Pillar II: temporary derogation for government bond exposure – impact on returns and risk profile

The immediate impact on fund performance is a recalibration of the risk–return balance in favor of stability, with potential short-term yield compression but reduced portfolio volatility.

Through Norma ASF nr. 11/2026, published in the Official Gazette no. 300/15.04.2026, the Autoritatea de Supraveghere Financiară introduces a temporary derogation from the 70% cap on investments in government securities for privately managed pension funds, as set out in Legea nr. 411/2004.

Investment flexibility and operational simplification

Fund managers may exceed the 70% threshold until April 30, 2027, without amending pension scheme prospectuses. The decision is unilateral, subject to two procedural requirements:

  • notification to ASF within 2 days
  • informing participants via website disclosure

This simplification removes a significant administrative constraint, particularly in periods of heightened market volatility.

Extended derogations from investment constraints

The application of the regulation generates two structural effects:

  • temporary removal of minimum allocation limits for other asset classes (equities, corporate bonds)
  • suspension of the minimum declared risk threshold, exclusively allowing downward adjustment

From an asset allocation perspective, this enables rapid repositioning toward low-risk assets, primarily government bonds issued by Romania, the EU, or the EEA.

Implications for participants and returns

An increased allocation to government bonds leads directly to:

  • reduced exposure to equity markets
  • lower medium-term return potential
  • stabilization of fund unit value during uncertain periods

For participants, this translates into a more conservative retirement savings profile, without direct changes to contribution levels.

Rebalancing obligation and execution risk

After the derogation expires, managers have 180 days to return within standard legal limits. This phase involves operational risks:

  • accelerated portfolio reallocations
  • exposure to prevailing market conditions
  • potential impact on fund performance

Although temporary, the measure sets a precedent for increased flexibility in Pillar II investment rules, directly affecting how systemic risk is managed in private pension funds.