Someone should introduce Ethan to behavioral economics.
Bloomberg Opinion is out with another piece bashing 401ks, or at least the middlemen that it claims muck it all up.
Titled “401(k) Fees Are Eating Your Retirement Savings,” it’s by Ethan Schwartz, an investment manager and former Treasury official in the Clinton administration.
Blaming an “antiquated 401(k) system,” he claims fee hover (his words) in the “range of 0.5% annually.” Far from hovering, fees have fallen—fast—for some time, to the point where fee compression is a major issue for managers, advisors, and everyone else. Thankfully, it’s forcing them to develop new and creative products to serve clients better.
You’d think a former Treasury employee would understand that the 401k is a framework; how it’s filled is what matters. He would just as well blame a car for a reckless driver.
This one time, this one friend had overpriced active funds in an investment menu, which apparently triggered his tantrum. I’ll do him one better since anecdotes are evidence.
The 401k in which I invest consists of low-cost, passively managed index funds, with a menu that includes actively managed options for those who—especially in the current COVID crisis—might want to take advantage of the resulting volatility. It’s not my bag, but I’m glad I have the option.
The Investment Company Institute routinely reports on declining expense ratios and Morningstar’s David Blanchett recently researched the alpha advisors provide. While the latter noted the advisor’s impact drops as assets rise, smaller businesses benefit most; exactly the demographic one would want to receive help.
He would dismiss the source since he refers to counterarguments as industry “howls” rather than principled opposition.
“Their most likely argument will be that investment managers and trustees perform a useful function in providing optimal investment choices, while educating savers on how to select among them,” he writes, preemptively undercutting any attempts at rebuttal.
But it’s his casual contention that sponsors and participants would behave rationally and truly act in their own best interest, without professional guidance, at which we marvel most.
Dr. Kahneman, Dr. Thaler, time to return those prizes.
This last paragraph is quickly becoming cut-and-paste boilerplate. Most sponsors carefully and effectively construct their 401ks, and some do not, but his criticism comes as coverage is increasing, balances are rising, and yes—fees are falling. If he thinks “removing the middlemen” will somehow make it better, the only howls he’ll hear are pitying laughter.