401k Investing for Newbies and Nerds
There are 90 million American workers who have collectively own $14 trillion in their 401k accounts. They face both challenges and opportunities. The largest opportunity is that their accounts are investment accounts, not savings accounts, and for the past three decades, many have grown their balances in the low double digit range. Those with the highest return have constructed portfolios that focus on index funds and avoided target date funds.
The main challenge 401k owners face is that there are required to make their investment decisions by choosing from a limited menu of mutual funds. 42% of 401k participants have found that including index funds in their portfolio has provided them with results that optimize their investment experience.
The 90 million 401k account owners can be divided into 3 categories. The first are those who could care less about their money and are willing to just take what they are given. The second group, NEWBIES, are inexperienced in the investment process, but are willing to become engaged in the management of their hard-earned dollars. The third group, NERDS, are those who have a modicum of investment expertise and are willing to devote the time and energy to expand their investments skills.
My mission is to motivate 401k participants and their employer plan providers to become engaged in their account and then train them how to optimize their results.
I have a 62-years of stock market experience. I have been a stockbroker, finance professor and individual investor. I have no investment products to sell. All I have to offer are the objective observations of one who has been there and done that.
401k Investing for Newbies and Nerds
Season 2 Episode 11 Is Your 401k Up To Par - Club Selection
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In my last episode, I made some disparaging remarks about golfers and 401K plan participants. I start this episode with a reader's digest version of my prior commentary. Then I provide a discussion designed to enlighten listeners on how and why to become better managers of their hard-earned retirement dollars.
A golfers handicapped helps them evaluate the quality of their game. There are similar benchmarks that help us evaluate various aspects of our everyday life. There are tables that tell us if we are a 6-foot male, we should weigh 200 lbs. There are Government standards that tell us our two-ton SUV should get 27 mile per gallon. My Cheerios box tells me that when I eat a cup of cereal, I have consumer 45% of the amount of sugar I should consume in a day.
90 million American workers have invested $15 trillion of their hard-earned money in stock market mutual funds. And just like the benchmarks discussed above, there are many who have no clue about the precise amount of return on their hard-earned retirement dollars and how to compare that to what is possible.
For most stock market gurus, the benchmark for investment performance is the return of the S&P 500. Over the course of the past 2 ½ years, in spite of all that’s been thrown at it, the S&P 500 has gained 58.6%. A S&P 500 index fund provides investors that same return for a one tent of one percent fee and no assembly required.
There are two other lesser used stock market indexes that some financial experts also use as a proxy for the market; The Dow and the Nasdaq. Their performance for the same time period as I quoted for the S&P, were 44.3% and 73.4% respectfully. A divergence from the return of the standard set by the S&P that is worthy of note. Both have index funds that, just like the S&P 500, mimic their performance.
My goal for this episode is to motivate you to do your homework and put a hard number on your investment return, not just “Doing OK.” Then and only then can you answer the question; Do I know as much about the performance of my 401k as I do my golf score?