Archive for March 29th, 2009

Retirement Mutual Funds: An Endangered Species?

US News & World Report - March 27, 2009


The retirement-fund business is reeling from huge mutual-fund losses and investor withdrawals. Fund executives point to overall market declines to defend their performance. They have logical explanations for the big losses suffered by one of their “safest” product classes–target-date mutual funds, which are designed as age-appropriate portfolios to help investors achieve their retirement goals. But a growing chorus of government, academic, and consumer critics is calling for changes in how the funds operate. And the fund companies themselves are under mounting financial pressures. Here are changes to look for:


More regulation. Democratic Senator Herb Kohl of Wisconsin, chair of the Senate Committee on Aging, is exploring tougher oversight of target-date funds. New retirement plan rules adopted in 2006 led to higher employee participation in 401(k)’s and other retirement plans, including the use of target-date funds as default investment choices. However, many investors were stunned when funds designed for 2010 retirees fell an average of about 25 percent last year. The marketing mantra of these funds was their automatic re-weighting as their owners aged–away from stocks and into bonds and other safer investments. Fund executives explain that someone retiring in 2010 may live another 30 years and will a solid chunk of equities in a target-date fund. But that truth never had a chance to catch up with public perception that safe means just that–no losses. As with the rest of Wall Street, the fund industry has taken a big consumer-confidence hit and may have to stomach more government rules to help win back investors. In the House Committee on Education & Labor, chairman Rep. George Miller of California has held multiple hearings with lots of venting at mutual funds. New rules here could include forcing the funds to disclose more details about their fees and more oversight of their communications with investors through employer retirement programs.


Automatic-pilot funds. Expect more retirement programs to steer employee and retiree money into index and other match-the-market funds that automatically adjust portfolios. Research findings agree that investors in 401(k), IRA, and other retirement programs make poor investment decisions. In recent Congressional testimony, Alicia Munnell, director of the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, said, “Workers continue to have almost complete discretion over whether to participate, how much to contribute, how to invest, and how and when to withdraw the funds. Evidence indicates that people make mistakes at every step along the way. They don’t join the plan, they don’t contribute enough; they don’t diversify their holdings; they over-invest in company stock; they take out money when they switch jobs; and they don’t annuitize at retirement.”


More flexible target date funds. Even with the hits taken by target-date funds, they remain an attractive vehicle for retirement programs. However, expect the industry to respond to recent poundings by making the age of the account holder only one of several key variables in a fund’s objectives. Wealth, other income sources and personal and family objectives will increasingly be considered. Hartford Financial Services just expanded its family of target date funds. Expect similar moves from other providers.


Higher fees, less service, or both. Big mutual fund families have suffered sizable revenue cutbacks. The industry has lost at least a couple of trillion dollars in account values, which translates into substantial lost fee income. Vanguard, known as one of the lowest-fee fund providers, recently moved to raise its fees and other funds likely are considering similar moves.


More self-directed funds. Poor returns plus higher fees equal an investor retreat into self-managed accounts. These accounts can, of course, invest in mutual funds, but the retirement-plan fees that major fund families have enjoyed will be under assault. Mass-market investors already had been moving to self-service accounts because personalized advice was not available to them, notes a recent report from Celent, a financial consultancy. Now, it says, that trend will be accelerated and joined by 401(k) account holders rolling into self-directed IRAs. At the same time, the big do-it-yourself houses such as Schwab, TD Ameritrade, E-Trade and others will be expected to build better customer communication programs. Otherwise, the poor decisions made by investors in managed retirement programs will simply be repeated.


Going, going, gone? Financial pressures, market declines, and the push for simpler and more transparent funds all argue for a world of fewer funds. That trend hasn’t yet been seen. According to the Investment Company Institute, the number of funds is largely unchanged during the past year. However, the Celent report, which dealt with implications of the financial crisis for the wealth-management industry, says stock mutual funds are quite simply the biggest loser in the market’s upheaval:


“It is highly likely that mutual funds as an asset class are in a permanent decline unless regulations change. ETFs are more cost-effective and can be sold short. Active funds do not outperform the indices. Hedge fund take advantage of the long-only nature of mutual funds to arbitrage gains away from the mutual funds into the hedge funds. Lifecycle funds do not achieve their touted objectives of becoming stable as retirement arrives. Celent projects that within five years, unless the regulations are changed to put mutual funds on a more equal footing, fund families will decline from over 7,000 to closer to 2,000.”


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Stimulus checks coming to older Americans

Silicon Valley Business Journal – March 27, 2009



Nearly 55 million older Americans enrolled in certain government programs will get a one-time, $250 payment from stimulus funds in a move that will inject $13 billion into the economy.


The funds will be available for those who receive Social Security or Social Supplemental Income benefits, or are beneficiaries of Veterans Affairs or the Railroad Retirement Board. Funds from Social Security or SSI will be delivered through those agencies.


