Friday, March 27, 2015

For millions, 401(k) plans have fallen short

For millions, 401(k) plans have fallen short


You need to know this number: $18,433.

That's the median amount in a 401(k) savings account, according to a recent report by the Employee Benefit Research Institute. Almost 40 percent of employees have less than $10,000, even as the proportion of companies offering alternatives like defined benefit pensions continues to drop.

Older workers do tend to have more savings. At Vanguard, for example, the median for savers aged 55 to 64 in 2013 was $76,381. But even at that level, millions of workers nearing retirement are on track to leave the workforce with savings that do not even approach what they will need for health care, let alone daily living. Not surprisingly, retirement is now Americans' top financial worry, according to a recent Gallup poll. 
 
To be sure, tax-advantaged 401(k) plans have provided a means for millions of retirement savers to build a nest egg. More than three-quarters of employers use such defined contribution plans as the main retirement income plan option for employees, and the vast majority of them offer matching contribution programs, which further enhance employees' ability to accumulate wealth.
But shifting the responsibility for growing retirement income from employers to individuals has proved problematic for many American workers, particularly in the face of wage stagnation and a lack of investment expertise. For them, the grand 401(k) experiment has been a failure.

"In America, when we had disability and defined benefit plans, you actually had an equality of retirement period. Now the rich can retire and workers have to work until they die," said Teresa Ghilarducci, a labor economist at the New School for Social Research who has proposed eliminating the tax breaks for 401(k)s and using the money saved to create government-run retirement plans.

A historical accident?

It wasn't supposed to work out this way.

The 401(k) account came into being quietly, as a clause in the Revenue Act of 1978. The clause said employees could choose to defer some compensation until retirement, and they would not be taxed until that time. (Companies had long offered deferred compensation arrangements, but employers and the IRS had been going back and forth about their tax treatment.)
"401(k)s were never designed as the nation's primary retirement system," said Anthony Webb, a research economist at the Center for Retirement Research. "They came to be that as a historical accident."

History has it that a benefits consultant named Ted Benna realized the provision could be used as a retirement savings vehicle for all employees. In 1981, the IRS clarified that 401(k) plan participants could defer regular wages, not just bonuses, and the plans began to proliferate.

By 1985, there were 30,000 401(k) plans in existence, and 10 years later that figure topped 200,000. As of 2013, there were 638,000 plans in place with 89 million participants, according to the Investment Company Institute. And assets in defined contribution plans totaled $6.6 trillion as of the third quarter of 2014, $4.5 trillion of which was held in 401(k) plans.
"Nobody thought they were going to take over the world," said Daniel Halperin, a professor at Harvard Law School. who was a senior official at the Treasury Department when 401(k) accounts came into being.

Rise of defined contributions

But a funny thing happened as 401(k) plans began to multiply: defined benefit plans started disappearing. In 1985, the year there were 30,000 401(k) plans, defined benefit plans numbered 170,000, according to the Investment Company Institute. By 2005, there were just 41,000 defined benefit plans–and 417,000 401(k) plans.

The reasons for the shift are complex, but Ghilarducci argued that in the early years, "workers overvalued the promise of a 401(k)" and the prospect of amassing investment wealth, so they accepted the change. Meanwhile, companies found that providing a defined contribution, or DC, plan cost them less. (Ghilarducci studied 700 companies' plans over 17 years and found that when employers allocated a larger share of their pension expenditures to defined contribution plans, their overall spending on pension plans went down.)
 
But the new plans had two key differences. Participation in 401(k) plans is optional and, while pensions provided lifetime income, 401(k) plans offer no such certainty.
"I'm not saying defined benefit plans are flawless, but they certainly didn't put as much of the risk and responsibility on the individual," said Terrance Odean, a professor of finance at the University of California, Berkeley's Haas School of Business.

Early signs of trouble

That concept may not have been in the forefront of employees' minds at the start, but problems with 401(k)s surfaced early.

