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YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Fidelity: 401(k) balances little changed over 2011

    Fidelity: Average 401(k) balances end 2011 largely unchanged, despite higher contributions

    Fantasy Finance

    BOSTON (AP) -- Workers stashed money away in their 401(k) retirement plans at a faster clip last year but didn't get an immediate reward for their savings strategy. Fidelity Investments, the nation's biggest 401(k) administrator, says the average account balance was essentially unchanged in 2011, compared with 2010.

    The year-end average for participants in Fidelity Investments plans was $69,100, down $300 from 2010, the company said on Thursday. The average slipped despite a slight increase in employee contributions. The 11.6 million participants in Fidelity's plans set aside an average $5,750 through paycheck deductions, up from $5,680 a year earlier. That's more than 8 percent of their annual pay, on average.

    The amount that employers paid in matching contributions also rose slightly, averaging $3,270 last year. The increase came as more companies restored matches that had been reduced or suspended during the recession.

    But the balance boost that workers received from higher contributions was offset by factors including investment performance, and fees paid to manage the money and administer plans. Those fees can be a significant drain on returns, and are one key reason why changes in account balances don't match market performance.

    Stocks were volatile in 2011. They rose in the first half of the year, then tumbled over the summer only to rally at year-end. The Standard & Poor's 500 index finished virtually unchanged, but rose 2.1 percent factoring in dividends. Many 401(k) accountholders invest in foreign as well as domestic stocks, and several overseas indexes tumbled. Bond investments in plan accounts helped offset those losses, as the Barclays Capital U.S. Aggregate Bond index rose 7.8 percent.

    The average 401(k) balance tracked the year's bumpy market returns. At midyear, it reached $72,700, the highest since Fidelity began tracking balances in 1998. The average dropped 12 percent over the next three months, amid growing worries about the global economy and the European debt crisis. Those fears eased late in the year, sparking stocks to climb and boost the average account 8 percent in the fourth quarter.

    Typically, about two-thirds of annual increases in 401(k) account balances are the result of workers' added contributions and company matches. It's only the final third that's the result of investment returns, said Beth McHugh, vice president of market insights at Boston-based Fidelity.

    One reason that account balances didn't rise last year is recent strong growth in the number of new plan participants, McHugh says. Many new enrollees are young workers who haven't been saving long enough to build up substantial accounts. Consequently, their low balances reduce the overall average account size.

    However, balances have risen all but two quarters since the market meltdown, which reduced the average to $46,200. Since then, the number of workers increasing their contributions has consistently surpassed the number cutting them.

    Investment earnings and contributions can grow tax-free in employer-sponsored 401(k) accounts, a key reason why they're popular ways to save for retirement.

    Yet it's been a tough battle in recent years. Workers who have stayed in the market haven't been able to rely on investment gains to build up savings. That's because stocks are nearly 15 percent below their historic peak in October 2007. Instead, workers have had to rely on contributions from themselves and their employers.

    Nevertheless, Fidelity's latest numbers demonstrate the value of a making saving a habit. Workers in Fidelity 401(k) plans who routinely set aside money from their paychecks with the same employer for at least 10 years had amassed an average $179,100 by the end of 2011. That's nearly two-and-a-half times greater than the overall average for Fidelity's 401(k) participants — including workers who haven't been saving for a long time or discontinued contributions because of economic hardship or a switch to a new employer.

    "It's a very important reminder that participants will benefit through a continuous commitment to savings," McHugh said.

     

    12 comments

    • jOHHNY  •  3 months ago
      Fidelity = rip off. Lousy funds, high fees and ridiculous expense ratios. But they do have a big advertising budget and gobs of hype aimed at the naive.
      • Tim 3 months ago
        My $$ is at Vanguard
    • Falcon  •  3 months ago
      Wow, this is exactly happened to my savings profolo last year. My 401 lost $698, well at least I did not get killed! Get this, on my savings account that pays .90 percent interest I made $392. My question is where am I really making out to save for my retirement? I say bring back pension plans.
      • Philip S 3 months ago
        I agree with you. It's really sad how little jobs offer pensions.
    • Robert  •  3 months ago
      Yep! Terrible investing management and strategy by Fidelity. Time for a change where my money resides.
    • Col Korn  •  3 months ago
      THE PRICE OF MEAT HAS JUST GONE UP AND YOUR OLD LADY HAS JUST GONE DOWN.
      During 2011 DOW is UP over 1000 points and UP over 6000 since 2008. The 1% is laughing all the way to the bank BUT what will they do after they have stolen ALL the money?
    • Curious  •  St Petersburg, Florida  •  3 months ago
      Learnt my lesson in 08, put it in PEMCO and get 5% per year.. just watch interest rates though... you can get 5% from AT&T and Verizon stocks too...
    • Caellyn  •  3 months ago
      Hidden fees.
    • Caellyn  •  3 months ago
      The fees even hidden fees soon have to be disclosed. That will be interesting. The fees do drain 401k balances. Soon, we will be able to compare better and truly vote with our wallets by walking away. Well, the employer/sponsor has that duty and ability to move the 401k funds. Generally we don't. I'm no longer sold on 401k's - haven't been in years. We would do better in something else with more control over our funds.
    • American citizen  •  Bristol, Connecticut  •  3 months ago
      this is SO frustrating...save money then lose it...guess the mattress is becoming the safest method again. Fidelity has much lower fees than other places, Johhny, and Robert, they are MUCH better than the companies suing each other and bilking the fed govt (which is us!)...depends on what you decide to invest in..and probably those fees are worse in other places. However, in net, the whole picture is grim..
    • Tim  •  Kansas City, Kansas  •  3 months ago
      What plan administrators won't tell you is even though managment fees are expresssed as a small percentage or even a fraction of a percentage those amounts-over time will add up to literally tens of thousands of dollars over an investors work life resulting in a huge drain on your overall returns.... A HUGE RIP OFF.
      • Caellyn 3 months ago
        That's not even counting all the hidden fees. Most fees don't even show up anywhere, but they are subtracted out from our balances. Soon, all fees will have to be disclosed. It's going to be interesting.
    • kevin  •  Surfside, California  •  3 months ago
      obama ruined the economy and generations of wealth......thanks barry
      • Philip S 3 months ago
        Obama didn't do it by himself. I predicted this current economy back when I was 17 and I'm 41 now. Our government it owned by big corporations. They, the corporations, are who are really running this country.
    • Paul  •  3 months ago
      Mitt Romney made $21 million in 2011! That's without ANY employer contributions.... How about that! I paid almost 28% and because my wife and I both had "Retirement Plan" checked on our W-2's, we could not make any additional contribution to our IRAs. Between that and the fact that our Fidelity 401Ks stayed flat, I guess there's little chance of retiring any time soon....
    • Daryl  •  Kansas City, Missouri  •  3 months ago
      The Dow is up 50% in the last 3 years. How is this possible?
      • Tim 3 months ago
        take a good look at the management fees
      • Caellyn 3 months ago
        Fees. There are many hidden fees you have been paying without knowing it. In the past they never even show up anywhere in which you could see them. Soon, all fees - even the hidden ones will have to be disclosed. It's going to be interesting.
      • Caellyn 3 months ago
        They have been secretly draining our balances with hidden fees.

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