
Wall Street for Dummies
Eighty million American workers actively participate in their companies 401(k) plan. Collectively, they have $12 trillion dollars invested in these plans. Regulations require them to make their own investment decisions by selecting from a list of mutual funds prepared by an investment professional who is compensated by the mutual funds they choose to include on the list. Last year, American workers paid $275 billion dollars in fees to have Wall Street manage their mutual funds. Over the course of the next decade is figure will exceed $3 trillion dollars.
There are those 401(k) participants who choose funds with minimal fees and superior performance. Others choose funds with high fees and subpar performance. The mission of Wall Street for Dummies is to educate 401(k) plan participants on the impact of fees on mutual funds’ performance and provide them with commentary on how to use the cost efficient and best performing funds.
I have a 62-year relationship with the stock market. I have been a stockbroker, finance professor and individual investor. For the past ten years I have devoted my professional efforts as a free-lance stock market pundit. I have no investment products to sell. All I to offer are the objective observations of one who has been there and done that.
Wall Street for Dummies
The Big Beautiful Bill and Your 401(k)
The stock market loves good news and hates bad news. The problem is that it has trouble deciding which is which. It also reserves the right to pause and change its mind midstream, without prior notice to the investing public.
Last week, the US Congress passed what the media refers to as “The Big, Beautiful, Bill. It covers a sweeping number of topics that will impact the trajectory of our society and economy for years to come. Many of the issues addressed in the Big, Beautiful, Bill are social in nature and of minor concern to the market. But there are two areas covered in the bill that have significant implications for the market’s future: Energy and interest rates.
The response of the 90 million Americans with 401(k) plans to this hazy forecast could be one of confusion and despair. But history tells us that the American economy has faced many uncertain times. And each and every time has emerge bigger and stronger. If the stock markets initial response to the Big Bill is negative, those 401(k) participants who are index funds investors will be able to buy additional shares at a reduced price and lower their average cost. If the markets response is positive, the total value of 401(k) index fund portfolios will increase in value.