The Citizen (Gauteng)

Millennial­s stuck in pension crunch

RETIREMENT CRISIS: ONLY 6% OF ALL SOUTH AFRICANS WILL HAVE ENOUGH MONEY FOR THEIR ‘GOLDEN YEARS’

- Inge Lamprecht

Signs are worrying that millennial­s will find the retirement larder empty after all the baby boomers are gone.

life expectancy may well put millennial­s (those between 25 and 35) at a relative disadvanta­ge.

A survey conducted by 10X Investment­s with BrandAtlas among 2 253 economical­ly active South Africans aged 25 and older has highlighte­d worrying and encouragin­g signs.

Millennial­s appear to be worse savers than their parents, with 35% of respondent­s saying they invest in various options to grow their wealth, compared to 55% of their parents. Thirty-six percent of millennial­s said they didn’t save or invest at all, compared to 24% of the older generation. Twenty-nine percent of millennial­s said they didn’t have a retirement plan. Twelve percent of mature respondent­s echoed this sentiment. Almost 60% of millennial­s said they planned to retire before 65 compared to 37% of their parents.

When told that paying 2% more in total annual fees over aperiod of 40 years could reduce their final investment value by up to 40%, millennial­s and their parents were highly sceptical.

Millennial­s were also slightly less aware of fees than their parents, with 42% saying they didn’t know what they paid.

Interestin­gly roughly half of all respondent­s said they paid less than 1% in fees to their financial service providers annually, which was clearly not the case. In 2015, the median total expense ratio (TER) of South African multi-asset funds was north of 1.6%.

When told that the impact of paying 2% more in total annual fees over an investment period of 40 years could reduce the final investment value by up to 40%, millennial­s and their parents were highly sceptical of the statistic, with roughly 80% of both sets of respondent­s expressing doubt at the fact.

Steven Nathan, CEO of 10X, said investors with a higher level of distrust were more likely to ask questions and take ownership of their situation.

Nathan said it was not clear whether younger investors would be in a better position 30 years from now.

Knowledge gap

What was unclear was how parents were doing 20 or 30 years ago when they were a similar age. “We know that most people don’t willingly save on their own.”

Nathan said the defined-benefit setting was a very good environmen­t for delivering positive retirement outcomes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa