As baby boomers retire and people
live longer, an understanding of Social Security and Medicare has become
increasingly important when planning for retirement.
With
changes to both plans that took effect January 1, knowing what benefits
Social Security and Medicare provide and the best age to start benefits
is the first step in retirement planning. Mercer’s 2017 Guide to Social
Security and 2017 Medicare booklet provides updated, easy-to-understand
information.
The booklets deliver simple explanations of these
programs, recent changes, and cost and benefit amounts for
2017—including lots of real-life examples.
The 2017 Guide to
Social Security—now in its 45th edition—is a 64-page booklet that
includes vital information about the following topics:
Major Social Security program changes for 2017;
Retirement benefits – early, late and delayed retirement information, with examples;
Disability and survivor benefits;
Who receives benefits;
Easy-reference monthly benefit tables;
Medicare benefits overview – eligibility and enrollment;
“To Do” section; and
Answers to frequently asked questions about Social Security.
Mercer’s 2017 Medicare booklet, 34th edition, is 32 pages and includes:
Major Medicare changes for 2017;
What is covered and not covered;
Enrollment and eligibility;
Part A (Hospital Insurance);
Part B (Medical Insurance);
Part C (Medicare Advantage Plans); and
Part D (Outpatient Prescription Drug Plan).
The
minimum order for the Guide is 25 copies at $7.95 each, the same price
as last year. Quantity discounts are available; for example, 100 copies
are $6.95 each
The minimum order for the Medicare booklet is 100
copies at $3.95 each, the same price as last year! Quantity discounts
are available; for example, 500 copies are $3.55 each.
Visit www.imercer.com/socialsecurity or call 800-333-3070 for more information and to purchase Mercer’s 2017 Guide to Social Security and/or 2017 Medicare booklet.
By using this site you agree to our network wide Privacy Policy.
Charles Schwab Lowers Trade Commissions and Index Fund Fees; Symons Capital Releases Small Cap Equity Mutual Fund; Pantheon Targets DC Plans for Private Equity Strategies; and more.
Charles Schwab Lowers
Trade Commissions and Index Fund Fees
Charles Schwab announced that beginning February 3, 2017, it
will reduce its standard online equity and exchange-traded fund (ETF) trade
commissions from $8.95 to $6.95. Effective March 1, 2017, Charles Schwab will
lower expenses for Schwab market cap-weighted index
mutual funds to align with their Schwab ETF equivalents. Moreover, all
investment minimums will be eliminated for these mutual funds, which will
utilize a single share class.
On March 1, Schwab will also
minimize expenses on the Schwab U.S. TIPS ETF and Schwab Fundamental
Index ETFs. Pending shareholder approval, the Schwab Fundamental Index mutual
funds will follow suit effective May 1, 2017, by eliminating all investment
minimums, employing a single share class, and aligning expenses with those in
the comparable Schwab ETFs.
“Reducing online trade commissions as scale and technology
lower our operating costs is a way to ensure our clients benefit from their
commitment to us,” says Schwab President and CEO Walt Bettinger. “I am
especially proud of our decision to eliminate investment minimums and employ a
single share class in our market cap-weighted and Fundamental Index mutual
funds—ensuring that every investor pays the lowest possible fees.”
Furthermore, Schwab is initiating a satisfaction guarantee
policy. Simply put, clients dissatisfied with certain commissions, transaction
fees or advisory program fees paid do the firm would be refunded for those expenses.
“Today’s consumers expect great value, a great experience,
and a refund if they aren’t satisfied,” explains Bettinger. “We believe a
modern investing experience should deliver on these expectations—period
Visit Schwab.com
for more information, disclosures, and specific details.
NEXT:Symons Capital Releases Small Cap Equity Mutual Fund
Symons Capital Releases Small Cap Equity Mutual Fund
The Symons Concentrated Small Cap Value Institutional Fund
(SCSVX) is an extension of the Symons Concentrated Small Cap Value
composite. SCSVX will purchase stocks with market capitalizations of less than
$3 billion and will hold fewer than 20 stocks across a broad sector allocation.
“As part of designing this strategy, and in an ever-changing
environment where fees are being compressed, we wanted to create a fund whereby
we believe there will be great demand in the small value asset class” says Michael
P. Czajka, CEO of Symons Capital Management. “In particular, with the lack of
available capacity in the small cap value space coupled with a good process and
a clear differentiation from our peers, I truly believe this will be the
strategy that makes Symons Capital Management a nationally known firm, side-by-side with some of the
other great small cap value investment firms.”
Symons Capital Management’s portfolio manager and investment
research team aims for long-term absolute returns and relative returns
above benchmarks, with a focus on risk-management and downside protection over
a full-market cycle.
“The small cap sector is an area where we believe our independent
macro, quantitative and qualitative equity research can be used to good
advantage to achieve long-term wealth accumulation,” says Czajka. “Typically,
there is less published research available on such companies, which makes this
a perfect strategy for us. I believe this strategy will be very successful not
only with investment management consultants, but even more so with registered
investment advisers who create asset allocation models utilizing mutual funds
rather than ETF’s or index funds in this asset class.”
NEXT: Pantheon Targets DC Plans for Private Equity Strategies
Pantheon Targets DC
Plans for Private Equity Strategies
Pantheon is introducing performance-based pricing to its
private equity strategies targeting the defined contribution (DC) market.
The performance pricing option applies to the part of the
portfolio invested in private equity and it’s accrued only when the performance
of the private assets in the portfolio beats its benchmark, which is the S&P
500. Generally speaking, the firm says investors don’t pay for performance they
did not experience.
