Easy Does It? | With a target-date fund, there's no stressing over fund choices. You simply pick the fund that corresponds to the year you plan to retire. For instance, if you're 40 years old and plan to retire in 25 years, you'd go with a 2040 target-date fund.
Target-date funds adjust your risk down gradually as you age. The younger you are, the more aggressive your investments. As you rack up birthdays, your investments grow more and more conservative. By the time you retire, your portfolio has a heavy mix of money markets and bonds.
This idea—called asset allocation—may sound good in theory. But it could keep your nest egg from reaching its full potential.
Let's compare two scenarios to see the difference.
In this example, Jill and Kate start investing at age 30 and contribute $250/month to a Roth IRA. Jill puts her money in individual growth stock mutual funds, while Kate invests in a 2050 target-date fund.
Both investors come out of the gate with a similar strong start. But over time, Kate's retirement fund starts falling behind. By the time they retire 35 years later, Jill's nest egg has a $200,000 advantage over Kate's. And that's because of a mere 2% difference in return in the last 15 years. | | | | |
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