Target Date Fund

A target date fund is a mutual fund that automatically shifts the fund owner's asset allocation over time. Target date funds are sometimes referred to as lifecyle funds--not to be confused with life-cycle investing. The "target date" is typically an approximate retirement date for the owner--for example, a 2030 fund. Asset allocations are generally more aggressive and equity-oriented for younger investors. The asset allocation will become less aggressive and more oriented towards fixed income investments as the participant ages. The Pension and Protection Act of 2006 allows target-date funds to serve as a default option in 401k plans, resulting in a significant increase in participation rates. Target-date funds have been the subject of some criticism and controversy in the wake of the financial crisis as many of the presumably more conservative funds for near-retirees suffered meaningful losses.

Target-Date Funds Popular Among Younger Investors Despite Recent Glitches

Target-date funds were given a huge boost by the Pension Protection Act of 2006. This legislation provides the basis for target-date funds to serve as default options in 401k plans. The result is that 43 percent of people in their 20s held target date funds at the end of 2008. Target-date funds attracted $41.8 billion in assets. This is despite the fact that certain target-date funds labelled 2010 (i.e. presumably for investors retiring in 2010) lost as much as 41 percent in 2008. Source:...
Key Phrases: 

What to Think When a Financial Advisor Says: "You Know I'm Not a Big Fan of Annuities"

Disdain for annuities is a thread of conventional wisdom that seems to exist among a broad swath of financial advisors.

In fact, many financial advisors seem conditioned to wear...

Putnam Makes Move to Address Sequence of Returns Risk in Target Date Funds

Putnam, a large Boston-based money manager with $110 billion in assets, plans to move from 10 to 50 percent of the assets currently in its target date mutual funds into four different absolute return funds. The move serves as a confirmation of the hazards that sequence of returns risk presents to near retirees and those who are recently retired. As recently reported by Bloomberg, target date funds have come under increasing regulatory scrutiny as funds that are intended to serve investors...

Listen to Zvi Bodie When it Comes to Retirement Planning

Zvi Bodie is absolutely one of the most honest and refreshing voices in finance and economics.  Professor Bodie also happens to be an advocate of life-cycle investing.

A recent interview with Bodie is highly recommended and available in U.S. News & World Report.

Highlights from the interview include:

  • ...

The Death of Asset Allocation?

Risk mitigation through diversification across time and space are fundamental tenets of conventional financial theory. In other words, the idea is that stocks are safe in the long-run and risk or volatility can be reduced by owning assets in uncorrelated markets. The problem is that stocks are not necessarily “safe” over any time horizon and correlations between asset classes tend to increase dramatically during times of market distress such as the past year and a half. Target date...

Pages