For one thing, employee participation in 401(k) plans never became anywhere near universal, despite aggressive marketing by investment firms and exhortations by employers and consumer associations to save more. A 2011 report by the Government Accountability Office found that "the percentage of workers participating in employer-sponsored plans has peaked at about 50 percent of the private sector workforce for most of the past two decades."

The employees who did participate tended to be better paid, since those people could defer income more easily. The GAO report found that most of the people contributing as much as they were allowed tended to have incomes of $126,000 or more.

In part, that is because the ascent of 401(k) plans came as college costs started their steep rise, hitting many employees in their prime earning years. Stagnating middle-class wages also made it hard for people to save.

Fees have been another problem. Webb has studied 401(k) fees, and he concluded that "as a result of high fees, fund balances in defined contribution plans are about 20 percent less than they need otherwise be."

The Department of Labor in 2012 established new rules requiring more disclosure of fees, but it faced strong industry opposition, including a 17-page comment from the Investment Company Institute.

Failure of choice

Most employees also turned out to be less than terrific investors, making mistakes like selling low and buying high or shying away from optimal asset classes at the wrong time.
Berkeley's Odean and others have studied the effect of investment choice on 401(k) savers, and found that when investors choose their asset class allocation, a retirement income shortfall is more likely. If they can also choose their stock investments, the odds of a shortfall rise further.
"401(k)'s changed two things: you could choose not to participate, and you chose your own investments, which a lot of people, I think, screw up," Halperin said.

Benna, who is often called the father of the 401(k), has argued that many plans offer far too many choices. " If I were starting over from scratch today with what we know, I'd blow up the existing structure and start over," he said in a 2013 interview.

Another problem is that when 401(k) savers retire, they often opt to take their savings in a lump sum and roll the money into IRAs, which may entail higher fees and expose them to conflicted investment advice. A recent report by the Council of Economic Advisors found that savers receiving such advice, which may be suitable for them but not optimal, see investment returns reduced by a full percentage point, on average. Overall, the report found that conflicted investment advice costs savers $17 billion every year.

The result of all these shortcomings? Some 52 percent of American households were at risk of being unable to maintain their standard of living as of 2013, a figure barely changed from a year earlier—even though a strong bull market should have pushed savings higher and the government gives up billions in tax revenue to subsidize the plans.

In a hearing last September on retirement security, Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., declared that "something is out of whack. The American taxpayer delivers $140 billion each year to subsidize retirement accounts, but still millions of Americans nearing retirement have little or nothing saved."

Retirement worries rise

As problems mount with 401(k)s, Americans' worries about retirement security are intensifying.
A 2014 Harris poll found that 74 percent of Americans were worried about having enough income in retirement, and in a survey published recently by the National Institute on Retirement Security, 86 percent of respondents agree that the country is facing a retirement crisis, with that opinion strongest among high earners.

Changes may come, but for now, 401(k) plans and their ilk remain Americans' predominant workplace retirement savings vehicle. They may be a historical accident, but for the millions of people now facing a potentially impoverished retirement, the fallout is grave indeed.

As a former Treasury official, Halperin witnessed the creation of 401(k) accounts, But, "on balance, I don't think it was a big plus" that the accounts were created, he said. "I don't take credit for it. I try to avoid the blame."

Kelley Holland
Kelley HollandSpecial to CNBC

Friday, March 13, 2015

These 20-somethings invest like 'Depression babies'

These 20-somethings invest like 'Depression babies'
Even though the stock market is booming and the economy continues to grow, the 2008 financial crisis is having a lingering effect on many young adults' willingness to take risks.
The problem, say financial advisors, is that it's causing an entire generation to potentially miss out on huge gains in their retirement portfolios.


"A lot of them took risks. They stretched to go to grad school with loans, found themselves without a job or took on debt to buy homes with nonconventional mortgages, with the promise that their homes would appreciate, but they didn't," said Barry Glassman, a certified financial planner and president of Glassman Wealth Services. "The message they got is that risk doesn't always work."


