August 23, 2012
--- Participants
who choose their own investment options are generally exposed to greater risk
than target-date fund (TDF) investors, according to research from Principal
Financial Group. ---
In analyzing a subset of 2.4 million defined contribution
accounts, The Principal compared do-it-for-me participants who use a
target-date investment option with do-it-myself participants who select their
own allocation and services. The research found that generally, do-it-myself
participants were less diversified by asset class and number of investment
options, rarely used automatic rebalancing to meet their investment goals, and
at younger ages, frequently had much less exposure to equities.
The research showed that do-it-myself participants are using
an average of two to four investment options across the board, compared with
the average 15 to 20 underlying investment options, representing a variety of
asset classes, within the typical target-date portfolio.
Among the youngest investors analyzed, those opting for a
do-it-myself approach generally had less exposure to equities, and may be
missing out on one of the key ingredients to greater retirement savings: the
potential power of compounded earnings. Equity exposure among do-it-myself
investors who are far from retirement tended to differ significantly from the
average target-date investor in the same age group.
The average do-it-myself participant born after 1987 had
nearly 30-percentage-points lower equity exposure (54.7%) within their
investment portfolio compared with the 83.95% within a target-date investment
option.
With time, participants’ investment allocations may become
out of alignment with their goals. While participants may rebalance on their
own to realign their allocations to their intended strategies, the analysis
found that do-it-myself participants are rarely selecting automatic this
option. Only 2% of do-it-myself investors elected an automatic rebalancing
service. Auto-rebalancing is typically a built-in feature within target-date investment
options.
Rebecca Moore