Data Points: Customization and the QDIA

Five years ago, more than 10% of plans that offered managed accounts used them as a default. Today? Our proprietary data shows usage of default managed accounts has been cut in half.

PLANADVISER Magazine is lucky to be supported by one of the best research teams in the retirement business, led by Brian O’Keefe, vice president, research and surveys, Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) Media.

To complement our special coverage package on the “Pros and Cons of Customization,” we asked the team to look back and recut some data from the PLANSPONSOR Defined Contribution (DC) Survey. In particular, we wanted to see whether custom target-date funds (TDFs) have grown in popularity in terms of being used as qualified default investment alternatives (QDIAs), and to compare this with their overall prevalence in plans—including those not using their custom TDFs as the QDIA. We wanted to see the same thing for managed accounts.

What is the default investment for automatic enrollment?

2020
2015
Target-date Fund (all types)
76%
69%
Pre-package TDF Fund
51%
52%
Retail / Single Manager Fund (Active Management)
18%
30%
Retail / Single Manager Fund (Indexed)
13%
21%
Pre-packaged Institutional Investment (i.e., single or multi-manager CIT, etc.)
20%
N/A
Custom Target-Date Fund (using investments from plan lineup)
21%
10%
Professionally Managed Account
4%
7%
Source: PLANSPONSOR DC Survey

As the data shows, the industry continues to closely embrace TDFs. Adoption has increased in every plan segment tracked over the past five years and increased as the default as well. Default usage of any type of target-date fund among mega plans (as defined in the PLANSPONSOR DC Survey) now tops 90%, up from 78% just five years ago.

According to our data, interest in custom TDFs has grown, but it may be approaching a limit. It is true that use of custom TDF defaults increased in every segment over the past five years, but growth was slowest among mega plans, where adoption increased from 19.0% to 21.3% of all plans. Since overall use of TDFs in this market increased by about 14%, one might have expected faster growth in this area, but it didn’t happen.

The picture for managed accounts is also striking. Five years ago, more than 10% of plans that offered managed accounts used them as a default. This held true for all plan sizes and the trend was more pronounced among smaller plans, when more than 25% of micro plans with managed accounts used them as a default in 2015. Today? The data suggests usage of default managed accounts has been cut in half.

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