EBRI Reports Increased Savings Needed for Health Expenses in Retirement

At the extreme, EBRI estimates, out-of-pocket costs could reach $399,000 or more.

Individuals should understand that Medicare was not designed to cover health care expenses in full, and the most recent estimates by the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI) show that, at the extreme, out-of-pocket costs could reach $399,000 or more.

The reason individuals could incur costs greater than the EBRI estimates is that the estimates include the savings needed to pay for premiums for Medicare Parts B and D, premiums for Medigap Plan F, and out-of-pocket spending for outpatient prescription drugs, but not savings needed to cover any expenses associated with long-term care or any spending for health care services not traditionally covered by Medicare, such as dental care.

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EBRI estimates that in 2018 a man with median drug expenses would need $75,000 in savings and a woman with median drug expenses would need $99,000 if each had a goal of having a 50% chance of having enough money saved to cover health expenses in retirement. If either instead wanted a 90% chance of having enough savings, $148,000 would be needed for a man and $161,000 would be needed for a woman.

EBRI explains that because women have longer life expectancies than men, they will generally need larger savings than men to cover health insurance premiums and health care expenses in retirement regardless of the savings targets.

A couple both with median drug expenses would need $174,000 to have a 50% chance of having enough money to cover health expenses in retirement. They would need $240,000 to have a 75% chance of covering their expenses and $296,000 to have a 90% chance. These estimates are 3% to 13% higher than the savings targets estimated in 2017. EBRI says the main reason for the increase in needed savings is related to the adjustment that is made each year to re-establish the baseline for out-of-pocket spending associated with prescription drug use.

Needed savings in 2018 for a man with drug expenditures at the 75th percentile throughout retirement would be $83,000 if he wanted a 50% chance of having enough savings to cover health care expenses in retirement. For a woman, the savings target would be $110,000. If either instead wanted a 90% chance of having enough savings, $156,000 would be needed for a man and $178,000 would be needed for a woman.

A couple both with drug expenses at the 75th percentile would need $193,000 to have a 50% chance of having enough money to cover health care expenses in retirement. They would need $266,000 to have a 75% chance of covering those expenses and $328,000 to have a 90% chance.

In 2018, for individuals at the 90th percentile in drug spending at and throughout retirement, a man would need $103,000 in savings and a woman would need $135,000 if each had a goal of having a 50% chance of having enough money saved to cover health care expenses in retirement. If either instead wanted a 90% chance of having enough savings, $191,000 would be needed for a man and $217,000 would be needed for a woman.

A couple both with drug expenses at the 90th percentile would need $238,000 to have a 50% chance of having enough money to cover health care expenses in retirement and $325,000 to have a 75% chance of covering their expenses. They would need $399,000 to have a 90% chance of covering their expenses.

The full Issue Brief can be found at www.ebri.org.

ICI Recommends SEC Create Summary Shareholder Report

A test of the summary report found more than 90% of mutual fund investors agreed it was enough to help them stay informed and was a document they would be more likely to read than current reports.

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) adopted a new rule, 30e-3, aimed at improving the experience of investors who invest in mutual funds, exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and other investment funds.

The rule permits asset managers to deliver shareholder reports by making them publicly accessible on a free website and sending investors a paper notice of each report’s availability via mail. If an investor prefers to continue receiving shareholder reports by mail, they may do so. The new rule goes into effect January 21, 2021.

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The SEC is also asking the public for their thoughts on how the delivery of fund information could be modernized.

In a comment letter, the Investment Company Institute (ICI) said it supports recent efforts made by the SEC to modernize fund disclosure and recommends that the Commission continue to help improve the investor experience for fund shareholders by proposing a summary shareholder report. ICI recommends that the Commission consider proposing a rule creating a new, optional summary shareholder report with key information, presented in a specific order to mirror the Commission’s design of the summary prospectus. This format would make the report easier to understand and help shareholders compare funds.

Specifically, ICI recommends that the summary shareholder report should include:

  • performance highlights;
  • total return;
  • expenses;
  • graphical presentation of portfolio holdings;
  • information on operation and effectiveness of its liquidity risk management program over the past year; and
  • instructions on how to access the full shareholder report.

To help inform its comments to the SEC, ICI created a prototype of the summary shareholder report and tested it using a nationally representative survey that included more than 1,200 mutual fund shareholders. More than 90% of these mutual fund investors agreed the prototype summary shareholder report was enough to help them stay informed and was a document they would be more likely to read than current reports. Similar numbers agreed that the more concise document made it easier to compare funds. The prototype and survey results are available on ICI’s website.

In a recent speech SEC Commissioner Kara Stein pushed for more investor education and said investors should be able to easily compare financial products.

In its letter, ICI also made the following suggestions:

  • The SEC should modernize the delivery of fund prospectuses. Providing firms with the flexibility to choose to send investors a notice informing them that a summary prospectus or a full-length prospectus is available will result in significant cost savings for fund shareholders, align with shareholder preferences, and be consistent with Rule 30e-3.
  • The Commission should encourage information being displayed in a user-friendly way by allowing funds to show additional information through smartphone applications; maintaining technology-neutral requirements; and considering starting a pilot that would allow funds to develop more creative approaches to disclosure with any necessary safe harbors.
  • Customized calculations of fund expenses should not be compulsory. A requirement for individualized expense information would be logistically complex and very costly, and is unnecessary because of calculators and other resources already available for investors.
  • Standardized risk measures or risk ratings are unnecessary and could do more harm than good, as risk is inherently complex and multifaceted. ICI strongly urges the Commission to neither mandate nor create standardized risk measures or risk ratings. Current fund disclosures adequately depict risks associated with investing in the fund for investors.

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