The VA and railroad board will be responsible for paying individuals under their respective programs. Those enrolled in more than one of these programs should expect only one $250 payment.


The funds will be shipped out in May.


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Reverse mortgages a lifesaver for some, but beware of shady lenders

The Orlando Sentinel - March 27, 2009


Once shunned by many as too risky, reverse mortgages have made a comeback as some cash-strapped seniors tap their home equity to replace savings battered by Wall Street’s meltdown.

Sales of reverse mortgages have increased at a double-digit rate recently and are on pace to set a record this year, according to the National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association.

More than 112,000 were sold in 2008, up nearly 50 percent from 2006, the trade group reported. Orlando now ranks seventh nationwide in reverse-mortgage sales, with more than 3,500 in 2008, according to federal regulators.

But seniors should still weigh the pros and cons carefully before they go forward with a reverse mortgage, experts say. And as home values have plummeted, some will find they have little home equity left to tap.


At its best, a reverse mortgage offers people 62 and older a sweet source of cash as a monthly payout, line of credit or lump sum. The money is tax-free, and the loan doesn’t have to be paid until borrowers die or sell their home. Most reverse loans are also federally insured, which protects the payout even if the lender goes under.

But at their worst, reverse mortgages may come with confusing terms, high-pressure sales tactics and expensive fees. Such practices have tainted reverse mortgages in the past, as some lenders were accused of trying to manipulate older homeowners into squandering their home equity.


‘It’s not for everyone’


Proponents insist that those days are long gone.

Don Mulcahy says his finances have run a lot smoother since he put his mortgage in reverse a few years back.

The 68-year-old former telephone salesman from Orlando used the proceeds to pay off his regular mortgage and save almost $1,000 a month. He liked the idea so much he started selling reverse mortgages himself.

“It’s not for everyone,” Mulcahy said. “But it turned out to be such a good deal for me, I figured others should know about it.”

A federal law enacted last fall capped some major fees for reverse mortgages, required pre-loan consumer counseling and barred lenders from “cross-selling” annuities and other financial products.

The industry itself has also worked to improve its reputation by adopting conduct standards and responding to complaints.

“There are definitely more safeguards now,” said Joe Nunziata, chief executive officer of Orlando-based FBC Mortgage, the lending unit of Florida Bank of Commerce.

But the industry still has a way to go to get a clean bill of health, AARP says.

“Despite the new laws, we are already still hearing reports of reverse-mortgage lenders selling high-priced annuities and other investments to borrowers,” said Bronwyn Belling, a reverse-mortgage analyst for the AARP Foundation. “Regulators are paying close attention to this problem, and we’re going to continue to watch it very closely.”

Many older homeowners are considering reverse mortgages for the first time, said Richard Schram, an executive with the Consumer Credit Counseling Service of Central Florida, which provides reverse-mortgage counseling. Some are looking to supplement their retirement income, while others hope it will help them prevent financial disaster, he said.

“Unfortunately, we find a lot of seniors coming to us now in need of getting a reverse mortgage because otherwise they’re looking at personal bankruptcy,” he said. “If they don’t have their home paid for, they’re trying to get out from under the monthly mortgage payments to avoid insolvency, save their homes and have money to pay other bills.”

But since home values have plummeted in the mortgage meltdown, many older people don’t have enough home equity left to tap with a reverse mortgage, said Christy Cowherd, a reverse-mortgage lender with Orlando’s First Commercial Bank of Florida.

“That can be a real blow to them,” she said. “Some come in with expectations that are way too high.”

Even people who have paid off their homes and are otherwise in good shape financially have seen their home equity dissipate. In some cases, their hopes to live off of their home’s value are gone, and their plans to sell it and buy a retirement condo have been put on hold.

Fewer qualify nowadays


Mulcahy said that only a couple of years ago, nearly everyone who applied for a reverse mortgage had enough home equity to make it work. Now maybe half of the applicants can do it.

“A lot of people just waited too long,” said Mulcahy, who conducts reverse-mortgage seminars at the Marks Street Senior Center in Orlando. “Even those who can take out a reverse mortgage now get less money than they would have a few years ago. Me, I was lucky. My house today is not even worth near what it was then.”

In mulling a reverse mortgage, consumers should compare offers and check the lender’s credentials with state regulators and better-business agencies, said Frank Arnall, a financial planner with the Orlando office of United Planners Financial Services of America.

“I have helped some clients save easily thousands of dollars by getting multiple quotes from different lenders and bringing the fees down,” Arnall said. “You have to shop around.”


See the full article…


About Reverse Mortgages:  Learn all about reverse mortgages at NewRetirement.com


Professional Financial Advisors:  Find out what a financial advisor can do for you at NewRetirement.com.


Annuity Advice for Retirement:   Evaluate and compare annuities at NewRetirement.com


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