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ARCHIVE
Featured Chart: 401(k) Participants Hold Lower-Cost Mutual Funds
By Sarah A. Holden
June 14, 2013
One key takeaway from ICI’s recent paper, The Economics of Providing 401(k) Plans: Services, Fees, and Expenses, 2012, is that 401(k) investors in mutual funds tend to hold lower-cost funds with below-average portfolio turnover.
Consider equity funds, in which one-third of 401(k) plan assets are invested. Eighty-four percent of 401(k) plan equity fund assets were invested in mutual funds with expense ratios less than 1.00 percent (or $1.00 for every $100 in assets) at year-end 2012. Indeed, 35 percent of 401(k) equity fund assets were in mutual funds with expense ratios less than 0.50 percent.
401(k) Equity Mutual Fund Assets Are Concentrated in Lower-Cost Funds
Percentage of 401(k) equity mutual fund assets, 2012
* The total expense ratio, which is reported as a percentage of fund assets, includes fund operating expenses and the 12b-1 fee.
Note: Figures exclude mutual funds available as investment choices in variable annuities. Components do not add to 100 percent because of rounding.
Sources: Investment Company Institute and Lipper
What are the factors that contribute to 401(k) investors holding funds with relatively low average expense ratios?
- Competition: Both inside and outside the 401(k) plan market, mutual funds compete among themselves and with other financial products to offer shareholders service and performance.
- Price-sensitive investors: Shareholders are sensitive to the fees and expenses that funds charge. Indeed, assets tend to be concentrated in lower-cost funds, providing a market incentive for funds to offer their services at competitive prices.
- Price-sensitive plan sponsors: In the 401(k) plan market, performance- and cost-conscious plan sponsors also impose market discipline. Plan sponsors regularly evaluate the performance and fees of the plans’ investments.
The full paper has many more insights into the services and costs of 401(k) plans. For more retirement-related research, please visit the Research section of our website, as well as our 401(k) Resource Center.
Sarah A. Holden is ICI’s senior director of retirement and investor research.
TOPICS: Retirement Research
Fact Checking the Media on Money Market Funds
By Mike McNamee
June 7, 2013
The media has heavily covered the unanimous vote by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to proceed with another round of regulatory changes for money market funds. In digesting this coverage, readers and journalists alike should make sure they have solid facts about money market funds. They also should be on guard for errors and omissions that tend to recur in stories and commentary on this issue.
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
On Money Market Funds, Financial Times Column Gets Recent History Wrong
By Paul Schott Stevens
June 6, 2013
John Authers’s recent Financial Times column (“Time to Throw Some Light on Shadow Banking”) provides an incomplete view of the recent history of U.S. money market funds and regulatory action around these funds. Readers need more facts.
TOPICS: Money Market Funds
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