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Rating:Reporters Listen When Fido Says 8 is a Magic Number Not Rated 0.0 Email Routing List Email & Route  Print Print
Friday, September 14, 2012

Reporters Listen When Fido Says 8 is a Magic Number

News summary by MFWire's editors

Fidelity [profile] is gaining ink across the country for its latest suggestions on retirement savings.

The Associated Press, FA magazine, the New York Times, and both Beth Healy and Chris Reidy of the Boston Globe covered Fidelity's suggestions. Local news outlets like Associated Press, FA magazine, the New York Times, and both Beth Healy and Chris Reidy of the Boston Globe covered Fidelity's suggestions. Both FA magazine and the Globe highlighted the 8x number in their headlines, and the Times included a chart from Fidelity.">KARE11 in Minneapolis - St. Paul and Turn to 10 in Providence also picked up on the release.

Both FA magazine and the Globe highlighted the 8x number in their headlines, and the Times included a chart from Fidelity. The AP, FA magazine and the Globe all mentioned Fidelity in their headlines.

The Boston-based mutual fund titan has come up with a simple guideline for 401(k) participants and others saving for retirement. According to Fidelity, you should aim to have at least eight times your ending salary saved by the time you reach age 67. That anticipates a lifespan of 92.

To get you there, Fido suggest you save one times your salary by 35, three times by 45 and five times by 55.


Company Press Release

Fidelity Outlines Age-Based Savings Guidelines to Help Workers Stay on Track for Retirement

09/12/12

Suggests Most Workers Save at Least 8X Ending Salary to Fund Income in Retirement

BOSTON – Fidelity Investments® today outlined an easy-to-understand set of savings guidelines to help workers evaluate whether they are on track to meet their income needs in retirement based on their current savings. According to Fidelity’s calculation, most employees should aim to save at least 8 times their ending salary in order to meet basic income needs in retirement1.

While every individual’s situation will differ greatly based on desired lifestyle in retirement, the average worker may replace 85 percent of his pre-retirement income2 by saving at least 8 times his ending salary3. In order to reach the 8X level by age 674, Fidelity suggests workers have saved about 1 times their salary at age 35, 3 times at age 45, and 5 times at age 55.

“We believe these savings targets offer a rule of thumb to help employees get engaged in retirement planning by making it simpler and more achievable, but we recognize many individuals may need more than 8X their ending salary in retirement based on their lifestyle,” said James M. MacDonald, president, Workplace Investing, Fidelity Investments.

The company’s 8X savings guideline is based on a hypothetical worker saving in a workplace retirement plan, such as a 401(k), beginning at age 25, working and saving continuously until 67, and living until 92. The ending goal would include savings in all qualified retirement accounts, such as 401(k)s and IRAs, as well as other outside savings. The guidelines also make the following assumptions:

• The employee will make continuous annual salary contributions to a workplace plan beginning at 6 percent and escalating 1 percent per year until 12 percent, plus receive an ongoing 3 percent annual employer contribution during their career5.

• The calculation assumes a lifetime hypothetical average annual portfolio growth rate of 5.5 percent6.

• Social Security payments are factored into the replacement income ratio of 85 percent7.

• The employee’s income grows by 1.5 percent per year over general inflation with no breaks in employment or savings8.

“The two factors that have the greatest impact on retirement savings over time are starting early and saving consistently,” added MacDonald. “Having worked with millions of workplace retirement plan participants, we know that positive behaviors lead to positive outcomes. Having age-based targets provide benchmarks to help retirement savers stay on track toward their ultimate goal.”

Retirement Guidance Helps Ensure Better Success
Fidelity urges workplace retirement plan participants to Plan for Life and to take advantage of the educational help provided through their workplace. Fidelity is committed to investing in, and delivering, a superior customer experience to its participants. The company provides engaging guidance through the channels that work best for the participant, be it over the phone, in-person or online. This includes licensed and dedicated telephone representatives, onsite workplace workshops, on-demand webinars, and access to representatives at our more than 170 investor centers nationwide. In addition, the firm’s suite of interactive online tools, available on its innovative NetBenefits® participant portal, help participants plan for retirement as well as transition from saving to income in retirement.

About Fidelity Investments
Fidelity Investments is one of the world’s largest providers of financial services, with assets under administration of $3.7 trillion, including managed assets of $1.6 trillion, as of July 31, 2012. Founded in 1946, the firm is a leading provider of investment management, retirement planning, portfolio guidance, brokerage, benefits outsourcing and many other financial products and services to more than 20 million individuals and institutions, as well as through 5,000 financial intermediary firms. For more information about Fidelity Investments, visit www.fidelity.com.

Guidance provided by Fidelity is educational in nature, is not individualized, and is not intended to serve as the primary or sole basis for your investment or tax-planning decisions.?

?Fidelity Brokerage Services LLC, Member NYSE, SIPC?
900 Salem Street, Smithfield, RI 02917?

?Fidelity Investments Institutional Services Company, Inc.?
100 Salem St., Smithfield, RI 02917?

?626284.1.0?
© 2012 FMR LLC. All rights reserved.?

?1) Retirement age 67; income estimates based on an 85% annual income replacement rate during retirement. Assumes systematic withdrawal of savings in retirement.?

?2) 85% replacement rate is for a hypothetical average employee and may not factor in all anticipated future living expenses or needs, such as long-term care costs.?

?3) Dollars expressed are in real dollars (all dollars in today’s 2012 dollars, not future value).?

?4) The age when workers born 1960 or later are eligible for full Social Security benefits.?

?5) Starting at age 25 through age 67, maximum annual qualified retirement plan contribution limits in 2012 are $17,000 (or $22,500 if age is 50 or older) and for SIMPLE 401(K) plan annual contribution limit is $11,500 (or $14,000 if age is 50 or older).?

?6) For purposes of this analysis, Fidelity utilized a flat rate of return in a deterministic model, not a stochastic model (such as “Monte Carlo”).?

?7) Data from SocialSecurity.gov. For example, a hypothetical worker who at age 25 commences his or her career with a $40,000 annual salary with an ending salary of approximately $72,000 at age 67, their benefit would be about $1,920 per month.?

?8) Actual average annual income increases based on 1.5% real wage increases plus 2.3% inflation adjustments. Also assumes the participant took no loans or hardships withdrawals from their workplace plan.
 

Edited by: Neil Anderson, Managing Editor


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