New Study Profiles Mutual Fund Investors

Typical Fund Investor is Middle-aged, Married, and Saving for Retirement

Washington DC, September 24, 1999 - The 82.8 million Americans who own mutual funds are, in many respects, a reflection of the U.S. population itself: middle-aged, married, and saving for retirement, according to a new study by the Investment Company Institute, the national association for the American investment company industry.

According to the 1998 Profile of Mutual Fund Shareholders, the typical mutual fund shareholder:

  • is middle-aged, married, and college-educated;
  • invests in mutual funds through employer-sponsored retirement plans;
  • is employed and of moderate financial means;
  • has $25,000 invested in mutual funds;
  • understands the key elements of investing in a mutual fund; and
  • has long-term mutual fund goals.

This study indicates that mutual funds continue to serve investors from all walks of life who are saving for retirement and other long-term financial goals," Institute President Matthew P. Fink said. "Mutual funds are affordable investments that provide significant value to millions of Americans."

Highlights of the report include:

  • Most shareholders invest in funds for retirement, are willing to take at least moderate risk for moderate gain, and are not focused on short-term market fluctuations.
  • Seventy-seven percent of all mutual fund-owning households participate in an employer-sponsored defined contribution retirement plan. Sixty-two percent of these households own mutual funds in their defined contribution plans. Half view the workplace as their primary purchase channel for mutual funds.
  • The median age of the primary financial decisionmaker in the household of typical mutual fund shareholders is 44 years. Nearly 70 percent are married; 50 percent have a four-year college degree or more.
  • The typical shareholder has invested $25,000 in mutual funds, which represents nearly one-third of the shareholder's household assets. Seven out of eight households include equity funds among their holdings. Eighty-two percent of mutual fund shareholders are employed full- or part-time. In married households, the spouse also tends to work. Median household income is $55,000 and median household financial assets are $80,000.
  • Half of all household owners made their first mutual fund purchase before 1990 and more than one-third did so between 1990 and 1995.
  • Investment decisionmaking is shared in 54 percent of fund-owning households. Males make the investment decisions in 24 percent of fund-owning households, females in 22 percent.
  • Twenty-two percent of mutual fund shareholders were born in 1965 or later, making them members of Generation X. Members of the Baby Boom Generation, born between 1946 and 1964, make up the greatest percentage of mutual fund shareholders at 51 percent. Twenty-seven percent of fund shareholders are members of the so-called Silent Generation, born before 1946.
  • Thirty-one percent of mutual fund shareholders reside in the Midwest; 30 percent in the South; 21 percent in the West; and 18 percent in the Northeast.

The survey contacted more than 1,400 financial decisionmakers to determine demographic, financial, and fund ownership characteristics of mutual fund shareholders nationwide. The survey also examined patterns of fund ownership through employer-sponsored retirement plans and outside of those plans.

The Investment Company Institute is the national association of the investment company industry. Its members include mutual funds, closed-end funds, and unit investment trusts.

NATIONAL AND REGIONAL PROFILE OF MUTUAL FUND SHAREHOLDERS (1998)

Shareholder Characteristics:

 

National

Northeast1

Midwest2

South3

West4

Median Age

44 years

43 years

43 years

44 years

45 years

Median Household Income

$55,000

$60,000

$50,000

$54,000

$60,000

Median Household Financial Assets

$80,000

$73,000

$75,000

$80,000

$95,000

Married

68 percent

66 percent

68 percent

67 percent

70 percent

4-year College Degree

50 percent

47 percent

49 percent

49 percent

56 percent

Household Investment Decisionmaker:

 

National

Northeast

Midwest

South

West

Male

24 percent

28 percent

23 percent

27 percent

21 percent

Female

22 percent

18 percent

20 percent

23 percent

24 percent

Shared Responsibility

54 percent

54 percent

57 percent

51 percent

55 percent

Fund Ownership Characteristics:
(Median Per Household)

 

National

Northeast

Midwest

South

West

Fund Assets

$25,000

$28,000

$21,200

$22,000

$25,000

No. Funds Owned

4

4

3

3

4

No. of fund companies in which assets are invested

2

2

2

2

2

First Fund Purchase

1990

1990

1989

1990

1988

Own funds outside employer-sponsored retirement plan

54 percent

56 percent

55 percent

50 percent

58 percent

Own funds inside employer-sponsored retirement plan

62 percent

66 percent

63 percent

60 percent

62 percent

Primary Financial Goal:

 

National

Northeast

Midwest

South

West

Retirement

77 percent

72 percent

78 percent

76 percent

82 percent

Education

11 percent

13 percent

11 percent

12 percent

7 percent

Other

12 percent

15 percent

11 percent

12 percent

11 percent

Source: 1998 Profile of Mutual Fund Shareholders, Investment Company Institute


1 Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Vermont

2 Ohio Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wisconsin

3 Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland,, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, West Virginia and Washington, D.C.

4 Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington and Wyoming

  

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