FYI: Average on Tuesday, many participants in its 401(k) retirement plan were likely in shock. Over one-third of the plan’s assets have been invested in the shares of General Electric, as shown by the company’s federal filings. Its share price has fallen by 60% since the end of 2016, as the S&P 500 has risen by over 25%.
Similarly, participants in the 401(k) retirement plan at Scana—a natural gas company in Georgia—have suffered heavy losses from inadequate diversification. Over 60% of the plan’s assets were invested in Scana stock, as shown by the company’s federal filings. Its share price fell by nearly 50% since the end of 2016.
As these examples illustrate, holding a large portion of your retirement assets in your employer’s stock is dangerous for your financial health. Such a large concentration undermines the risk-reducing benefits of a diversified securities portfolio. Indeed, a large holding in employer stock doubles your risk: If your company runs into major problems, you may lose your job and your retirement security.
Regards,
Ted
http://fortune.com/2018/06/20/general-electric-dow-jones-401k-retirement/
Comments
How did the Fortune authors get it wrong? The second author, an undergraduate who "provided research assistance" will probably get the blame.
SCANA is to be bought by Dominion Energy, after the partnership with SCE&G to build nuclear power plants encountered huge cost overruns (and lots of political turmoil in South Carolina).
I don't think I'd be buying Dominion stock right now.
BlockChain bubble is coming and will make some millionaires.
So while there can be some risk to pension plans, they're not going to go bust simply because the employer did. The fact that ERISA allows limited investments by a plan in employer stock answers the question of whether there is a fiduciary duty to eschew this stock. There isn't.
But there's still the usual fiduciary requirement that the selection of investments by the plan (whether company stock or anything else) be prudent.
This is a different question from whether individuals ought to buy company stock in their defined contribution (DC) plans (where there is no 10% limitation).
There are NUA rules that allow company stock appreciation to be taxed as cap gains instead of ordinary income, as is the usual case for anything else held in a DC plan. That changes the risk/benefit calculation a bit, encouraging some investment in employer stock with a DC plan. But one still shouldn't go overboard.
https://www.kitces.com/blog/net-unrealized-appreciation-irs-rules-nua-from-401k-and-esop-plans/
Finally, with respect to SCANA, the article may have been poorly worded, as opposed to factually incorrect. SCANA Energy, a company owned by SCANA Corp, services only Georgia, and provides only natural gas (as noted in the article). That appears to be the company the article is referring to.
https://www.scanaenergy.com/
SCANA Corp has several subsidiaries including South Carolina Electric and Gas.
https://www.scana.com/