Houston Chronicle Sunday

Wall Street’s gains, more savings lift 401(k) balances

- By Alex Veiga

LOS ANGELES — Solid stock market gains through much of the pandemic and workers putting more of their pay toward their golden years are paying off for many retirement savers.

The average 401(k) plan balance grew 24 percent to a record $129,300 in the second quarter from a year earlier, according to a review of 19.8 million accounts by Fidelity Investment­s.

The median balance, a better measure of the typical plan size, was only $29,000, up 22 percent from a year earlier. Just 60 million Americans actively participat­ed in 401(k) plans last year, according to the Investment Company Institute, an associatio­n representi­ng investment funds.

Retirement plans also got a boost as contributi­ons by employees, including more than half of Gen Z workers, increased to an all-time high in the second quarter. Also, fewer savers borrowed from their retirement accounts, keeping more of their money invested in the market as it rallied.

Still, most of the credit for juicing retirement plan balances goes to the resilient stock market, said Jessica Macdonald, Fidelity’s vice president of thought leadership.

“In 401(k) accounts especially, 85 percent of the balances that increased in (the second quarter) were due to market performanc­e,” she said.

The S&P 500, a benchmark for many stock funds, plunged more than 20 percent in February and March last year as the pandemic knocked the economy into a recession. But the index recovered fully a few months later and continued to climb to new highs this year. The S&P 500 ended the second quarter up 39 percent from a year earlier, buoyed by an improving job market and optimism that vaccinatio­ns would spur more of the economy to reopen.

Workers’ better savings habits have also been a factor in building their nest egg. The average employee funneled 9.3 percent of their pay into their 401(k) in the second quarter, a record high, Fidelity said. About 38 percent of employees with Fidelity-managed 401(k) plans increased how much they paid into their retirement account over the last year, while only 7 percent reduced their contributi­ons.

Some 18.2 percent of baby boomers with a 401(k) made a “catch-up” contributi­on in the second quarter, a new high. This refers to the $6,500 maximum that savers 50 or older are allowed to contribute in a given year above the maximum annual contributi­on of $19,500. Such contributi­ons have been increasing slightly over the past few years, Fidelity said.

Younger workers are also putting more of their pay into retirement plans. Among Gen Z employees, the oldest of whom are now in their early 20s, some 54 percent increased their 401(k) contributi­ons over the last year, while 43 percent of millennial­s did, the company said.

Most employers give workers the option to automatica­lly increase their contributi­ons each year without having to do anything. Some automatica­lly sign up their employees for auto escalation programs, requiring them to opt out if they don’t want their contributi­on levels to steadily rise.

Fewer investors have been borrowing from their retirement savings or are at least paying loans off more quickly. About 17.5 percent of 401(k) plans reviewed by Fidelity had an outstandin­g loan in the second quarter, a record low.

Financial experts discourage investors from borrowing from their retirement accounts because doing so takes money out of the market, potentiall­y missing out on gains.

“The best thing you can do is keep your money in your account and let it grow and plan to tap into it for your actual retirement,” Macdonald said.

For most savers, building a nest egg is a marathon, not a sprint, as reflected by far higher average retirement plan balances among those who’ve been setting aside part of their income for a decade or more.

Investors who had been pumping money into their Fidelity

401(k) plans for at least 10 years averaged a balance of $402,700 in the second quarter, the company said. In contrast, plans held by Gen-Z savers had an average balance of $4,700.

The size of nest eggs also varies widely, depending on whether you’re a man or a woman. Among women invested for 10 years in a 401(k) plan, the average balance was $324,700 in the second quarter, while the average balance for men was $440,300, Fidelity said.

Among the likely factors behind the disparity: the wage gap between men and women.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? According to one review, retirement plans got a boost partly because employees’ contributi­ons rose to a new high.
Associated Press file photo According to one review, retirement plans got a boost partly because employees’ contributi­ons rose to a new high.

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