Do You Really Know What's Inside Your 401(k)? - Zweig
Leave it to Wall Street to take a cheap, simple, elegant idea and junk it up with fees, complexity and opacity.
Thats whats starting to happen to target-date funds, the investment favored by tens of millions of people saving in 401(k)s and other retirement plans. A vehicle that couldnt be easier to own may soon become too hard to understand. Many of these funds are getting cluttered with extra holdings. Things might get worse if so-called alternatives managers have their way and start stuffing illiquid, risky and often expensive private-markets assets into them.
Target-date funds are permanent autopilot portfolios that neutralize self-destructive investing behavior. More than two-thirds of all participants in 401(k) retirement plans hold at least one, according to the Investment Company Institute.
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These all-in-one funds solve all that. They hold stocks, bonds and other assets in predetermined proportions, scaling down risk as investors age. Along the way, if stocks fall too far too fast, these funds automatically buy; if stocks go up too far too fast, these funds mechanically sell. The saying set it and forget it was made for these portfolios. It isnt much of an exaggeration to say that with target-date funds, the only decision youve had to make is which one to buy in the first place.
Many target-date funds are no longer the simple bundles of underlying funds they once were. Nearly 35% hold at least two dozen underlying positions, up from 29% a decade ago, according to Morningstar data. Crack open an all-in-one portfolio, and youre likely to find both a growth and a value fund for large stocks, another pair for midsize companies and still another for small stocks. Then there might be stocks screened on other criteria, such as high profitability or minimal price fluctuation, or a couple of strategic, discovery or dynamic funds to make the mix sound more enticing.
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https://www.wsj.com/finance/investing/do-you-really-know-whats-inside-your-401-k-c480ec9c?st=P6c3t1&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
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bucolic_frolic
(53,678 posts)They are one strategy. There could be many others, just not in a 401k. I want a basket of strategies, not just a basket of prominent names.
I want to know if 35% of every index fund is invested in the MAG 7 or the same 30 global tech names.
Who are the managers, what is their track record? Is it basically a closet index fund? "We select undervalued stocks with growth potential for capital gains." Oh, really? Is that a strategy?
I'm finding funds with vague objectives managed by multiple fund advisory companies who have no real claim to fame. Average is being hitched to growth in the overall economy. I want a discernible path to returns that beat the market averages.
Advisory fees are leeching investors every bit as much as insurance agents are doing to Medicare. IMHO