XML 40 R21.htm IDEA: XBRL DOCUMENT v3.20.4
Benefit Plans
12 Months Ended
Dec. 26, 2020
Retirement Benefits [Abstract]  
Benefit Plans Benefit Plans
Pension and Other Postretirement Plans

The Company sponsors several qualified and nonqualified pension plans and other postretirement benefit plans for certain employees.  The following tables provide a reconciliation of the changes in the most significant plans’ benefit obligations and the fair value of the plans’ assets for 2020 and 2019, and a statement of the plans’ aggregate funded status:

 Pension BenefitsOther Benefits
(In thousands)2020201920202019
Change in benefit obligation:    
Obligation at beginning of year$182,164 $166,739 $12,653 $14,382 
Service cost— — 212 260 
Interest cost3,260 5,972 430 609 
Actuarial loss (gain)10,790 17,061 422 (1,860)
Plan amendments— — (26)— 
Benefit payments(9,214)(9,883)(716)(832)
Curtailment— — (183)— 
Settlement (1)
(99,585)— — (198)
Foreign currency translation adjustment3,394 2,275 (10)292 
Obligation at end of year90,809 182,164 12,782 12,653 
Change in fair value of plan assets:    
Fair value of plan assets at beginning of year183,486 164,603 — — 
Actual return on plan assets13,313 26,734 — — 
Employer contributions— — 716 832 
Benefit payments(9,214)(9,883)(716)(832)
Settlement (1)
(99,585)— — — 
Surplus assets (1)
(12,386)— — — 
Foreign currency translation adjustment2,866 2,032 — — 
Fair value of plan assets at end of year78,480 183,486 — — 
Funded (underfunded) status at end of year$(12,329)$1,322 $(12,782)$(12,653)
(1)In November 2019, the Company’s Board of Directors approved the termination of the U.S. defined benefit pension plan. There were no impacts to consolidated results for 2019. Settlement accounting criteria was met in Q4 2020, therefore, all resulting settlement charges occurred in 2020. The plan termination resulted in incremental benefit payments of approximately $100.0 million and termination costs of $17.8 million, which consisted of an $11.6 million non-cash
settlement charge and $6.2 million in federal excise tax on surplus assets returned to the Company of approximately $12.4 million, as of December 26, 2020.

The following represents amounts recognized in AOCI (before the effect of income taxes):

 Pension BenefitsOther Benefits
(In thousands)2020201920202019
Unrecognized net actuarial loss (gain)$26,476 $36,195 $(1,187)$(1,609)
Unrecognized prior service credit— — (2,401)(5,485)
 
The Company sponsors one pension plan in the U.K. which comprised 100 and 43 percent of the above benefit obligation at December 26, 2020 and December 28, 2019, respectively, and 100 and 39 percent of the above plan assets at December 26, 2020 and December 28, 2019, respectively.

As of December 26, 2020, $0.9 million of the actuarial net loss and the remainder of the prior service credit will, through amortization, be recognized as components of net periodic benefit cost in 2021.
 
The aggregate status of all overfunded plans is recognized as an asset and the aggregate status of all underfunded plans is recognized as a liability in the Consolidated Balance Sheets.  The amounts recognized as a liability are classified as current or long-term on a plan-by-plan basis.  Liabilities are classified as current to the extent the actuarial present value of benefits payable within the next 12 months exceeds the fair value of plan assets, with all remaining amounts classified as long-term.  

As of December 26, 2020 and December 28, 2019, the total funded status of the plans recognized in the Consolidated Balance Sheets was as follows:

 Pension BenefitsOther Benefits
  (In thousands)
2020201920202019
Long-term asset$— $8,592 $— $— 
Current liability— — (948)(1,013)
Long-term liability(12,329)(7,270)(11,834)(11,640)
Total (underfunded) funded status$(12,329)$1,322 $(12,782)$(12,653)
The components of net periodic benefit cost (income) are as follows:

(In thousands)202020192018
Pension benefits:   
Service cost$— $— $88 
Interest cost3,260 5,972 5,745 
Expected return on plan assets(5,704)(8,103)(9,522)
Amortization of net loss2,305 1,950 1,151 
Settlement charge11,642 — — 
Net periodic benefit cost (income)$11,503 $(181)$(2,538)
Other benefits:   
Service cost$212 $260 $235 
Interest cost430 609 447 
Amortization of prior service credit(519)(902)(902)
Amortization of net (gain) loss(193)(88)92 
Curtailment gain(2,591)— — 
Settlement charge— (2)38 
Net periodic benefit income$(2,661)$(123)$(90)

During 2020, the Company recognized a curtailment gain of $2.6 million related to one of its postretirement benefit plans.

The components of net periodic benefit cost (income) other than the service cost component are included in other income, net in the Consolidated Statements of Income.
 
