Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

401(k) investors opting for target funds

- By Stan Choe

NEW YORK — More and more retirement savers have their entire 401(k) account in just a single mutual fund, and investment advisers are fine with it.

Last year, for the first time, more than half of Vanguard’s 4.6 million retirement account participan­ts were invested in a single target-date retirement fund, according to an analysis by the mutual fund giant.

This may sound anathema to an industry that preaches the value of diversific­ation, but these funds are designed to provide it for investors in one package. And after years of trying to manage their own investment­s, savers are finding it easier to pick one fund that does the job, even if the fees may sometimes be higher.

The stakes are high that workers choose wisely because they’re increasing­ly in charge of their own retirement savings, with traditiona­l pension plans rare and pressures mounting on Social Security.

“People need to get two things right: They need to save enough, and they need to invest appropriat­ely,” said Jean Young, senior research analyst with the Vanguard Center for Investor Research. “That sounds easy, but it’s not.”

Target-date retirement funds can help with the second of those responsibi­lities. Savers pick a fund pegged to the year they hope to retire. If the date is far away, the fund loads up on stocks and other high-growth investment­s. As the targeted year approaches, the funds automatica­lly move into more conservati­ve investment­s so that savers don’t get wiped out by a plunge just before retirement, like what occurred in 2008.

It’s a far cry from a couple decades ago, when one of the biggest selling points for a 401(k) plan was all the choice it afforded investors. Want a fund that specialize­s in just high-risk foreign bonds? How about stocks of tiny companies from Europe? Or technology stocks? No problem, you were in control.

Ultimately, many investors felt overwhelme­d by the amount of choice, and that led some to have either too much or not enough risk in their 401(k). The migration into target-date funds has helped investors avoid these two danger zones of investing.

In 2008, for example, 11 percent of 401(k) participan­ts had nothing at all invested in stocks, according to Vanguard’s records. That may

 ?? JARID A. BARRINGER/ERIE TIMES-NEWS 2014 ?? More retirement savers have their entire 401(k) account in a single mutual fund.
JARID A. BARRINGER/ERIE TIMES-NEWS 2014 More retirement savers have their entire 401(k) account in a single mutual fund.

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