Real vs. Pretend Management of Retirement Plan Investments

Ron SurzAdvisor Perspectives welcomes guest contributions. The views presented here do not necessarily represent those of Advisor Perspectives.

Key Takeaways

  • Managed accounts classified as qualified default investment alternatives (QDIAs) are not truly managed because there is no participant engagement.
  • Personalized Target Date Accounts (PTDAs) combine managed accounts and target date funds, offering multiple glidepaths for self-directed participants to manage their own risk.
  • For defaulted participants, customization — not personalization — is recommended, with plan sponsors designing a model glidepath tailored to plan demographics.
  • Personalization works for non-defaulted, engaged participants, but pretending to personalize for defaulted accounts misleads and fails to address true risk tolerance.

When Is a Managed Account Not Managed? When It’s a QDIA

Although managed accounts (MAs) are the second most popular qualified default investment alternative (QDIA), with $450 billion in invested assets, they are far behind the $4 trillion invested in the most popular vehicle, target date funds (TDFs). However, a new hybrid product, Personalized Target Date Accounts (PTDA), combines the two approaches.

There are two distinct types of managed accounts. Both are called “managed accounts,” but one is not actually managed.

  1. Truly managed accounts require decisions from participants who typically take advice from live investment consultants. These accounts are not QDIAs because these participants do not default.
  2. By contrast, people relying on the default option do not engage, so managed accounts for them are not actually managed, despite the fact that they are labeled as such.

This article details personalization with a strong caution against trying to personalize what cannot be personalized because It’s Not Nice to Fool Mother Nature with a “managed” account that is not actually managed.