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Retirement savings account balances hit two-year high: Fidelity

Data from more than 45 million 401(k), 403(b) and IRA accounts show steady contributions even as "vibecession" weighs on savers.

Retirement account balances have reached their highest levels in over two years, driven by record-high contributions and favorable market conditions, according to Fidelity Investments’ first-quarter 2024 retirement analysis.

Based on an analysis of more than 45 million IRA, 401(k), and 403(b) retirement accounts on its platform, the investment giant highlights that long-term savers showed the greatest improvement in their account balances.

“Average account balances [in 401(k) and 403(b) accounts] increased more than 5% from last quarter and reached their highest levels since Q4 2021,” Fidelity said in its latest Building Financial Futures report.

The average 401(k) account held $125,900, exceeding the $113,000 for the average 403(b) account, the report said.

“We are encouraged to see account balances increase, providing solid proof that retirement savers are remaining invested and continuing to make steady contributions – while seeing the financial benefits as a result,” Sharon Brovelli, president of workplace investing at Fidelity Investments, said in a statement.

Savings rates in 401(k)s hit a record high of 14.2 percent as contributions from employees and employers matched the highs seen in previous quarters. Younger savers also played a substantial role, Fidelity said, as their 401(k) accounts saw balance increases of 11 percent for millennial and 15 percent for Gen Z savers.

Focusing on data around 15-year continuous 401(k) savings balances, Fidelity found Gen X participants edged out Boomers for the first time, with Gen Xers amassing $543,400 compared to $543,200 for Baby Boomer investors.

As of the first quarter of 2024, over 4.9 million workers have been investing in their 401(k) plans for at least five years, Fidelity said.

The report also shed light on retirement savers employed by small businesses in light of Small Business Month. As Fidelity’s data tells it, employees with SEP IRAs, SIMPLE IRAs, or self-employed 401(k)s are placing a greater emphasis on their long-term saving as they surpassed traditional 401(k) holders in terms of average account balances.

“Small businesses are at the heart of American communities, and it is encouraging to see that when small business employees are given the opportunity to save, they run with it,” said Roger Stiles, president of Fidelity Wealth.

“Offering small businesses a variety of options to help meet their retirement needs is an important way to close any existing retirement coverage gaps and get more Americans saving for retirement,” Stiles said.

The broad trend of tenacity among workers in building a strong retirement income foundation came against a broad backdrop of “vibecession,” which Fidelity defined as “a period of widespread pessimism about the economy regardless of the actual economic situation.”

“US payrolls continued to expand in the first quarter while unemployment levels remained at historic lows and the stock market continued an upward trend,” Fidelity noted in its report.

Despite those sunny signals, 75 percent of Fidelity customers expressed feelings of stress over higher prices and increased costs of living.

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