its plan matters to all retirement savers.
A pension plan is a popular retirement benefit. After you enroll in a pension plan, you or your employer starts contributing money into an investment fund that grows over time. This ensures you’ve still got a regular source of income after you stop working.
There are loads of different retirement products available on the market to help retirement savers plan for the future. But when people talk about pensions, they’re normally referring to a “defined benefit plan.”
A defined benefit plan sees an employer invest in a retirement fund on your behalf. You’re then guaranteed a fixed annual income after you stop working. It also generally includes survivor benefits so your loved ones continue to receive payments after you die.