Target funds that work longer than you do
Target-date funds — mutual funds designed for people planning to retire in a particular year — are more popular than ever these days, in part because they have become standard features of workplace retirement plans.
But the best thing about target-date funds is that the managers take care of everything. They craft a portfolio of stocks, bonds and other assets that are appropriate for your time horizon. And over time, the fund managers rebalance regularly and gradually shift the asset mix to a more conservative blend.
But not all target-date funds are created equal. Three features, it turns out, can make the difference between a good target-date fund and a bad one:
The so-called glide path — the proportion of stocks and bonds in the portfolio and how it changes over time as the target date approaches (and passes) — is one factor.
Another, of course, is the innards — the quality of the funds that fill the portfolio. (Target-date funds are usually made up of several other funds from the same fund family.)
Finally, expenses matter. As with any investments, the less you pay in annual fees, the better.
Taking those factors, as well as a few others, into consideration, we found four target-date series worthy of mention that keep working even after you retire. (All returns are as of Oct. 21, 2015.)
American Funds Target Date
As a rule, Kiplinger doesn’t recommend funds that levy sales charges. And that’s why we don’t often write about the American Funds, which offers many fine products but charges a load if you buy the fund directly or through an adviser who is compensated through commissions.
But investors generally don’t pay a load to buy shares in American target-date funds if the funds are offered in their workplace retirement plan.
American is one of the biggest and oldest fund firms in the country. Many of its funds are among the biggest, by assets, and have solid track records. Such outstanding funds as New Perspective (ANWPX) and Washington Mutual (AWSHX) fill the Target Date series, which is one reason we like it.
Other positives: Low fees, and a glide path that shifts quarterly and continues to do so for 30 years after a fund has reached its target date.
Most of the funds in the American Target Date series rank in the top 10 percent of their peer groups over the past five years. American Funds 2030 Target Date (AAETX), which launched in early 2007, has outpaced most of its peers in every calendar year except 2010. The fund returned an annualized 10.3 percent over the past five years, ranking among the top 3 percent of 2030 target-date funds.
Schwab Target
Schwab’s target-date series has been around since 2005. But with just $3 billion in assets, it’s tiny compared with the likes of Vanguard and T. Rowe Price, which have $178 billion and $122 billion in assets, respectively, in their target-date products.
Even so, Schwab investors haven’t been disappointed. With a mix of actively managed and index funds from Schwab, as well as from Dodge & Cox, Loomis Sayles, Metropolitan West and Wells Fargo, among others, this series has racked up an impressive track record. Over the past 10 years, for instance, Schwab Target 2020 (SWCRX) has returned 5.9 percent annualized, which ranks among the top 5 percent of its peer group
Since being named manager in February 2012, Zifan Tang has made several changes to the target-date portfolios, according to Morningstar. Tang altered the glide path in 2013 to boost the funds’ exposure to U.S. bonds and lessen the exposure to foreign bonds. In 2014, she boosted the funds’ holdings in U.S. stocks while trimming the allocation to foreign stocks.
Last September, Tang abruptly removed Pimco Total Return from the Schwab lineup when Bill Gross resigned — also abruptly — from Pimco. And this year, Tang removed all Treasury inflation-protected securities (TIPS) from portfolios with target dates running from 2030 through 2055.
We like the series’ below-average fee schedule (the Target 2030 (SWDRX) fund costs 0.72 percent in annual expenses, according to the fund’s prospectus, which is well below that of the typical 2030 target-date fund, at 0.99 percent).
And we like the glide path, which starts out aggressively — with more than 90 percent of assets in stocks when you have 40 years to go before you retire — and ends conservatively — as the fund shifts for another 20 years after it reaches the target year, to an ultimate mix of 25 percent stocks, 66 percent bonds, and 9 percent cash.
T. Rowe Price Retirement
T. Rowe’s flagship Retirement target-date series has won high marks from many, including Kiplinger. The obvious reason is the funds’ above-average allocation to stocks. For example, Retirement 2030 (TRRCX), which is designed for those who expect to retire around 2030, devotes 77 percent of its assets to stocks; the average 2030 target-date fund holds 70 percent of its assets in stocks.
Even Price’s Retirement 2015 fund, with 54 percent in stocks, is more aggressive than the typical 2015 target-date portfolio, which on average has 45 percent in stocks.
The series’ underlying funds have provided some oomph, too. Among the 18 funds in Retirement 2020 are T. Rowe Price Value (TROW), a member of the Kip 25, as well as MidCap Growth (RPMGX), New Horizons (PRNHX) and Small-Cap Stock (OTCFX).
Not surprisingly, the high stock allocation means above-average volatility. In 2008, when the S&P 500 plunged 37 percent, the most popular T. Rowe target-date funds in 401(k) plans landed in the bottom half of their peer groups.
But the good times have outweighed the bad, as demonstrated by the funds’ results during the subsequent bull market. Thanks to their strong results in a blistering stock market, all but one fund in this series boasts a 10-year return that ranks among the top 1 percent of its respective target-date peer group (the exception, Retirement 2005 (TRRFX), ranks in the top 2 percent of its peers).
Interestingly, this is a series with which you can truly grow old. The series’ glide path continues to reposition the stock-bond balance more conservatively for 30 years past the target year. From the first year of retirement, when you own a fund that has 45 percent in bonds and the rest in stocks, your mix will shift over the next three decades to 80 percent in bonds and 20 percent in stocks.
Vanguard Target Retirement
This low-cost target-date fund series keeps things simple, and that’s why we like it. Each fund, no matter what target year is in the name, holds just four or five funds.
For most of the series’ glide path, Vanguard uses just four of its most popular index funds: Total Stock Market Index (VTSMX), Total International Stock Market Index (VGTSX), Total Bond Market Index (VBMFX) and Total International Bond Index (VTIBX). When a fund gets within five years of its target year, Vanguard Inflation Protection Securities (VIPSX), an actively managed fund that invests in short-term TIPS, joins the mix. (Symbols are for the “investor” share class.)
Index funds have done well over the past decade and so, not surprisingly, have Vanguard’s target-date funds. The 2015 (VTXVX), 2025 (VTTVX) and 2035 (VTTHX) funds, each of which has a 10-year record, rank among the top 9 percent of their respective peers over that period.
Glide paths are important while you’re saving and after you retire. With Vanguard’s target-date series, the stock-bond mix continues to swing to a more conservative stance for another five years after the fund reaches its target year. Thereafter, the stock-bond mix stays fixed at 30 percent in stocks and 70 percent in bonds.
© 2015 The Kiplinger Washington Editors.