(Repeats story published late on Feb 25)
* Proposal to eliminate breakeven requirement for 3rd pillar
* Funds to be able to invest in wider range of assets
* Changes come as part of wider pension reform
By Jan Korselt and Roman Gazdik
PRAGUE, Feb 25 (Reuters) - The Czech Finance Ministry is proposing looser regulation for existing pension funds, as part of government pension reform, including ending a breakeven requirement, a deputy minister said on Friday.
The Czech centre-right government aims to approve a pension overhaul this year that would begin filtering part of social taxes into private pension funds in 2013 in a new second pillar that will be more tightly regulated than other funds.
In an interview, deputy Finance Minister Klara Krol said that existing pension funds in the system's fully private so-called third pillar will have wider investment opportunities under the reform and will be able to invest in more asset classes.
The funds, which administer assets equal to 6 percent of Czech economic output, have been subject to tight regulation such as the breakeven requirement to cover any losses with fund administrators' own capital.
Analysts and industry players have said this regulation often means lower returns.
"(The third pillar) will be funds with separated assets without the guarantee to at least break even," Krol said.
"The third pillar will be regulated less than the second. In the third pillar there will be an unlimited number (of investment strategies)."
She added that people will also have the option of investing in third-pillar funds under existing conditions if they choose. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ FACTBOX on key parametres of the plan [
] For a story on the government's plans [ ] ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> NEW PILLARThe pension plan, still to be finalised and expected to be implemented in 2013, will allow people to begin diverting 3 percentage points from the 28 percent social tax to their own savings accounts and away from the current pay-as-you-go system that uses current tax receipts to pay pensioners.
The money diverted must also be matched by 2 percent of a person's salary.
Krol said pension funds in the newly created second pillar will have the option pick one out of four investment strategies defined by level of risk.
Those funds will have to invest in publicly traded assets, but can also invest in riskier assets via other funds.
They will be required to hold a minimum of one-third of their portfolio in Czech crown assets.
"There will be a requirement for a certain part of investments to be denominated in Czech crowns, which means more or less bought through the Czech bourse," she said.
She said this could give a boost to capital markets similar to the situation in neighbouring Poland, where private pension funds are required to invest nearly all of their assets at home, helping market liquidity. (Writing by Jason Hovet)