Los Angeles Times

401(k) company match is making a comeback

Contributi­ons by employers are on track to hit 4.7% of salaries this year after dipping to 3% in 2009.

- By Thomas Heath Heath writes for the Washington Post.

One of the best tools to save for retirement over the last three decades has been the 401(k) and the corporate match —free money! — that came with it. In many places, one of the first casualties of the financial crisis was the company match.

Now, it seems, the match is roaring back. Many companies are boosting their matches in employee 401(k) plans, according to a report by Vanguard Group, the investment firm with $4.4 trillion under management.

The results of the study, titled “How America Saves,” were reported in the Wall Street Journal.

Many firms are using the automatic matches as an inducement for people to save more, creating more peace of mind and loyalty among employees.

Company matches in 401(k)s are on track to hit 4.7% of employee salaries this year, up from 3.9% in 2015 and way up compared with 3% in 2009 in the depths of the financial crisis, according to the 107-page report.

“Increasing contributi­ons into your retirement plan, especially when you are younger, is a no-brainer,” said Christophe­r Poch, an advisor with Morgan Stanley Private Wealth Management. “The more you can save for retirement, and the earlier you start, the better off you will be.”

Many companies reduced their 401(k) matches in recent years as a way to save money when earnings dropped after the financial crisis or because of outside forces such as the digital economy, which has wreaked havoc on business models in the retail, media and other sectors.

But as finances stabi average lized, some firms are increasing their matches. The motives behind the increase in matches vary, but they mostly break down into two groups.

“One is competitiv­e factors and one is employers with a high degree of paternalis­m,” said Jean Young, a research analyst at the Vanguard Center for Investor Research. She views paternalis­m as a sign of a benevolent employer that is nurturing good financial habits in its workers.

Employers use matches as a carrot to woo new employees, especially in the highly competitiv­e technology sector.

“We are seeing a higher proportion of tech industry firms providing a match than the broader all-industry average, particular­ly within the mid-to-largersize firms,” said Aimee DeCamillo, head of T. Rowe Price Retirement Plan Services. “In 2016, we saw almost 81% of tech firms offering a match, compared to slightly less than 75% across all industries.”

A generous 401(k) match — or any match — is free money. That goes a long way to attracting and retaining employees.

Microsoft last year boosted its match. Lowerearni­ng employees, those making a (ahem) paltry $80,000 a year, saw their maximum potential match go to $9,000 from $2,400. An employee under 50 who saves the federally allowed limit of $18,000 can now get a Microsoft match of $9,000, boosting his or her annual tax-sheltered retirement savings to $27,000.

“The principal reason was to enhance competitiv­eness in order to attract, retain and motivate the best talent available,” said Fred Thiele, Microsoft’s general manager of global benefits.

“We wanted to encourage greater retirement savings at the lower-income tiers of the company,” Thiele said. “The goal is to get early-in-career, lower-income savings. When you add the power of compoundin­g and weighted investment fees of 0.21%, these people are in a much better position later in life.”

Some companies use it as a way for current employees to beef up their retirement savings and smooth the path toward an exit. The 401(k) matches also boost morale.

“We increased our 401(k) match in honor of our people and their accomplish­ments,” said Scott Scherr, founder and chief executive of Ultimate Software, a human resources software maker in Weston, Fla.

Ultimate Software has been steadily increasing its 401(k) match to reward its 3,700 employees when the company hits its financial goals.

The company said it matches 40% of every dollar that an employee contribute­s up to the maximum. Ultimate Software is shooting to reach $1 billion in revenue next year. That kind of match keeps people around longer, which reduces the expense of replacing them.

“We hope our employees will commit to us and our customers long term,” Scherr said.

The 401(k) match increases come as many employers continue to move away from pensions and other defined-benefit programs.

That shift puts more responsibi­lity, and risk, on employees.

The 401(k) has become a cornerston­e of the retirement system since Congress passed it into law with the Revenue Act of 1978.

The tax-sheltered component allows taxpayers a compelling break on income tax.

Young of Vanguard said that “in order for people to have sufficient savings for retirement, they have to get two things right: They have to save enough and they need to save appropriat­ely. The most important one of those two things is saving enough.”

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