Few Retirement Savers Left The Stock Market Last Year

January 20, 2009 RSS Feed Print
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Only a small portion of retirement savers pulled their money out of the stock market last year. Just 14 percent of retirement plan participants made any kind of change to their 401(k) asset allocation in 2008, according to retirement plan administrator Mercer, which oversees 401(k) accounts for 1.2 million Americans.

Those who did make changes fled the stock market and sought safety, shifting their assets from equity markets into stable value and money market funds.

Mercer has also seen a jump in the number of people requesting withdrawals from their accounts compared to last year, especially in November and December, and an increase in the number of participants who have stopped contributing to their employer’s 401(k) plan. “Mercer has seen more participants decrease rather than increase their contribution rates throughout 2008, a trend rarely seen in more stable economic times,” the firm said.

The number of 401(k) participants taking these actions was relatively small, averaging less than one percent in both cases. But Eric Levy, retirement business leader of Mercer’s outsourcing business, called the growth in withdrawals and reduced contributions alarming. “This may point to the dire straits that a small but growing number of participants find themselves in where withdrawals and zero contribution rates are seen as a type of financial last resort,” he says.

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I am a state employee with a 403(b) plan. Like many employee sponsored retirement plans, the plan limits investments to certain mutual funds and money market funds. This limitation, by the way, applies to almost all 529 college plans as well. The problem for me is that in this climate of approaching economic catastrophe, I don't want my money tied up in anything but government guaranteed funds. So I stopped contributing to the retirement plan. It is better to pay taxes on your earnings now than risk losing them in risky investments, and, yes, money market funds are indeed risky (the government guarantee of certain money market funds is only temporary).

Ma Le of ME 12:03PM January 25, 2009

I stopped contributing to my 401(k) last November, but not because I wanted. Due to IRS regulations, I can not continue to contribute when my earned income stops, as mine did when I got laid off.

rick2rio of MN 9:48AM January 21, 2009

The big players count on the small players panicking and withdrawing at a loss that becomes their gain.

Retirees cannot afford to withdraw at sever losses.

They can only hang in there and wait for their little bit to regain the value they bought in with their collective small investments and only consider withdrawing at a proft like the big players do.

HillbillyBill of TN 12:28PM January 20, 2009

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