John Hancock Retirement Plan Services will begin offering
Morningstar’s HelloWallet financial wellness program on its Total Retirement
Solutions platform in the fourth quarter.
HelloWallet helps people manage their finances by creating budgets, analyzing
spending and savings trends, and tracking progress toward goals. It is based
on findings from behavioral finance and industry experts.
“Our proprietary research proves that financial stress is a
major factor in many people’s lives, and retirement is almost an irrelevant
topic as people have too much debt and not enough savings,” says Patrick
Murphy, president of John Hancock Retirement Plan Services. “By offering
HelloWallet, we’re helping people figure out how to alleviate their immediate
financial stresses and enabling them to save for a comfortable retirement.”
For the trailing 12 months ending in the second quarter, total contributions, including company match, to 401(k) plan participant accounts reached $10,180, up
from $9,840 at the end of the first quarter, according to Fidelity Investments.
This is the first time that trailing one-year contributions surpassed $10,000.
However, the average 401(k) account balance dipped slightly,
by 0.76%, to $91,100 at the end of the second quarter, from $91,800 at the
end of the first quarter.
The average 401(k) loan balance rose to $9,720 at the end of the second quarter, up 0.93%
from $9,630 at the end of the first quarter and 2.3% from $9,500 a year ago.
Fidelity attributed the increase in loans to the rise in account balances.
Baby Boomers Overweight in Equities
The average account balance has risen 50% in the past five
years, primarily driven by the booming stock market, Fidelity said. However,
this has led to an increased exposure to equities in many 401(k) accounts,
which could leave investors overly exposed in the event of a market downturn,
Fidelity said.
Eighteen percent of people between the ages of 50 and 54 had
a stock allocation at least 10 percentage points higher than recommended in the
second quarter, and 27% of people between the ages of 55 and 59 had such
exposure, Fidelity said. Furthermore, 11% of people in the 50-54 age bracket
had 100% of their 401(k) assets invested in stocks, and 10% of people in the
55-59 age bracket had 100% of their assets in stocks.
“One thing we learned from the last recession is that having
too much stock in your retirement account can expose your savings to
unnecessary risk,” says Jim McDonald, president of workplace investing at
Fidelity. “It’s the hidden danger that many workers are unaware of. This is
especially true among workers nearing retirement, who should be taking steps to
protect what they’ve worked so hard to save.”
Individual retirement account (IRA) balances increased to $96,300 at the end of the second quarter, up 2.4% from
$94,000 at the end of the first quarter and up 4.1% from $92,500 at the end of
the second quarter of 2014, according to Fidelity. The average IRA contribution fell to $2,690 at the
end of the second quarter, down 14.6% from $3,150 at the end of the first
quarter. Fidelity attributed this to the significant number of people making contributions
to their IRA in the first quarter to meet the Internal Revenue Service
deadline for claiming contributions on tax returns.