AUSTRIA – IBM’s pension fund in Austria has disclosed that Axel Benesch has stepped down as its director.
The pension fund said management duties were now split between Richard Schwarz, a managing director, and Axel Frolik, chief financial officer.
It is not clear whether a direct replacement will be found for Benesch and the fund did not disclose the reason for his departure.
According to Pensionfundsonline.co.uk, the Vienna-based fund is an Austrian Pensionskasse with €500m in assets, 1,400 contributing members and 1,000 pensioners.
In 2005, another good year for equities, it and other Austrian Pensionskassen had an average return of 11.4%.
The departure of Benesch from IBM’s Austrian Pensionskasse comes against the backdrop of the US computer giant’s campaign to slash worldwide pension costs.
As 2006 began, IBM announced a freeze on its DB plan for US employees, which has an estimated $50bn (€41bn) in assets. Later in January, IBM announced proposed changes to its UK pension arrangements, including reductions in future benefits for DB-covered employees and an offer that those employees switch to DC.
Meanwhile in Germany, the computer giant wants to switch 11,000 employees there from DB schemes to a DC one in a bid to reduce pension costs by several hundred million euros.
IBM’s German Pensionskasse has €5.9bn in assets and is headed by Peter Thonet.
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