Americans Reflect on How Stock Market Volatility Will Affect Plans to Retire

Six in ten (61%) survey respondents are simply not sure how long it might delay their ability to save for retirement should a large 6,000 point drop in the Dow occur.

Lately, retirement plan participants have seen how volatile markets can be, with the Dow plunging nearly 3,000 points in early February, and the markets swinging wildly up and down since then.

Data from the Alight Solutions 401(k) Index showed participants reacted poorly to the volatility.

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A new survey conducted by Gfk on behalf of in partnership with COUNTRY Financial finds Americans are expecting a volatile year in the stock market with slightly more than one-quarter (27%) saying the market will gain value and 23% expecting the market to lose value. Nearly three in 10 (29%) say they “don’t know” what to expect from the stock market in 2018, and 19% expect the market to stay the same.

More than half of Americans (52%) say they are financially prepared if the Dow were to lose an additional 6,000 points, yet only 28% actually have a financial safety plan in place. Two-thirds (65%) of Millennials do not consider themselves financially prepared for another down market in comparison to 70% of older Americans (age 65 and older) and men (57%), who believe they are equipped to handle a drop.

Six in 10 (61%) survey respondents are simply not sure how long it might delay their ability to save for retirement should a large 6,000 point drop in the Dow occur. For those that are able to estimate the amount of delay in their ability to save for retirement, responses ranged from zero to two years (23%) to more long-term impact of nine or more years (2%), with a mean of 2.69 years. Women are more likely than men to be “unsure” about how long a large drop in the Dow might delay being able to save for retirement (67% to 55%, respectively). Men are more likely than women to say that the delay in savings might only be zero to two years (28% to 18%).

The survey also revealed how many Americans would tap into savings to pay for an unexpected expense. Nearly half of Americans (49%) feel like they could pay a $1,500 emergency room visit using their savings, while one in five (19%) would need to rely on using a credit card to pay the emergency room bill. More than half of Americans (53%) feel like they could pay a $500 car insurance deductible using their savings, while one in six (17%) would need to rely on using a credit card to pay the insurance deductible. When faced with a $100 tax bill, 54% of Americans feel like they could pay the bill from their savings.

Among those Americans with access to using retirement savings vehicles, such as a 401(k), 403(b), 457 plan or individual retirement account (IRA), only 46% say they are contributing as much as they would like. Those who are not contributing as much as they like blame a combination of a full range financial responsibilities (home mortgage (23%), credit card debt (20%), student loans (16%), car loans (15%), and medical bills (8%)) holding them back from contributing more.

Investment Products and Services Launches

JULY adds Stadion ETF to platform; Nationwide increases fund offerings with new ETF; and Fairpointe Capital releases ESG-centralized approach.

Stadion Money Management announced that July Business Services (JULY), a national retirement plan recordkeeper, has added Stadion’s managed account solution, StoryLine, built with SPDR exchange-traded funds (ETFs), to its retirement platform.

JULY provides custom plan design and hands-on services for plan setup, operation and administration.

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StoryLine, built with SPDR ETFs, is a retirement planning solution built specifically for 401(k) participants in adviser-sold plans. StoryLine offers plan level customization with the option of participant level customization, which Stadion sees as a distinct improvement over “one size fits all” target-date strategies. StoryLine, which made its market debut in 2016, has approximately $600 million in assets under management (AUM) and approximately 1,100 plans through year end.

“We are excited about adding Stadion as a solution for personalized participant account management to our open architecture retirement platform,” says John Humphrey, JULY’s president and CEO. “Stadion’s experience and approach to simplifying participant investing aligns nicely with JULY’s strategy of making retirement planning easy for employers and participants.”

 

Nationwide Increases Fund Offerings with New ETF

 

Nationwide added another Strategic Beta exchange-traded fund (ETF) option that seeks to provide investors with improved risk-adjusted returns by enhancing diversification. The new Nationwide Maximum Diversification Emerging Markets Core Equity ETF (MXDE) is the latest Strategic Beta ETF since Nationwide launched three others in 2017.

“The Nationwide Maximum Diversification Emerging Markets Core Equity ETF seeks to identify the exact combination of stocks within the emerging markets universe that will maximize the diversification benefits of a portfolio while retaining the full equity risk premium,” says Chris Graham, chief investment officer for Nationwide Funds. “In other words, by building portfolios which seek to minimize idiosyncratic risk exposure from specific stock, sector, factor or country bets, this fund is expected to deliver higher risk-adjusted returns.”

Like the Nationwide Maximum Diversification U.S. Core Equity ETF (MXDU) launched last year, the Nationwide Maximum Diversification Emerging Markets Core Equity ETF (MXDE) seeks to deliver higher risk-adjusted returns relative to market cap-weighted strategies by creating a more diversified risk allocation aimed at capturing the full equity risk premium. Both funds track an index developed by TOBAM that applies liquidity and socially responsible investment (SRI) screens in determining the investable universe. Based on a patented, proprietary mathematical formula, the TOBAM Diversification Ratio, TOBAM weights individual stocks to minimize the correlations among holdings, resulting in the creation of the “most diversified portfolio,” given a 50% active share constraint.

The benchmark for the new fund is the MSCI Emerging Market Index and the listing exchange is NYSE Arca.

“Since the end of 2015 the MSCI Emerging Market index has outperformed the S&P 500 Index by 19% on a total return basis,” says Graham. “We think emerging markets are a great option to help advisers combat their clients’ home bias investing and further diversify their portfolio.”

 

Fairpointe Capital Releases ESG-Centralized Approach

 

Fairpointe Capital LLC has introduced the Fairpointe ESG [environmental, social, and governance] Equity Strategy. The strategy integrates structured ESG analysis with Fairpointe’s bottom-up, fundamental valuation-based approach to investing and is managed by Mary Pierson, Frances Tuite, and Thyra Zerhusen.

“We have long been proponents of investing in companies with principled corporate governance practices,” says Mary Pierson, co-CEO of Fairpointe Capital.  “Adding this concentrated ESG strategy was a natural progression for us. Ultimately, we believe that when good governance leads, responsible social and environmental actions follow.”  

Fairpointe focuses on corporate governance, actively voting proxies and engaging with management regularly. “We believe this gives us a voice to improve corporate behavior—and ultimately leads to less risk and potentially better performance,” says Fran Tuite, portfolio manager. The strategy unites Fairpointe’s governance investing philosophy with consideration of environmental and social actions.

The managers use a proprietary system to rate companies, which includes the MSCI ESG database combined with their own extensive research. 

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