Refunds Are for Savings—Not Retirement

Only 2% of investors who expect to receive a federal tax refund intend to invest the money in their workplace retirement account.

More than half (52%) plan to place the money in their savings account, 25% plan to reduce debt and 17% intend to simply spend the money, according to a survey by John Hancock.

Half of investors expect to receive a 2014 federal tax refund, and 29% anticipate owing taxes, according to the survey of household financial decisionmakers with a household income of at least $75,000 and assets of at least $100,000.

Of the refund spenders, nearly four in ten (38%) plan to spend their tax refund on a vacation, a decrease from last year. One in five will devote their refund to basic household needs and only one in 20 plans on using the refund for a luxury item.

In a possible indicator of tight financial times, the results seem at odds with the recent Hancock survey that claimed investor sentiment is peaking.

In that report, most (81%) of respondents said 2015 would be a good year for the average investor, up from 73% in the first quarter of 2014. Three-quarters of those surveyed also said they are optimistic that the U.S. economy will be stronger two years from now. Almost two out of three respondents (62%) also claimed that now is a good or very good time to invest in stocks, stock mutual funds and balanced mutual funds.

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