Why Stable Value is Critical in Retirement Plan Menus

Takeaways

  • The shift from a zero-interest rate environment to one with higher yields and inflation uncertainty makes capital preservation choices more significant for long-term retirement outcomes.
  • Stable value funds are essential for retirement plans as they can potentially provide the two outcomes plan participants seek for capital preservation: the price stability of cash with inflation-beating returns.
  • As stewards of their employees’ retirement savings, we suggest plan sponsors revisit their capital preservation options to make sure they deliver the outcomes their plan participants need to fulfill their retirement objectives.

Plan sponsors have much to consider when designing and maintaining a workplace retirement plan. Employee demographics, plan design, and selecting investment managers are just a few of the key factors.

One step of the decision-making process might seem less complicated—selecting a capital preservation option for the plan. This task may initially seem less difficult than choosing an investment in the target-date, equity or fixed income categories because the objective of capital preservation appears more straightforward than higher-return, higher-risk asset classes.

However, plan sponsors need to be aware of the varied approaches to capital preservation and prioritize the careful evaluation of the landscape of investment options and the underlying risk/return that comes with them.

The environment for capital preservation has fundamentally changed

Today’s higher interest rate environment makes retirement plan cash management decisions even more crucial than during the past decade. When the Federal Reserve (Fed) finishes its rate cutting cycle, short-term interest rates are likely to settle in the range of 3%-4%, a level that can materially affect participants’ accumulation and income over a long horizon.

The figure below illustrates that when cash yields averaged 0.25%, which was the case for nearly 15 years—the accumulation differences were marginal over a 30-year time horizon. But if yields revert closer to their long-term average of around 3%, accumulation differences can determine whether a plan participant has either a cash-strapped or a comfortable retirement.

With interest rates normalizing, capital preservation options are offering competitive, inflation-beating return potential. Combined with low volatility, these strategies may be essential to help plan participants reach retirement goals.

Basis Point graph

In addition to the re-setting of interest rates, the inflation landscape has also changed. Inflation is top of mind for most savers, and there will likely be more inflationary than disinflationary shocks in the foreseeable future. This shift in sentiment may have profound implications. With inflation still running above long-term averages, maximizing yield while balancing returns with capital preservation is essential to building and protecting the real value of participant savings.