this post was submitted on 30 May 2026
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Except the Danish government-mandated pension fund ATP that everyone is forced to contribute to. If you want to hit jackpot just invest opposite of what ATP is investing.
Why is it so bad? I don’t know about the exact situation, but 10.4% average yearly gain seems exactly like what a pension fund should do. Trying to hit the jackpot with people’s pensions is not a secure or sustainable way to deal with people’s pensions.
The last 8 years straight they've lost money though...
That appears to be fundamentally false.
Not when you look at their entire (investment) business. an article from the biggest danish financial paper outlines it (paywalled)
ATP is actually an insurance company masquerading as a pension fund: focus more on their guarantees, instead of getting optimal returns.
Their guaranties and payouts in their inaurance-branch are also horrendous and laughable, plagued by nonsensical coverage rules and ridiculous low rates.
Edit: and no, it's not an insurance company masquerading as a pension fund, the areas are two entirely independent branches they have slowly been merged over time in the name of government efficiency (a.k.a. budget cuts). They also handle student financial support and basically all government financial aid programmes. But again, the cost of these things are entirely separate from the pension fund and how that is managed, it's not the same pool of money.
Ah, yeah that sounds pretty bad
They’re all active on WallStreetBets…
This is unfortunately way too real. How a supposedly professionally managed fund can loose money when prretty much the entire market is trending upwards is almost impressive.