Saturday, July 11, 2009

Money & Business

Planning to Retire by Emily Brandon

Retirement Savers Lost $2 Trillion in the Stock Market

October 08, 2008 11:52 AM ET | Emily Brandon | Permanent Link | Print

Stock market turmoil has wiped out roughly $2 trillion of Americans' retirement savings over the past 15 months, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

The value of pension funds and retirement accounts dropped by roughly $1 trillion, or almost 10 percent, in the year ending June 30, the CBO told the House Education and Labor Committee Tuesday, citing Federal Reserve data. Since then, asset prices have dropped even further. The CBO says that retirement assets may have declined by as much as $2 trillion over the past 15 months. 

"To the extent households view balances in defined-contribution plans as part of their overall portfolio of wealth, a decline in those balances could lead people to reduce or delay purchases of goods and services," says Peter Orszag, director of the CBO. "It could also lead some workers to delay their retirement." The CBO says this multitrillion-dollar loss in retirement wealth could further slow the ailing economy.

Individual 401(k) participants' average losses ranged from 7.2 percent to 11.2 percent in the first nine months of 2008, according to an Employee Benefit Research Institute analysis of 2.2 million participants. Over two thirds of the assets in 401(k)-style defined-contribution plans are invested in equities, either directly or through mutual funds. During the first nine months of 2008, stocks were down, with the S&P 500 index losing more than 19 percent. Fixed-income investments fared better, with the Lehman Aggregate index gaining 0.63 percent and three-month treasury bills gaining 1.54 percent.

The recent market turmoil may be disproportionately affecting older Americans. Older employees generally have less of their money in stocks and stock funds than do younger workers, which shields them somewhat against catastrophic losses. But older workers' average account balances are markedly higher, so they have more to lose in a significant downturn and less time to recoup losses before retirement. "In the last few weeks, we've been confronted with older workers' and retirees' lives being turned upside down; their panic tops off an already existing state of chronic anxiety about retirement futures," says Teresa Ghilarducci, a professor of economic policy analysis at the New School for Social Research.

Two potential solutions to retirement losses offered by the CBO are working longer to offset financial declines and sensibly allocating your assets to avoid bearing the risks associated with tumultuous markets as much as possible. For example, most workers should invest in diversified index funds rather than individual stocks.

Here's another potential strategy to insulate yourself against stock market risks.

Tags: economy | investing | retirement | stock market | 401(k)

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Reader Comments

Lost Money

I'm 58, retired and totally disabled. My wife and I lost over 70% of our retirement based on what our "financial adviser" at Merrill Lynch told us. What a laugh. Now we are scrambling to keep our house, food in our mouths and medicine in our blood streams.

Does anyone know of law suits, individual or class action against Merrill Lynch for abusing and violation their fiduciary duties???

Just drop me an email-----

Regards

S.

The Unretired Going Back To Work ...

We tell these people to deversify such as a SnP 500 and it dwn 40 % YTD! But the truth is these retired folks should not have been in stks altogether anyway if at all! Tell these folks how " poorly " stks have preformed over the last 10 & 20 yrs to now!

Ask yourself ! If your dwn say 50 % - how long n how much will the mkt have to gain for me to become whole. A cool 100 % my friends and that well take a decade at that! And mind you that doesn't take into acc't any inflation or lost money you would have made had you not suffered those heavy loses back in 2008 n 09 huh !

I've been retired 15 yrs now, with rental property and FDIC Cds @ 6% long term. Have three times the money I had 15 yrs ago without the worry and am debt free! 68 n smiling too!

Class Action law suit

I also lost over half of my retirement fund. I also

had a Morgan Stanley advisor. I am 68 so there is no way to make up the lost funds , for I can't work another 37 years.

I just wonder if there will be a big lawsuit about this loss

of retiree's funds. There should be for not one time did anyone call me and tell me that I should have protected funds

or to move them to safer ground.

I am paying to have this company lose money for me and this is the second time this has happened. 2001 and 2008.

I am a caregiver for my husband 24/7. I thought I had someone that cared about my funds but evidently not.

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Reporter Emily Brandon tells you how to get ready financially for retirement and to make your golden years the best they can be. You can E-mail Emily your retirement concerns at retire@usnews.com.

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