Portfolio choice, trading, and returns in a large 401(k) plan

Portfolio choice, trading, and returns in a large 401(k) plan

Portfolio choice, trading, and returns in a large 401(k) plan

Agnew

Julie

Agnew, Julie

Author

Author

Balduzzi

Pierluigi

Balduzzi, Pierluigi

Dept. of Finance, Carroll School of Management

Author

Author

Sunden

Annika

Sunden, Annika

Author

Author

text

working paper

Chestnut Hill, Mass. Center for Retirement Research at Boston College20002000monographic

Chestnut Hill, Mass.

Chestnut Hill, Mass.

Center for Retirement Research at Boston College

2000

2000

monographic

Englisheng

English

eng

electronicapplication/pdfborn digital

electronic

application/pdf

born digital

This paper examines portfolio choice, trading behavior, and realized rates of return following a panel of nearly seven thousand 401(k) retirement accounts during the April 1994-August 1998 time period. The distribution of equity allocations in the panel is strongly bi-modal: 48% of the average annual equity allocations in the panel are zero, while 22% of the allocations are 100%. The oveall average allocation of stocks is 41%. Regression results show patterns of stock allocations by marital status, earnings, age, and seniority that are broadly consistent with the implications of normative models. Stock allocations are higher for married investors and for investors with higher earnings and more seniority on the job; stock allocations are lower for older investors. The evidence on trading activity indicates very limited portfolio re-shuffling, in sharp contrast to existing evidence from discount brokerage accounts: over 87% of the annual number of trades in the panel are zero, and only 7% of the observations exceed one. This evidence is consistent with the implications of models of optimal portfolio choice with fixed transaction costs. Daily changes in equity allocations correlate only weakly with same-day equity returns and do not correlate with future equity returns. This evidence suggests that investors only take partial advantage of the wildcard option in equity-fund shares and are not able to time the market.

Julie Agnew, Pierluigi Balduzzi, and Annika Sunden.

CRR WP2000-6

CRR WP2000-6

CRR WP

2000-6

http://crr.bc.edu/images/stories/Working_Papers/wp_2000-06.pdf

MChBEnglisheng

MChB

Englisheng

English

eng