Market Crisis Has Baby Boomers Stressed Over Retirement

Many Americans are watching their retirement plans fall by the wayside as declines in home values and stock prices have whittled away their savings and net worth.

Source: Source: CNBC | Published on March 3, 2009

The depth of that damage will be evident later this month when the Federal Reserve reports on household wealth in the fourth quarter, which will pick up where the third quarter left off. At $56 trillion, it was some 12 percent below what it was during its peak in the third quarter of 2007.

“We won't be rebuilding wealth so quickly,” says Christian Weller of the American Progress and the University of Massachusetts, who specializes in retirement income security.

Weller says the decline in wealth is the greatest on record.

Housing prices are expected to bottom out until mid-year at the earliest. Thus far, the median price of a home is down more than 20 percent from $219,000 at the market peak in 2007 to $170,000 in January.

Stock prices, however, have fallen twice as much, some 50 percent, from their October 2007 peak.

And while a greater percentage of Americans are homeowners than investors and thus the average household’s wealth is more defined by real estate than investments, the investment outlook is still a major force.

“There are more people involved in the equity market and have wealth tied up in it than the 1980s and 1990s,” says Christopher Rupley of Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi.

In 2008, 47 percent of all households, or some 54.5 million, participated in the market through equity or bond ownership, according to a joint study by the Investment Company Institute and the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association. In 1989, only 39 percent were in the market.

Between 1989 and 2004 alone, the number of people in defined contribution (DC) retirement savings plans, such as 401(k)s, nearly doubled, from 36 million to 65 million.

Meanwhile, the value of those holdings has shrunk considerable. Americans held $15.9 trillion in retirement assets at the end of the third quarter of 2008, accounting for 35 percent of all household financial assets.

At the end of the second quarter of 2007, right before the credit crunch first bit, the value of those holdings was $17.4 trillion, equal to 40 percent.

Given the declines of the fourth quarter and the first two months of this year, both retirement metrics are even lower today.

“I think we’re prepared for people turning their 401(k) into 200k, but not for it to be 40k," says Rupkey.

In the current environment, the huge losses in the stock market may actually have a larger psychological effect than those of the housing market because of the more frequent reminders; the declines are measured daily and weekly, not just monthly, like housing.

While major stock market indices are at 12-year lows; existing single family home prices are a mere six-year low.

“The stock market is in a self-fulfilling negative spiral,” says economist David Jones of DMJ Advisors.

And unlike with housing, the government may be hurting, not helping the situation, say analysts. Though strictly speaking, there’s little the government can do to directly intervene in the market place, in the way it is doing with tax incentives for homebuyers, mortgage modification and foreclosure forbearance, analysts say it can certainly do more than it is doing.