The bull market in U.S. stocks has fattened
An analysis by Vanguard researchers on the
The improvement in retirement readiness is encouraging, Kelly Hahn, Vanguard Investment Strategy Group's head of retirement research, said in a blog post. "We see a meaningful improvement in retirement readiness for many baby boomers."
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Stock-market gains have helped bolster retirement savings for most — the gap between upper-income earners and those at the bottom has grown. Workers in the bottom quartile face a savings gap of 36% between their sustainable replacement rate and their expected spending needs.
"Because the market gains disproportionately benefited high earners with the most wealth and highest equity allocations, the disparity in retirement readiness between low- and high-income earners has widened," said Hahn.
For median income earners, the retirement savings gap narrowed eight percentage points to 25%.
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Vanguard's calculations are based on data from the Federal Reserve's 2019 and 2022 Survey of Consumer Expectations, and S&P 500 performance from the end of 2019 through 2022. That means retirement assets are even higher now.
A review of Federal Reserve data shows that the value of equity and mutual fund holdings among those at least 55 years old have climbed by $5.5 trillion in the past year and by almost $17 trillion since the start of the pandemic in the first quarter of 2020.
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While people at the top are seeing flush retirement accounts, the share of people who say they have zero confidence in a comfortable retirement reached a record high this month. Likely a reflection of the increase in the cost of living, the figure still highlights the vast differences among retirement savings.