The weighted average assumptions used in the measurement of the Company’s benefit obligations are as follows:

 Pension BenefitsOther Benefits
 2020201920202019
Discount rate1.40 %1.93 %2.92 %3.70 %
Expected long-term return on plan assets4.69 %3.84 %N/AN/A
Rate of compensation increasesN/AN/A5.00 %5.00 %
Rate of inflation3.20 %3.20 %N/AN/A

The weighted average assumptions used in the measurement of the Company’s net periodic benefit cost are as follows:

 Pension BenefitsOther Benefits
 202020192018202020192018
Discount rate
1.93 %3.72 %3.22 %3.70 %4.56 %3.89 %
Expected long-term return on plan assets
3.84 %5.05 %5.27 %N/AN/AN/A
Rate of compensation increases
N/AN/AN/A5.00 %5.00 %5.00 %
Rate of inflation
3.20 %3.40 %3.30 %N/AN/AN/A
The Company’s Mexican postretirement plans use the rate of compensation increase in the benefit formulas.  Past service in the U.K. pension plan will be adjusted for the effects of inflation.  All other pension and postretirement plans use benefit formulas based on length of service.

The annual assumed rate of increase in the per capita cost of covered benefits (i.e., health care cost trend rate) is assumed to range from 4.3 to 8.7 percent for 2021, gradually decrease to 4.1 percent through 2040, and remain at that level thereafter.  The health care cost trend rate assumption does not have a significant effect on the amounts reported.

Pension Assets

The weighted average asset allocation of the Company’s pension fund assets are as follows:
 Pension Plan Assets
Asset category20202019
Fixed income securities (includes fixed income mutual funds)— %55 %
Equity securities (includes equity mutual funds)66 25 
Multi-asset securities24 
Cash and equivalents (includes money market funds)
Alternative investments
Total100 %100 %

At December 26, 2020, the long-term target allocation, by asset category, of assets of the Company’s defined benefit pension plans was: (i) equity securities and multi-asset securities, including equity index funds – not less than 70 percent; and (ii) alternative investments – not more than 10 percent.

The pension plan obligations are long-term and, accordingly, the plan assets are invested for the long-term.  Plan assets are monitored periodically.  Based upon results, investment managers and/or asset classes are redeployed when considered necessary.  None of the plans’ assets are expected to be returned to the Company during the next fiscal year.  The assets of the plans do not include investments in securities issued by the Company.  

The estimated rates of return on plan assets are the expected future long-term rates of earnings on plan assets and are forward-looking assumptions that materially affect pension cost.  Establishing the expected future rates of return on pension assets is a judgmental matter.  The Company reviews the expected long-term rates of return on an annual basis and revises as appropriate.  The expected long-term rate of return on plan assets was 4.69 percent for 2020 and 3.84 percent in 2019.

The Company’s investments for its pension plans are reported at fair value.  The following methods and assumptions were used to estimate the fair value of the Company’s plan asset investments:

Cash and money market funds – Valued at cost, which approximates fair value.

Mutual funds – Valued at the net asset value of shares held by the plans at December 26, 2020 and December 28, 2019, respectively, based upon quoted market prices.

Limited partnerships – Limited partnerships include investments in various Cayman Island multi-strategy hedge funds.  The plans’ investments in limited partnerships are valued at the estimated fair value of the class shares owned by the plans based upon the equity in the estimated fair value of those shares.  The estimated fair values of the limited partnerships are determined by the investment managers.  In determining fair value, the investment managers of the limited partnerships utilize the estimated net asset valuations of the underlying investment entities.  The underlying investment entities value securities and other financial instruments on a mark-to-market or estimated fair value basis.  The estimated fair value is determined by the investment managers based upon, among other things, the type of investments, purchase price, marketability, current financial condition, operating results, and other information.  The estimated fair values of substantially all of the investments of the underlying investment entities, which may include securities for which prices are not readily available, are determined by the investment managers or management of the respective underlying investment entities and may not reflect amounts that could be realized upon immediate sale.  Accordingly, the estimated fair values may differ significantly from the values that would have been used had a ready market existed for these investments.
The following table sets forth by level, within the fair value hierarchy, the assets of the plans at fair value:

 Fair Value Measurements at December 26, 2020
  (In thousands)
Level 1Level 2Level 3Total
Cash and money market funds$492 $— $— $492 
Mutual funds (1)
— 71,084 — 71,084 
Limited partnerships— — 6,904 6,904 
Total$492 $71,084 $6,904 $78,480 
 
 Fair Value Measurements at December 28, 2019
  (In thousands)
Level 1Level 2Level 3Total
Cash and money market funds$12,318 $— $— $12,318 
Mutual funds (2)
— 163,253 — 163,253 
Limited partnerships— — 7,915 7,915 
Total$12,318 $163,253 $7,915 $183,486 
(1)Approximately 76 percent of mutual funds are actively managed funds and approximately 24 percent of mutual funds are index funds.  Additionally, 27 percent of the mutual funds’ assets are invested in non-U.S. multi-asset securities and 73 percent in non-U.S. equities.

