Reports and documents on top of a newspaper.

PlanSponsor: Investment Product and Service Launches

NEPC's IDAC launch was included in PlanSponsor's weekly roundup of new investment products and services.

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Reports and documents on top of a newspaper.

Financial Advisor: DC Plan Assets Funneling Into Target Date Funds

Ross Bremen was recently featured in a Financial Advisor article discussing the 2019 Defined Contribution Plan & Fee Survey results.

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Reports and documents on top of a newspaper.

Pensions & Investments: DC plans' use of default auto escalation on the rise — NEPC

NEPC's 2019 Defined Contribution Plan & Fee Survey results were featured in a recent P&I article. 

The use of auto escalation as a default feature in defined contribution plans has increased substantially since 2010, according to NEPC's annual Defined Contribution and Fee Survey.

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Co-workers in a meeting.

PlanSponsor: Getting SECURE Act's Lifetime Income Provisions Right

Our Ross Bremen was featured in a PlanSponsor article that discusses the SECURE Act. Read the article on their site here.

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Sideways view of stacked coins.

Pensions & Investments: Little uptake seen on offering lifetime income products

Defined contribution sponsors’ approach to offering in-plan lifetime income options, such as a annuities, is illustrated by a series of recent surveys by different organizations that reach the same conclusion — relatively small percentages of sponsors provide them.

 


Side view of a stack of newspapers.

Pensions & Investments: Outsourcing, More Use of Specialist Managers Part of 2020 To-Do List

Read the article on P&I's site here.

Timothy T. Yates Jr. said larger endowments now are in the midst of having serious 'buy- or-build discussions.'

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Close-up of reports being reviewed.

U.S. News & World Report: Why Bonds Beat Expectations

Read the article on U.S. News & World Report here. 

A calmer investing path.

Fixed income can serve to dampen volatility in a portfolio, especially when equity markets show downside volatility. Investors can reasonably expect stocks and bonds to move in different directions, or at least not at the same rates. So far this year, both asset classes are showing gains, although stock returns have outpaced bonds. That's typical in a year when both are in positive territory. "U.S. bonds did better than expected in 2019 as concerns over weak stock markets, a possible imminent recession and trade war worries led investors to bid up bonds, and lowered yields," says Andrew Aran, partner at Regency Wealth Management in Ramsey, New Jersey.

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