To the poster who said " If too many people opt for lump sum payouts in a short period of time it could drive down the funding levels triggering the cessation of the lump sum payout option for the moment.", I do not believe that is correct.
The way I understand it, the company offers Lump Sum withdrawal as long as the funding is above 80% of the liability of the pension plan. (i.e. if the total liability of the fund (add up everybody's pension to get that amount) is lets say for easy math... 100 Million dollars. Then as long as the fund has at least 80 million dollars in it (80%), you can do a lump sum withdrawal.
The fear about everyone pulling their money all at once will drain the fund is bad math. Let's say the fund liability is $100M (like above) and it's funded fully at 100%. If a bunch pf people pull their money by way of lump sum withdrawal, then the liability also is reduced by the same amount of the withdrawals. I.e., the funds liability is $100M, then 20 people who all have $1M in their Pension all decide to take the lump sum option December 1st. if we have $100M, and 20 people withdrawal $1M each ($20M) then the fund only has $80M in it right? But the LIABILITY of the fund is now only $80M, so it is STILL funded at 100%.
What can drive down the funding percentage is if the stocks/bonds/investments/etc that the pension is invested in goes down, then the fund can lose money and THAT can drive the funding percentage down.
Not to say that isn't going to happen (seen the stock market lately?) but the fear that everyone pulling their money out is going to destroy it for the rest of those with a Pension is unfounded.
My .02, worth every penny.. :-)