Skip to Content

New Report Details How U.S. Public Pension Plan Investment Strategies Have Adapted to Meet Changing Market Conditions

Jun 16, 2025

Uncertainty business Global finance crisis investment investing managing risk in risk asset analyzing financial chart trading invest data price crypto currency market graph

For Immediate Release

New Report Details How U.S. Public Pension Plan Investment Strategies Have Adapted to Meet Changing Market Conditions

Analysis from Aon and the National Institute on Retirement Security Finds Public Pension Funds Have Successfully Navigated Economic Downturns by Reallocating Investment Portfolios and Seizing New Asset Class Opportunities

Webinar on June 25 to Review Report Findings

WASHINGTON, D.C., June 17, 2025 – A new report from the National Institute on Retirement Security (NIRS) and Aon examines the changes public pension plan investing has undergone throughout the twenty-first century. After decades of investing primarily in bonds and other fixed income assets, public pension plans have shifted to more diverse investment portfolios, which enabled these funds to grow, deliver reliable benefits, and withstand market turmoil during and after the 2008 Global Financial Crisis (GFC).

These findings are detailed in a new report, Evolution and Growth: How Public Pension Plans Have Diversified Their Investments Amid Changing Markets. The report is authored by Tyler Bond, Research Director at NIRS; Katie Comstock, Partner and Head of Public Sector Solutions at Aon; and John Sullivan, Associate Partner, Asset-Liability Management at Aon.

Read the report.

Register for the webinar on Wednesday, June 25, 2025, at 2:00 PM ET.

“Financial markets are never static, and the broader economy is always changing. Amid this environment, the challenge and responsibility of public pension funds is to adapt and deliver reliable benefits for public service employees. The analysis in this report finds public pension funds in the U.S. have accomplished this mission, even during a period of unprecedented market changes,” said report co-author Tyler Bond. “The data shows that, over time, public pension funds have diversified their investment portfolios, allocating capital across public and private equity, real estate, hedge funds, and other alternative assets. This strategic diversification has helped them consistently provide stable and reliable retirement income to workers, even through changing market conditions.”

“This analysis of how public pension plans have responded to market conditions illustrates notable drivers of asset allocation evolution and public plan sponsors’ ability to adapt” said report co-author Katie Comstock. “The data shows that strategic shifts in asset allocation have helped many public pensions meet return expectations while recovering from major financial shocks. This research reflects Aon’s commitment to arming clients with the analytical tools and insights to make confident, forward-looking investment decisions in an ever-evolving market environment.”

The report’s key insights and analysis are as follows:

  • Public pension plans have significantly diversified their portfolios. From 2001 to 2023, the average plan reallocated about 20 percent of its assets from public equity and fixed income into private equity, real estate, hedge funds, and other alternative investments.
  • Public pension plans adopted the prudent investor rule throughout the twentieth century. During their early years in the 1920s and 1930s, U.S. public pension plans largely followed an investing philosophy known as “fiscal mutualism” in which they invested primarily in municipal bonds. By the mid-twentieth century, most plans had adopted the “prudent investor rule” instead. This shift in investment philosophy opened the door for the more diverse portfolios seen today.
  • Pension funds responded to significant changes in financial market conditions. Changes in the broader economy and financial markets, such as the long-term reduction in interest rates and the decline in the number of publicly traded companies, have led plans to adjust their investment portfolios in response to changing market conditions.
  • The decade of ultra-low interest rates was a notable period of transition and change for public plan investments. This fiscal policy decision following the financial crisis had major consequences for how public plans invest.
  • More diverse pension plan portfolios have performed strongly in recent years. When compared to a “traditional” 60/40 or 70/30 public stock/bond portfolio, the diversified portfolios of public pension plans in the U.S. mostly outperformed following the GFC, measured net-of-fees over rolling five-year periods. Moreover, the diversified portfolio exhibited less volatility and greater upside and downside benefits.
  • Public pension plans have met their investment return expectations more frequently since the GFC. When compared to their own return expectations (defined as the actuarial assumed rate of return), U.S. public plans have largely met or exceeded these expectations over rolling five- and 10-year periods that correspond with greater diversification and lower actuarial assumed rates of return. Furthermore, the diversified portfolio met these objectives more frequently than the traditional portfolios.

The National Institute on Retirement Security is a non-profit, non-partisan organization established to contribute to informed policymaking by fostering a deep understanding of the value of retirement security to employees, employers and the economy as a whole. Located in Washington, D.C., NIRS membership includes financial services firms, employee benefit plans, trade associations, and other retirement service providers. More information is available at www.nirsonline.org.

Aon plc (NYSE: AON) exists to shape decisions for the better — to protect and enrich the lives of people around the world. Through actionable analytic insight, globally integrated Risk Capital and Human Capital expertise, and locally relevant solutions, our colleagues provide clients in over 120 countries with the clarity and confidence to make better risk and people decisions that protect and grow their businesses.Follow Aon on LinkedInXFacebook and Instagram. Stay up-to-date by visiting Aon’s newsroom and sign up for news alerts here.

Related News

The Unsung Economic Engine: Retiree Pension Spending
woman spending money at store

The Unsung Economic Engine: Retiree Pension Spending

In a new Forbes column NIRS Executive Director Dan Doonan writes that pension income is so much more than just income for retirees – it’s also a reliable economic engine that impacts virtually every community across the U.S. When pension income lands in a retiree’s bank account, that money doesn’t just sit in an account. […]

Mar 3, 2025

Retiree Spending of Pension Income Fueled $1.5 Trillion In Economic Output
Senior woman making spending money at a restaurant.

Retiree Spending of Pension Income Fueled $1.5 Trillion In Economic Output

Retiree spending powered by U.S. private and public sector defined benefit pensions contributed significantly to the economy in 2022, according to a new report from the National Institute on Retirement Security.

Pensionomics 2025: Measuring the Economic Impact of Defined Benefit Pension Expenditures calculates the national economic impacts of U.S pension plans, as well as the impact of state and local plans on a state-by-state basis.

Jan 6, 2025

Pension Spending Supports 7.5 Million Jobs, 1.2 Trillion in Economic Output
Older Man in stori looking at medicine to buy.

Pension Spending Supports 7.5 Million Jobs, 1.2 Trillion in Economic Output

PENSION SPENDING SUPPORTS 7.5 MILLION JOBS, $1.2 TRILLION IN ECONOMIC OUTPUT ACROSS THE U.S. Real Estate, Food Services, Health Care, and Retail Sectors See Biggest Employment Impacts Webcast on January 10th at 2 PM ET to Review Findings WASHINGTON, D.C., January 10, 2019 – A new report finds that economic gains attributable to defined benefit […]

Jan 10, 2019