From Target Date Funds To Lower Cost Index Funds

   

Also featured as a guest post on Mustard Seed Money:

 

Usually, on the first day of a new job, we receive some new hire paperwork from Human Resources. Included in that package is paperwork concerning which retirement plan we’d like to participate in, how much we’d like to contribute and how to get started. Sometimes we have to go online and complete this information.

 

The process of going through retirement paperwork can be overwhelming, to say the least. It’s because we are generally provided with a bunch of options or funds to choose from. In the end, we may just say I don’t feel like dealing with all this reading and will take the easy way out and pick a retirement fund option known as a target date fund. In recent years, more and more employers have started to offer this simple way for its employees to save for retirement.

 

Target date funds are mutual funds that generate an asset mix based on the anticipated date the participant is expected to retire. For example, if you are in your 20s and plan to retire in 2060, you would select a 2060 target date fund. This target date fund would be designed to be aggressive in its investment allocation. That is, it would have holdings in small-cap and growth companies and as the years go back would readjust the asset mix into more conservative assets such as bond funds and other cash equivalents. Thereby the fund “targets” the year of retirement based on its name and adjusts investments within the fund accordingly.

 

 

History of Target Date Funds

 

Target-date funds were created in 1994. This was in response to a lack of education by participants in 401(k) plans. Many participants were just not willing to conduct their own asset allocation and because of this nervousness and lack of desire on the part of the participants, the demand for target-date funds was born. They were first introduced by Wells Fargo and Barclays Global Investors.  Ofcourse in the late 90s and early 2000s, other investment companies joined the trend such as Fidelity, TRowe Price, and Vanguard with their own target date funds.

 

In order to facility so many participants into these retirement plans in an efficient way, groups or clusters of funds were created. These creations were distinguished by the average years’ participants were expected to enter into retirement.

 

So for a 25-year old planning to retire at age 65, a 2060 target fund may be appropriate. For a 30-year old a 2055 fun and 35-year old a 2050 fund may be the right choice. You get the picture. The further away you are from retirement, the more aggressive the fund’s portfolio model will be (i.e., more in stocks and less in bonds). The closer you are to retirement, the more conservative and the fund allocation will adjust by itself without you having to go in and do anything. Sounds easy right? It sure is and that is why so many people decide to enroll in them.

 

 

Target Funds Today

 

Target-date funds continue to be super-popular these days in workplace retirement plans. They are easily accessible as they are offered by many employers. My previous two employers offered target-date funds and yes I was enrolled in them.

 

Even at my current employer, I initially selected a target date fund. It allowed me to be, well quite honestly lazy with my retirement planning. This along with the fact that target dates funds are the default funds offered in most defined contribution plans. Furthermore, many employers offer automatic enrollment as well as these funds and once people are in most don’t bother changing their investments because they know the target date fund will take care of it.

 

And even in my very first job which offered a 401k plan, most likely I selected a target date fund because I didn’t know much about the other funds. I probably read that this fund is for people that plan to retire in year 20XX. And so I took my calculator and did a quick difference between my age and 65 or 67 and said ok, that’s the one that’s right for me, ignoring everything else and moving on to the next piece of new hire paperwork.

 

 

Target Date Funds Composition

 

Target date funds have within them funds. So a target date fund is basically a fund of funds. It may have some money in a large-cap fund, some in a mid-cap fund, and some in a small-cap fund. It may have some money in an international fund, and some in a bond fund. Generally, the underlying funds in a target fund are from the same fund family.

 

So for example, if you are in a Fidelity target date fund or what Fidelity calls a Freedom Fund, the underlying funds are that of Fidelity as well and you as an investor have no control of those funds. Check out the allocation below of the Fidelity Freedom Index 2050 Fund:

 

Fidelity Freedom simple money man

 

 

Target Fund May Not Be My Target

 

As we already know the closer someone is to retirement, the more a target fund’s objective changes to a more conservative investing approach. In sticking with the Fidelity Freedom Index 2050 Fund mentioned above, it has 26.94% in International Equity Funds. However, the Fidelity Freedom 2040 Fund has 31.13% in International Equity Funds.

 

If you are bullish in the international sector and are seeking more diversification and exposure there, but are comfortable with your domestic allocation, maybe you should develop your own mix of lower cost index funds and save in fees. This is what ended up doing and will discuss later.

