A majority — 65% — of U.S. individuals did not take financial actions as a result of COVID-19, a study by the Investment Company Institute has found.
The remaining 35% took a variety of actions to cope with the pandemic’s financial hardships, the most common of which was using emergency savings, which was reported by 20% of individuals. Another 18% increased their credit card debt, and 7% reported increasing other debt, excluding loans from 401(k)-type retirement plan accounts.
Actions that drew on retirement accounts were the least common responses. Only 6% reported taking withdrawals from 401(k)-type retirement plan accounts; 3% took withdrawals from individual retirement accounts; and 3% took loans from 401(k)-type retirement plan accounts.
“The survey findings are consistent with the data ICI has published throughout the pandemic based on actions reported by record keepers to defined contribution retirement plans,” the mutual fund trade group said in a release.
“Together, these two sets of data — the self-reported actions from the survey and the administrative recordkeeper data based on actual DC account activity — contradict claims that large numbers of savers turned to withdrawals or loans from retirement plans in response to COVID-19 financial stress. To the contrary, Americans appear to have placed a high priority on preserving their retirement savings,” ICI said in the release.
Large and mega plans show strongest appetite, but fee confusion persists.
Many people are taking a dangerous gamble with their financial future, new study warns.
Britt is named CFO of Wipfli, a $600 million accounting firm that audits two NFL franchises
The acquisition pairs Zephyr's 21,000-product separately managed account database with YCharts' newly launched AI agent assistant for investment research.
The war for talent continues in the Sunshine State with as Truist and RayJay teams managing a collective $1 billion in client assets defect to other firms.
Northern Trust’s Ken Lassner shows advisors how to convert volatility into after-tax portfolio gains
Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income