Trading Was Brisk in DC Accounts in May

More defined contribution plan participants made trades last month, according to Aon Hewitt.
Reported by Jill Cornfield

Defined contribution (DC) participant transfers in May averaged 0.031% of total balances daily, according to the Aon Hewitt 401(k) Index.

There were eight days of above-normal trading activity—the highest monthly total in two years, making it the first month with transfers above 0.03% since October 2013. This brings the total of above-normal trading days to 23 for the year to date.

Fixed-income trades elbowed equities, with 61% of trading days favoring fixed income. The most popular asset classes for inflows were international ($153 million), money market ($89 million), and GIC/stable value funds ($82 million). The most common classes for outflows were large U.S. equity ($107 million), company stock ($86 million), and small U.S. equity funds ($48 million).

Target-date funds continued to receive the majority of new contributions, with $240 million going into individuals’ accounts, while large U.S. equity funds received $116 million.

For the month, participant allocations to equities ticked up slightly, from 66.4% to 66.7%, after combining contributions, trades and market activity. Future contributions to equities decreased slightly, from 67.2% in April to 67% at the end of May, Aon Hewitt says.

Capital market returns had a mixed month. U.S. large-cap equities, represented by the S&P 500 Index, and U.S. small-cap equities, represented by the Russell 2000 Index, delivered positive returns, but international equities, represented by the MSCI ACWI ex-US Index, and U.S. fixed income, represented by the Barclays Aggregate Index, both slipped.

In the previous month, relatively few defined contribution participants enacted trades, continuing a tepid trend after 2015’s more volatile start.

Tags
Defined contribution, Investing, Participants,
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