(2)Approximately 80 percent of mutual funds are actively managed funds and approximately 20 percent of mutual funds are index funds.  Additionally, 10 percent of the mutual funds’ assets are invested in non-U.S. multi-asset securities, 28 percent in non-U.S. equities, 62 percent in U.S. fixed income securities.

The table below reflects the changes in the assets of the plan measured at fair value on a recurring basis using significant unobservable inputs (level 3 of fair value hierarchy) during the year ended December 26, 2020:

  (In thousands)
Limited Partnerships
  
Balance, December 28, 2019$7,915 
Surplus assets(1,104)
Net appreciation in fair value93 
  
Balance, December 26, 2020$6,904 
Contributions and Benefit Payments

The Company does not expect to contribute to the U.K. pension plan, other than to reimburse expenses, and expects to contribute $1.0 million to its other postretirement benefit plans in 2021. The Company expects future benefits to be paid from the plans as follows:

(In thousands)Pension BenefitsOther Benefits
2021$3,428 $947 
20222,945 942 
20233,050 1,016 
20243,160 977 
20253,273 974 
2026-203018,210 4,700 
Total$34,066 $9,556 

Multiemployer Plan

The Company contributes to the IAM National Pension Fund, National Pension Plan (IAM Plan), a multiemployer defined benefit plan.  Participation in the IAM Plan was negotiated under the terms of two collective bargaining agreements in Port Huron, Michigan, the Local 218 IAM and Local 44 UAW that expire on May 7, 2023 and June 26, 2022, respectively.  The Employer Identification Number for this plan is 51-6031295.

The risks of participating in multiemployer plans are different from single-employer plans in the following aspects:  (i) assets contributed to the multiemployer plan by one employer may be used to provide benefits to employees of other participating employers; (ii) if a participating employer stops contributing to the plan, the underfunded obligations of the plan may be borne by the remaining participating employers; (iii) if the Company chooses to stop participating in the plan, the Company may be required to pay the plan an amount based on the underfunded status of the plan, referred to as a withdrawal liability.

The Company makes contributions to the IAM Plan trusts that cover certain union employees; contributions by employees are not permitted.  Contributions to the IAM Plan were approximately $1.2 million in 2020, $1.2 million in 2019, and $1.3 million in 2018.  The Company’s contributions are less than five percent of total employer contributions made to the IAM Plan indicated in the most recently filed Form 5500.

Under the Pension Protection Act of 2006, the IAM Plan’s actuary must certify the plan’s zone status annually.  Plans in the red zone are generally less than 65 percent funded, plans in the yellow zone are less than 80 percent funded, and plans in the green zone are at least 80 percent funded.  If a plan is determined to be in endangered status, red zone or yellow zone, the plan’s trustees must develop a formal plan of corrective action, a Financial Improvement Plan and/or a Rehabilitation Plan.  The IAM Plan remains well-funded at over 80 percent, for 2020, and has been certified in the green zone. In 2019, although the IAM Plan was well-funded at 89 percent, it was certified in the yellow zone due to a declining credit balance. However, as a result of a challenging investment environment and the decline of the IAM Plan’s credit balance, the IAM National Pension Plan Board of Trustees voluntarily elected to place the IAM Plan in the red zone. The action was taken to protect the IAM Plan’s participants’ core retirement benefits and strengthen the IAM Plan’s financial health over the long term.

401(k) Plans

The Company sponsors voluntary employee savings plans that qualify under Section 401(k) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986.  Compensation expense for the Company’s matching contribution to the 401(k) plans was $5.7 million in 2020, $5.4 million in 2019, and $5.1 million in 2018.  The Company match is a cash contribution.  Participants direct the investment of their account balances by allocating among a range of asset classes including mutual funds (equity, fixed income, and balanced funds) and money market funds.  The plans do not allow direct investment in securities issued by the Company.
UMWA Benefit Plans

In October 1992, the Coal Industry Retiree Health Benefit Act of 1992 (1992 Act) was enacted.  The 1992 Act mandates a method of providing for postretirement benefits to the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) current and retired employees, including some retirees who were never employed by the Company.  In October 1993, beneficiaries were assigned to the Company and the Company began its mandated contributions to the UMWA Combined Benefit Fund, a multiemployer trust.  Beginning in 1994, the Company was required to make contributions for assigned beneficiaries under an additional multiemployer trust created by the 1992 Act, the UMWA 1992 Benefit Plan.  The ultimate amount of the Company’s liability under the 1992 Act will vary due to factors which include, among other things, the validity, interpretation, and regulation of the 1992 Act, its joint and several obligation, the number of valid beneficiaries assigned, and the extent to which funding for this obligation will be satisfied by transfers of excess assets from the 1950 UMWA pension plan and transfers from the Abandoned Mine Reclamation Fund.  Contributions to the plan were $57 thousand, $223 thousand, and $153 thousand for the years ended 2020, 2019, and 2018, respectively.