A Bankrate.com report released in July showed that Americans age 18 to 29 are more likely to choose cash as their favorite long-term investment over any other age group. In fact, 39 percent said cash was their preferred way to invest money not needed for 10 years or longer.
The report pointed out, however, that the S&P 500 Index had gained 17 percent over the previous year, while cash investments generally were garnering returns below 1 percent.
Jonya | Getty Images

In another study, released earlier this year by Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance, only 11 percent of those age 18 to 29 said they are comfortable with the risks associated with growth strategies in their portfolios. Just 14 percent said they are pursuing as much growth as possible.
"The danger in being too conservative is, foremost, your portfolio won't even keep pace with inflation," said Ben Tobias, a certified financial planner and president of Tobias Financial Advisors. "That's a problem."
Tobias said his firm has worked with clients' adult children who are actually more conservative than their parents.
But consider this: Tobias pointed out that if you were to invest $100 in certificates of deposit—which are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.—you might double that in 20 years.
"But the fact that it doubles is less important than how much that $200 will buy in 20 years," Tobias said. "You don't lose [your original investment], but you're guaranteed the effects of inflation and taxes, and you'll end up with less purchasing power than your original investment. That's the most important thing."


Advisors say millennials' aversion to risk is reminiscent of so-called "Depression babies": people who grew up watching their parents and other adults lose their life savings, their jobs and general financial security.
      
Young adults, likewise, have lived through the tech bubble bursting in 2001, the 9/11 terrorist attacks and the 2008 financial crisis.

"They are less trusting of big financial institutions and the stock market in general," said certified financial planner Greg Sarian, managing director and partner at HighTower Advisors. "I didn't see this [phenomenon] 15 years ago."


What Sarian and other advisors do is educate young clients—or adult children of older clients—about exactly what risk is in a portfolio, and help them figure out exactly how much risk makes sense for them personally.


"They just won't make money in bonds and cash," Sarian said. "That only protects your money.
"If you're in your 70s, protection is critical," he added. "But if you are young, you need to take some risk in your [asset] allocation."


However, most young adults are not benefiting from sitting down with a professional who can ease their mind about the stock market. According to a report from The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co., only 13 percent of adults age 18 to 29 work with a financial advisor.
So for those going it alone?


"I'd encourage them to look at any 20-year period of the stock market and its performance over that time," Tobias of Tobias Financial Advisors said.

For example, take the 20-year period from 1993 to 2013, which included two of the worst periods in stock market history. Yet the average yearly return for the S&P 500—generally considered a broad gauge of the stock market's performance—during that 20 years was 9.13 percent. Even when adjusted for inflation, that figure is 6.6 percent.

Tobias points out that many of the horror stories young adults have heard of people losing their shirt in the stock market come from those who failed to stay invested when the market crashed.
"The number of people who liquidated their portfolios in 2008 is tremendous," he said, adding, "They are the ones who are hurting. The ones who stayed invested don't have those horrible stories."
"Inherently, if you feel a sense of stability, you can open your mind to taking more risk." -Avani Ramnani, director, financial planning & investment management, Francis Financial
Certified financial planner Avani Ramnani pointed out that if young adults face uncertainty in their lives due to unemployment or underemployment or any other life situation that makes them feel insecure, they are less likely to take financial risks in their portfolios.
"Inherently, if you feel a sense of stability, you can open your mind to taking more risk," said Ramnani, director of financial planning and investment management for Francis Financial.
"The danger is the long term," she said. "If they stick to that conservative approach to investing over their whole life, they are [hurting] themselves."


—By Sarah O'Brien, special to CNBC.com

Do you really need $2.5 million for a good retirement?

Do you really need $2.5 million for a good retirement?
   
You can't feel secure in retirement if you don't have a good idea of how much money you'll need.
But if you believe a new Legg Mason survey, you may have to save far more than you think. Investors surveyed by the global investment management firm said they will require an average of $2.5 million in retirement to enjoy the quality of life they have today.

