Retirement savers, how much market risk can you handle?
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[February 15, 2018]
By Mark Miller
CHICAGO (Reuters) - The opinions expressed
here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.
Allan Roth has decades of experience constructing retirement investment
portfolios for clients, but he never predicts the direction of the stock
market.
He does, however, predict human behavior. “People will buy after the
market goes up,” said Roth, founder of Wealth Logic LLC, a fee-based
investment advisory and financial planning firm based in Colorado
Springs, Colorado, “and they will sell when it goes down.”
Roth is describing what the behavioral finance experts call recency bias
- the tendency to use our recent experiences to make assumptions about
what will happen next. The stock market’s recent volatility -
punctuating a nine-year bull market that was preternaturally smooth over
the past year - points to the possibility that recency bias could do a
lot of damage to retirement portfolios this year.
Just to be clear: like Roth, I don't know where the market will head
this year. But volatility, and the possibility of a major bear market,
point to a missing part of the equation in most retirement saving plans:
a careful assessment of risk.
Employers sponsoring 401(k) plans have a fiduciary duty to select plan
fund choices that are varied enough in time horizon and risk levels that
participants can create a diversified portfolio. To do this they must
consider the range of participant time horizons.
Many plan sponsors do not have the investment expertise required to
select the plan’s fund choices or provide individual participant advice,
so they hire a fiduciary to help with plan fund selection. Some of the
fiduciaries that help select a plan’s fund choices will also provide
education (not fiduciary) or individual participant advice (fiduciary).
In the case of individual participant advice on their 401(k) portfolio,
an appropriate needs-based analysis would be factored in to the
investor’s time horizon and goals.
Outside of a 401(k) plan, assessing risk tolerance is standard procedure
for all financial advisers - broker-dealers are required by the
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority to assess risk tolerance as part
of the agency's suitability standard for evaluating investments, and
registered investment advisers must assess risk tolerance as part of the
“duty of care” obligations they have as fiduciaries.
But there is no broad agreement on the best way to assess investor
attitudes about risk. A wide array of tools is available that can
measure risk tolerance, but the smart approach is to consider risk as
part of a broader goals-based approach to retirement saving. “We look at
risk alongside how much to save and when to retire,” said Wei-Yin Hu,
vice president of financial research at Financial Engines, which
provides planning services to employees participating in 401(k) plans.
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“Most people don’t naturally have a grasp of standard deviation of stocks and
bonds, but if we show the consequences of a risk choice in a broader context,
they can see how it all fits together,” he said.
A SIMPLE STRESS TEST
But if you really just want to test your risk tolerance, here is a simple
approach: ask yourself if you understand how much you could lose if the market
really crashes, and whether you could withstand the losses while it recovers.
In the last big market crash, the S&P 500 Index fell 55 percent (including
dividends) from its peak on Oct. 9, 2007, to its trough on March 9, 2009, notes
Kendrick Wakeman, chief executive officer of FinMason, a financial technology
and investment analytics firm. Bonds, as measured by the iShares Core U.S.
Aggregate Bond ETF, returned 7.39 percent, including interest and other income.
Wakeman recommends a simple stress test: apply those figures to your current
portfolio. Taking the test not only helps determine your breaking point, but
also helps prepare you emotionally so that you will be less likely to panic and
sell at a market bottom. “There’s really no better way to determine someone’s
risk aversion,” he said.
But few financial advisers administer that test. A survey by FinMason last year
of nearly 500 investors with personal financial advisers found that only one in
four had been informed by their adviser how much they could lose in a crash.
And the long nine-year bull market has encouraged more risky investor behavior.
“Many of the new clients coming to me over the last few years have been taking
far more risk than they were in 2007,” said Roth. “The duration of the bull
market is one reason, but interest rates were higher back then, so there were
more opportunities to earn something decent on bonds.”
Conventional wisdom encourages young people, in particular, to take more risk,
notes Michael Kitces, founder of the XY Planning Network, a network of fee-only
advisers specializing in serving Gen X and Gen Y clients. “The idea is that you
can ‘afford to take a lot of risk’ because you’ve got a long time horizon,” he
said. “But times like this are a good reminder that no matter your time horizon,
you should never take more risk than you are comfortable and willing to take.”
Indeed, research has shown that for young savers, the key ingredients for a
financially comfortable retirement are getting an early start and saving at a
healthy level. Compound returns will take care of the rest.
Even for younger investors, a well-balanced, diverse portfolio is important,
Kitces said. “Remember, if a portfolio is well-diversified, not everything
should go down together. But that also means not everything should go up
together, either. If everything in your portfolio has all been doing well in the
bull market for the past several years, that means you may be overly
concentrated.”
(Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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