A Closer Look at Large 401(k) Investment Menus: BrightScope/ICI Data

401(k) investment menu

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The average large 401(k) plan offered 28 investment options in 2020, of which about 13 were equity funds, three were bond funds, and nine were target date funds.

That’s according to an updated study released today from BrightScope and the Investment Company Institute (ICI), The BrightScope/ICI Defined Contribution Plan Profile: A Close Look at 401(k) Plans, 2020, which found employers play a significant role in designing diverse investment lineups in 401(k) plans.

“This study illustrates that employers recognize the importance of customizing investment menus of their 401(k) plans to suit their employees and promote saving and investing for retirement,” said Sarah Holden, ICI Senior Director of Retirement and Investor Research. “The wide range of investment options that employers offer allows investors to choose between a straightforward target date fund, or to personalize their asset allocation as they see fit.”

Between 2006 and 2020, large 401(k) plans added an average of six investment options to their plan lineups, going from 22 investment options on average in 2006 to 28 in 2020. Target date funds accounted for much of the net increase in investment options offered. In 2006, 32% of large 401(k) plans offered target date funds; this had risen to 87% of plans in 2020.

Similarly, the percentage of participants who were offered target date funds increased from 42% of participants to 84% between 2006 and 2020, and the percentage of assets invested in target date funds increased from 3% to 28%.

TDF offering and use in large 401(k)s

Note: BrightScope audited 401(k) filings generally include plans with 100 participants or more. Plans with fewer than four investment options or more than 100 investment options are excluded from this analysis. In 2020, the sample is 59,981 plans with 59.1 million participants and $5.9 trillion in assets. Source: BrightScope Defined Contribution Plan Database

Notably, the report shows that average 401(k) total plan cost has decreased since 2009. In 2020, the average total plan cost was 0.83% of assets, down from 1.02% in 2009. The average participant was in a lower-cost plan, with a total plan cost of 0.51% of assets in 2020 (down from 0.65% in 2009), while the average dollar was invested in a plan with a total plan cost of 0.34% in 2020 (down from 0.47% in 2009). The total plan cost includes administrative, advice, and other fees from Form 5500 filings, as well as asset-based investment management fees.

“The decrease in 401(k) plan cost suggests that 401(k) plan sponsors and participants are paying attention to fees and expenses,” said Brooks Herman, Managing Director for Data & Research at ISS Market Intelligence, a unit of investment advisor Institutional Shareholder Services. “Falling investment management costs have contributed to the decline in total plan cost, including across the variety of mutual funds included in 401(k) plan lineups.”

Other key findings of the study include:

This report in The BrightScope/ICI Defined Contribution Plan Profile series focuses on private-sector 401(k) plans in 2020. This report first analyzes large 401(k) plans in the Department of Labor 2020 Form 5500 Research File. Focus then shifts to nearly 60,000 audited 401(k) plans in ISS Market Intelligence’s BrightScope Defined Contribution Plan Database, which have between four and 100 investment options and typically 100 participants or more.

Complete results of the annual BrightScope/ICI study are posted at https://www.ici.org/research/retirement/dc-plan-profile.

SEE ALSO:

• Why Advisors Need to Consider Value Equities in DC Plan Investment Menus Now: Invesco’s Kevin Holt

• 401(k) Assets Top $7 Trillion at 2023 Mid-Point

• CITs to Overtake Mutual Funds as Most Popular Target Date Vehicle Within 2 Years

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