“The innovative fee solution we are announcing today visibly
aligns investors’ interests with Pantheon’s, addresses core plan sponsor
concerns including costs and potential litigation, and it demonstrates the
confidence we have in our ability to deliver strong returns to our investors,”
says Kevin Albert, managing director at Pantheon.
John Hancock Investments has revamped its target-date funds
(TDF) for the defined contribution (DC) market with new names and lower fees.
The John Hancock
Multimanager Lifetime Portfolios, formerly known as John Hancock Retirement
Living Portfolios, are designed to help manage longevity risk by following a
glide path that begins with 95% equity exposure before gradually decreasing to
50% at the target retirement date. It then continues scaling down through the
first 20 years of retirement until stabilizing at 25%. The portfolio management
team implements the asset allocation strategy with a combination of active
open-end mutual funds and other investments, tapping nearly 20 specialized
teams.
The John Hancock
Multi-Index Lifetime Portfolios, formerly known as John Hancock
Retirement Living II Portfolios, are also designed to help manage longevity
risk and follow the same lifetime glide path. Managers implement the asset
allocation strategy with a combination of index-tracking exchange-traded funds
(ETFs) and other investments to minimize the impact of expenses on portfolio
returns.
John Hancock Multi-Index
Preservation Portfolios are designed for investors who want to minimize
risk in the years leading up to retirement. Glide paths begin at 82% equity
exposure which decreases to and stabilizes at eight percent upon reaching the
target retirement date. John Hancock Asset Management implements the asset
allocation strategy with a combination of index-tracking ETFs and other
investments to minimize the impact of expenses on portfolio returns.
NEXT: Vanguard Lowers Expense Ratios on 21 Fund Shares
Vanguard Lowers
Expense Ratios on 21 Fund Shares
The financial services firm Vanguard says its clients saved
almost $25 million after it lowered expense ratios for 21 individual mutual
fund shares including three quantitative equity funds and six target-date funds
(TDF)s.
Last month, the firm reported lower expense ratios for
shares of 35 funds representing aggregate savings of $13 million.
The expense ratio of the $6.6 billion Vanguard Strategic
Equity Fund dropped three basis points to 0.18%, that of the $1.5 billion
Vanguard Strategic Small-Cap Equity Fund dropped five basis points to 0.29%,
and that of the $1.5 billion Vanguard U.S. Value Fund dropped three basis
points to 0.23%. These funds are managed by Vanguard’s Quantitative Equity
Group (QEG).
The firm’s six Target Retirement Funds (TRFs) saw their
expenses drop by 1 basis point each. The expense ratios fell to 0.13% for both
the Target Retirement Income Fund and the Target Retirement 2010 Fund, and to
0.14% for the Target Retirement 2025 Fund. Three institutional target-date
funds—the $2.2 billion Vanguard Institutional Target Retirement Income Fund,
the $2 billion Vanguard Institutional Target Retirement 2010 Fund, and the $6.3
billion Vanguard Institutional Target Retirement 2015 Fund—reported lower
expense ratios of 0.09%.
The World Gold Council and State Street Global Markets, an affiliate of State Street Global Advisors, announced
that the SPDR Long Dollar Gold Trust has begun trading on the New York Stock
Exchange. GLDW seeks to track the performance of the Solactive GLD Long USD
Gold Index, less fund expenses.
“The price of gold and the U.S. dollar have historically
tended to move in opposite directions,” says Nick Good, co-head of the Global
SPDR business at State Street Global Advisors. “By lessening the dollar’s
potential impact on gold, GLDW seeks to provide investors the opportunity to
realize the potential benefits of using gold as a strategic portfolio
diversifier, while offering the ability to buffer against the potential adverse
effects of a strong dollar on gold.”
The index combines a long position in physical gold and long
dollar exposure against a basket of non-U.S. currencies.
The organization notes that performance of the U.S. dollar against this
currency basket is expected to increase or decrease the amount of gold held by
GLDW. GLDW holds physical gold in the form of 400 ounce London Good Delivery
bars stored in the custodian’s London vault, except when GLDW’s physical gold
has been allocated in the vault of a subcustodian solely for temporary custody
and safekeeping.
“GLDW is the first ETF listed in the U.S. backed by physical
gold that is designed to hedge the movement of gold against the U.S. dollar,”
says Joseph Cavatoni, principal executive officer of GLDW’s sponsor, and
managing director USA and ETFs, World Gold Council.
Cardinal Investment Advisors, a boutique consulting firm
specializing in liability-driven investment experience, has adopted RiskFirst’s
risk management platform, PFaroe.
This solution will allow the firm to optimize its clients’ portfolios
in a liability-aware fashion, informing long-term strategies around glide
paths, required cash contributions and the maintenance of credit balances.
“Cardinal is committed to investing in tools and resources
that help us to meet our key objective: optimizing the creation, implementation
and monitoring of investment strategies,” says Scott Skornia, managing
director, Cardinal Investment Advisors. “We have always looked at such
strategies from a liability/risk perspective and PFaroe aligns perfectly with
this view. The tool will be an asset to our offering; automating our reporting and
allowing us to have all our data in one place—everything from the attribution
of risk, all the way down to having access to underlying benchmark data. The
system will bring greater levels of efficiency and streamlining to the
business.”
Matthew Seymour, CEO, RiskFirst, adds: “Cardinal deals
frequently with complex portfolios and equally complex liability structures,
and is dedicated to delivering innovative LDI solutions and optimized portfolio
strategies. Cardinal has historically created in-house the financial tools and
analytics required to do this, with a reputation for developing best-in-class
asset-liability models, so we are delighted that they have decided to bring in PFaroe
to add value to their specialist offering for clients old and new.”