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Keeping your eyes on your target-date fund

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Simple is good when it comes to investing for retirement. But even after you find something simple, you can’t take it easy.

That’s the case with what are called “target-date” retirement mutual funds, which some advocates call “set-it-and-forget-it” investments.

If you began putting money in a target-date fund five years ago and have since tuned out, it’s undergone some transformation. The changes go beyond the gradual shift from stocks to bonds that all target-date funds are designed to undergo. They are more fundamental.

Target-date funds take care of how to divvy up a retirement account among stocks and bonds, allowing savers to put the decision-making on autopilot. The funds used to focus on just U.S. stocks and bonds, but they’re now buying a broader mix of investments, from foreign stocks to commodities, as well as making other changes.

A reminder of what target-date retirement funds are: They offer a one-stop shop for nest eggs. Savers pick a fund set for the year that they hope to retire: Early 30-somethings might pick a fund targeted at a retirement in 2045.

When retirement is far off, target-date funds invest heavily in stocks. That’s because investors have the luxury of time to ride out dips that may occur. Each of the three biggest target-date fund providers — Fidelity, Vanguard and T. Rowe Price — keeps at least 85 percent of its 2045 fund in stocks.

As the years progress, target-date funds shift some of their money from stocks into bonds and cash because investors should take less risk as retirement approaches. Fidelity’s target-date funds reduce the percentage of assets held in stocks from 85 percent to 50 percent over the course of 30 years, steadily dropping along the way.

The funds do all this shifting on their own, investors don’t have to do anything. Such convenience even has attracted experts on how to choose a mutual fund.

Here are some guidelines to keep in mind as you consider target-date funds, as well as some of the ways that they’ve changed in recent years:

• They’re built to be the only fund that you own for your retirement savings.

The financial industry has preached the benefits of diversification for years. By spreading your nest egg across many different stocks and bonds, the chances drop that one bad investment can torpedo your retirement. But some have taken the advice a step too far.

Some investors feel they need to own many different mutual funds to be diversified, says Jim Lauder, who helps run the Wells Fargo Advantage Dow Jones Target Date funds. They shouldn’t if they own a target-date fund. Each holds hundreds of stocks and bonds from around the world, and managers have constructed them to be diversified.

• Two target-date funds for the same year can look very different.

Some providers are more aggressive, putting a heavier emphasis on stocks, while others are more conservative. The Wells Fargo Advantage Dow Jones 2020 fund (WFDTX) has 43 percent of its money in stocks, for example, while T. Rowe Price’s Retirement 2020 fund (TRRBX) has 68 percent. That will lead to differences in performance.

• They’re becoming more foreign.

Japanese stocks have been some of the world’s best over the last year, and European stocks are climbing as worries about the region’s debt crisis fade.

• They’re becoming more passive.

Target-date funds are typically made up of other mutual funds. The majority of the industry’s assets are invested in actively managed mutual funds. But a growing number of target-date funds are relying on index funds, which passively follow an index rather than try to beat it.

• They’re getting cheaper to own.

Expenses are going down as a direct result of the increased focus on index funds. Target-date funds have an average expense ratio of 0.91 percent.


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