That's about $2.2 million more than the average balance of $385,000 those investors actually had in 401(k)s and similar retirement plans, which might help explain why only 40 percent of the 458 investors surveyed said they are "very confident" in their ability to "retire at the age I want to." (And the investors surveyed have set more aside than the average retirement saver. At Fidelity, the nation's largest retirement plan provider, the average 401(k) balance was $91,300 at the end of 2014.)
Despite their above-average savings rate, these investors are worrywarts. On average, they told Legg Mason they spend an hour and 18 minutes worrying about money each day. That's 475 hours, or nearly 20 full days, of financial hand-wringing a year.
 

All that anxiety has generated some resolve to change savings habits. Some 72 percent of investors surveyed said they would make sacrifices now to have more money in retirement and 42 percent expect to cut expenses so they don't outlive their assets.
Image Source | Getty Images

How much do you really need to retire?

Of course, most people won't need to save $2.5 million to have a comfortable retirement. But figuring out how much you should squirrel away can be challenging.
 
Fidelity estimates most investors require about eight times their ending salary to increase the chances that their savings will last during a 25-year retirement. But every retirement is different. People also tend to spend lavishly in their first years of retirement before their spending declines in later years.
Health care is the wild card in retirement planning, especially as Americans live longer. Fidelity projects a 65-year-old couple retiring will need an average of $220,000 to cover medical expenses in retirement.


A financial plan will help you estimate how much you will need to save. "Without a plan, it's like being in dense fog. You can't see the end goal and there is no clear path how to get to your goal," said Andy Tilp, a certified financial planner and president of Trillium Valley Financial Planning near Portland, Oregon.

Tilp also recommends those close to retirement factor in the potential costs of long-term care. "Not everyone will require long-term care, but it is good to know the impact of the addition expenses. We look at whether they can afford to self-fund, or whether they should consider long-term care insurance," he said.


CORRECTION: This version updated with Legg Mason correcting data from its survey about how much time investors spend worrying about their money.

Saturday, March 7, 2015

Americans Aren’t Saving Enough for Retirement, but One Change Could Help

Americans Aren’t Saving Enough for Retirement, but One Change Could Help


   
Here is something every non-rich American family should know: The odds are that you will run out of money in retirement.


On average, a typical working family in the anteroom of retirement — headed by somebody 55 to 64 years old — has only about $104,000 in retirement savings, according to the Federal Reserve's Survey of Consumer Finances.


That's not nearly enough. And the situation will only grow worse.
The Center for Retirement Research at Boston College estimates that more than half of all American households will not have enough retirement income to maintain the living standards they were accustomed to before retirement, even if the members of the household work until 65, two years longer than the average retirement age today.




Using a different, more complex model, the Employment Benefit Research Institute calculates that 83 percent of baby boomers and Generation Xers in the bottom fourth of the income distribution will eventually run short of money. Higher up on the income scale, people also face challenges: More than a quarter of those with incomes between the middle of the income distribution and the 75th percentile will probably run short.


The standard prescription is that Americans should put more money aside in investments. The recommendation, however, glosses over a critical driver of unpreparedness: Wall Street is bleeding savers dry.


"Everybody's big focus is that we have to save more," said John C. Bogle, founder and former chief executive of Vanguard, the investment management colossus. "A greater part of the problem is the failure of investors to earn their fair share of market returns."
His observation suggests a different policy prescription: shoring up Americans' retirement requires, first of all, aligning the interests of investment advisers and their clients.
A research paper by Mr. Bogle published in Financial Analysts Journal makes the case. Actively managed mutual funds, in which many workers invest their retirement savings, are enormously costly.


First, there is the expense ratio — about 1.12 percent of assets for the average large capitalization blend fund. Then there are transaction costs and distribution costs. Active funds also pay a penalty for keeping a share of their assets in low-yielding cash. Altogether, costs add up to 2.27 percent per year, Mr. Bogle estimates.


By contrast, a passive index fund, like Vanguard's Total Stock Market Index Fund, costs merely 0.06 percent a year in all.


Of course, Mr. Bogle has a horse in the race. He founded the Vanguard Group. He invented the first index fund for the public. His case is powerful, nonetheless.