 

Additionally, the set it and forget it nature of target funds is not one favored by many investment publications including Motley Fool who states that it’s important to continuously monitor the underlying fund performance to make sure it’s meeting your expectations in terms of risk tolerance and returns. And up until a few months ago, I started thinking, are target date funds really worth it? Should I employ a set it and forget it approach for something as big as retirement? Well maybe, but maybe not.

 

 

Target Date Fund Performance

 

Apart from having less flexibility in allocating with target funds, another drawback is performance. The target date fund I previously had is a fund of funds. The underlying funds are actively managed. According to CNBC, many actively managed funds are being outperformed by passive funds and ETFs. And about 85% of active large-cap funds fail to meet their benchmarks.

 

The article further identifies Vanguard (the biggest provider of index products) which has received $216 billion in inflows. I’ve found that it really only makes sense to own an actively managed fund if you’re looking for a particular investment and in a specific sector as illustrated by Verdan Vuk, Senior Analyst for Money Forever. Otherwise, he says you’re just wasting money.

 

 

Target Date Fund Fees

 

If you’re putting money into a retirement plan, you’re doing better than two-thirds of Americans because who are otherwise not. So you’re already ahead of the game anyway. But there may be a way to do better and that is by avoiding excessive fees.  One of the main reasons why investors avoid target date fund is very simple: high fees. Everywhere I read this is a common theme as some fund companies can “charge twice or even three times” the amount in fees as their competitors.

 

The fund I was in (TRRMX or T. Rowe Price Retirement 2050 Fund) has an expense ratio of 0.76%.  So I decided to take action by logging into my account and creating my own allocation. My retirement website offers an interactive tool where I can enter data such as my age, when I plan to retire, how much I plan to spend in retirement, and what I’ve saved thus far. The output results in the creation of a customized allocation.  This is the allocation model that was suggested for the variables I provided:

 

Aggressive portfolio model simple money man

 

Using this model, I proceeded to allocate my current fund and al future contributions from the target date fund into lower-cost index funds. This movement of investments is offered for free by my retirement provider and maybe by yours as well! Below is my new self-created portfolio model:

 

 

Investments & Allocation Expense Ratio Asset Class
Vanguard Total International Stock Index Fund – Institutional Shares – 25% 0.090% Int’l
Vanguard(R) Small-Cap Index Fund – Institutional Shares – 5% 0.050% Small-Cap
Vanguard(R) Mid-Cap Index Fund – Institutional Plus Shares – 10% 0.010% Mid-Cap
Vanguard(R) Institutional Index Fund – Institutional Plus Shares – 50% 0.020% Large-Cap
Vanguard(R) Total Bond Market Index Fund – Institutional Shares  – 7% 0.040% Bonds
*Investment Contract Pool – 3%
*
Total Expense Ratio 0.210%
Target Fund 0.760%
Difference 0.550%

 

 

And with this change, I’ll be saving over half a percent in annual fees, as highlighted above! Trust me, over-time that can add up to a lot in fees. I did the math really quickly and when the balance gets higher the expense ratio really starts making a difference:

 

 

When 401k Balance Is: Ratio Difference Annual Savings
 $          100,000 0.550%  $            550
 $          500,000 0.550%  $         2,750
 $       1,000,000 0.550%  $         5,500
 $       1,500,000 0.550%  $         8,250

 

 

So I went online a googled some more, for an expense ratio calculator. I found a simple one on Begin to Invest. Based on the below calculation, if someone were to have $200,000 as a starting point and decided to move investments, contribute the maximum as it stands right now, earn 6%, then they’d save over $280,000 over 30 years when employing a low-cost index fund VA a target date fund:

 

Expense ratio calculator simple money man

 

 

I encourage everyone to use this site and plug in some hypotheticals to see what savings are available.

 

 

Take Charge or Your Investments

 

Retirement is a major part of our lives. And as such, planning for it should be as well. We owe it to ourselves to learn more about low-cost index funds because they cost less than target funds and have performed better historically. Why pay more and get less?

 

 

So readers are you in a target retirement fund? If so, have you thought about moving to lower cost index-funds?

 

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I use Personal Capital because (1) it’s free, (2) it tracks all of my accounts and overall net worth, (3) my account balances automatically update, (4) it shows how my investments are diversified and allocated in various sectors, and (5) can use built-in tools like “Investment Checkup” to get….wait for it…free personalized advice!