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Investment Strategy
FEB 2026
1 min read

Liability-Driven Investing: Matching Assets to Obligations

Prof. James Chen

Professor Chen teaches pension economics at Columbia Business School and advises several state pension funds.

"Discover how liability-driven investing (LDI) helps pension funds match their assets to future payment obligations."
# Liability-Driven Investing Liability-Driven Investing (LDI) is an investment strategy that focuses on matching the duration and cash flows of a pension fund's assets with its future liabilities. ## Why LDI Matters Traditional asset-only approaches focus solely on maximizing returns. LDI takes a different approach by first understanding the nature of pension obligations and then constructing a portfolio that can reliably meet those obligations. ## Key Components ### Duration Matching By matching the duration of assets to liabilities, pension funds can reduce interest rate risk—one of the largest risks facing defined benefit plans. ### Cash Flow Matching For near-term obligations, cash flow matching ensures that specific assets mature at the same time payments are due. ### Surplus Optimization Once the liability-matching portfolio is established, any surplus can be invested more aggressively to improve funded status.

Key Lessons

  • 1.LDI reduces the volatility of funded status
  • 2.Interest rate risk is the primary concern for pension liabilities
  • 3.Cash flow matching is most effective for near-term obligations
  • 4.A well-funded pension can afford more aggressive surplus management
Source: Columbia Business School Research

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