Assuming an annual market return of 7 percent, he says, a 30-year-old worker who made $30,000 a year and received a 3 percent annual raise could retire at age 70 with $927,000 in the pot by saving 10 percent of her wages every year in a passive index fund. (Such a nest egg, at the standard withdrawal rate of 4 percent, would generate an inflation-adjusted $37,000 a year more or less indefinitely.) If she put it in a typical actively managed fund, she would end up with only $561,000.


We might have seen this building decades ago. As companies gradually did away with the defined-benefit pensions that once provided working families with their main supplement to Social Security, workers found they had to shoulder the responsibility and risk of saving and investing for retirement largely on their own.


In 1979, almost two in five private sector workers had a defined-benefit pension that would pay out a check until they died. Today only 14 percent do. Almost one in three, by contrast, must make do with a retirement savings account alone to supplement their Social Security check.


If there is an industry rived with conflicts of interest, it is the financial conglomerates that advise Americans on investing these savings. Yet nobody was paying attention to the safeguards that might be needed when corporate retirement funds managed by sophisticated professionals were replaced by individual 401(k)s and Individual Retirement Accounts.


"Wall Street makes no money on low-cost index funds," said David F. Swensen, who runs the investment portfolio for Yale. "That is the problem."
It's not hard to find evidence of Wall Street's rapaciousness.
      
Sendhil Mullainathan of Harvard and colleagues from M.I.T. and the University of Hamburg sent "mystery shoppers" to visit financial advisers.They found that advisers mostly recommended investment strategies that fit their own financial interests. They reinforced their clients' misguided biases, encouraging them to chase returns and advising against low-cost options like low-fee index funds.


Another study, by Susan Christoffersen of the University of Toronto and colleagues from the University of Virginia and the University of Pennsylvania, found that investment advisers directed more of their clients' money to funds that shared the upfront fees with them. Returns of these funds were poor, compared with alternatives.


"It is superslimy," noted Kent Smetters, an expert on finance at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School.
President Obama has tried to take a crack at one corner of the problem: questionable advice provided by managers of I.R.A.s.


For all their flaws, 401(k) plans have a fiduciary responsibility to act in participants' best interest. Managers of I.R.A.s, by contrast, are not legally bound to put their clients' interests first. They must offer "suitable" products — a much squishier standard.
"They can't put your grandma in a heavy tech fund," Mr. Smetters said. "But they could put her in a more expensive bond fund that pays them a huge commission."


It should be no surprise which of these Wall Street prefers. In a 2011 report, the Government Accountability Office of Congress said it found advisers who were paid $6,000 to $9,000 if clients rolled over savings from 401(k) plans to I.R.A.s.


I.R.A.s are a huge source of profit for Wall Street. Workers roll some $300 billion worth of 401(k) balances into I.R.A.s when they leave their jobs every year.


The White House's Council of Economic Advisers argues that "conflicted advice" by advisers who get payments from the funds they recommendreduces the annual returns to investment by 1 percentage point, a more modest penalty than Mr. Bogle's analysis might suggest. Still, this could cost savers up to $33 billion a year out of $3.3 trillion invested by I.R.A.s subject to potentially conflicted advice.


In 2010, the Labor Department proposed imposing fiduciary responsibility on I.R.A. advisers. The resistance from Wall Street was so fierce that the Obama administration was forced to back down. Last month, the administration tried again. Perhaps it will have better luck this time.
Mr. Swensen, Mr. Bogle and Mr. Smetters applaud the Obama administration's shot at changing the rules. But they acknowledge that imposing tighter standards on I.R.A.s will not end suspect advice. And most investment assets are held outside tax-preferred retirement accounts and would not be subject to the rule change.


Unlike regulations in Canada and some Western European countries, which have essentially banned kickbacks from funds to investment advisers, the Obama administration's proposed rule does not directly attack conflicts of interest.


But the new rule could move American retirement saving one step closer to the goal: getting almost everybody to stop trying to beat the market, put their money in low-cost index funds and leave it there. Then Americans might reach retirement better prepared.