Another week, another Bloomberg op-ed bashing 401(k)s—but this time the target is fees—and advisors.
The most recent “shot” is found in an article[i] titled “401(k) Fees Are Eating Your Retirement Savings.” The author, one Ethan Schwartz,[ii] without citation (beyond “various estimates”), tosses out claims as to the “average” fees in 401(k)s (and we know the value of “average” in such matters), states that those fees are “much higher” for then claims to know of “annual expenses well under 0.1%, and often near zero, offered by widely available stock and bond index funds and ETFs in many flavors and stripes outside of 401(k)s”—and then does the math to show how much it all adds to individually, and then he extrapolates it to the whole universe of 401(k) savers to assert that “more than $20 billion annually” is being “taken” from the nest eggs of retirement savers.
Better still, he cites the example of a “close friend” who asked for his help—only to find that “the plan offers a menu of high-priced (and underperforming) actively managed vehicles. Its only index-tracking choices are expensive “collective investment trusts costing about 0.5% more than index mutual funds and ETFs.” Oh, and he also cites as “even more outrageous” the reality that those trusts allow for securities lending (which doesn’t cost the plan money, and in fact probably offsets fees with income).
As unlikely as his generalizations seem to match the 401(k)s I know, it’s impossible to pick apart his portrayal of facts because—the individual situation notwithstanding—they are gross generalities. Not that that dissuades him from offering a “solution”—to “simply eliminate 401(k) intermediaries,” and to “let American workers save for retirement using their choice of designated, IRA-like accounts offering the same, cheap index-tracking funds and ETFs available outside of retirement plans.”
Unlike the other proposals cheered of late, he’s willing to leave the “other incentives that encourage Americans to save through their 401(k)s” intact, “including preferential tax status, employer matching contributions and enrolling employees by default.” He touts as “added bonus,” that “employers would no longer have to spend time and money establishing and monitoring their own, costly 401(k) plans. And employees of small businesses would no longer face a cost disadvantage vis-à-vis the plans offered by large firms, as they do today.”
Now, he anticipates “howls of opposition from the investment management industry,” and—along with a perspective of the industry that seems woefully out of date, he cites the work of none other than Yale Law School professor Ian Ayres and University of Virginia law professor Quinn Curtis. You may remember these guys—and the “love letters” from Yale. Their academic pedigree notwithstanding, these are the guys who used outdated (and limited) Form 5500 data and questionable expense assumptions to make wild accusations about 401(k) fees and the plans that offered them. Accusations that, it bears reminding, were subsequently disavowed by Yale University’s Law School.
In fact, actual fund data continues to show declining fees among 401(k) plans. It’s not that you can’t find outliers—perhaps even this writer’s colleagues’—but that’s clearly the exception, rather than the rule. In fact, the Investment Company Institute reports in “The Economics of Providing 401(k) Plans: Services, Fees, and Expenses, 2019” that 401(k) plan participants investing in equity mutual funds incurred an average expense ratio of 0.39% in 2019, compared with 0.42% in 2018 and 0.77% in 2000.
Like so many others who opine from ivory towers far removed from the front lines of workplace retirement plans, this author blithely assumes that workers don’t need the education, encouragement and financial support of employers and advisors. He ignores (or perhaps is simply unaware) of the data that shows how workers of even relatively modest means are 12 times more likely to save in their workplace retirement plan than on their own.[iii]
Today they’re also well-served by a growing number of automatic enrollment designs to help them get started, a steady increase in the default savings rate, and acceleration in that rate over time, not to mention the expanded availability and utilization of qualified default investment alternatives—enhanced designs that are not only continually finding their way “down market,” but that it seems fair to say are largely due to the involvement and engagement of those savings “eating” intermediaries he characterizes as “largely superfluous.”
What exactly is (still) “eating” 401(k) haters?
Why, instead of looking for ways to undermine a system that works, or pushing for incentives to extend those benefits to everyone—do they seem bound and determined to put those retirement savings on a “crash” diet?
- Nevin E. Adams, JD
[i] Bloomberg News editorials have been on something of a tear of late; you’ll also want to check out An Article that Doesn’t Make Much Sense and Chiseling Away at the 401(k)…
[ii] According to Bloomberg, Schwartz has worked as an investment manager and financial services executive for 21 years. He was a special assistant to the deputy secretary of the Treasury in the Clinton administration.
[iii] Vanguard, How America Saves 2018 (DC plan participation), EBRI estimate based on 2014 IRS SOI tabulation (IRA-only participation).
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