MullinTBG,
a unit of Prudential Retirement, updated its participant website to improve
user experience and streamline nonqualified deferred compensation (NQDC) plan
online account details.
The site will go live September 29. Features include
redesigned account information displays, home page customization options and
navigation enhancements.
Some key enhancements include improved usability, a
customizable home page that enables participants to personalize their data, and
more detailed account views. The site is also integrated with a number of
qualified plan providers to enable participants to view a multitude of benefit
plan data through a single sign on.
“MullinTBG’s Web presence is vital to how participants
interact with our systems and experience overall satisfaction with their
plans,” said Yong Lee, chief operating officer.
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Research Cautions Against Retiring During Good Economy
Many
Americans choose to retire when the economic markets are peaking, an action
that can cause problems for their long-term financial stability, a researcher
found.
In the study, which was published in the Journal of
Personal Finance and funded by a grant from Prudential Insurance Company of
America, Rui Yao, an assistant professor of personal financial planning in the
College of Human Environmental Sciences at the University of Missouri, found
that the probability that retirement-eligible Americans chose to retire
increased as the number of consecutive up-market years increased. Each one
percentage increase in market returns increased the probability of retirement
by more than 2%.
Yao also found that working Americans with a retired spouse
were more likely to retire than all other household types, including those with
a working spouse and those without a spouse. Yao says this trend could also
create potential financial problems.
“Potential retirees often will first meet their targeted
retirement savings goals during an up market and will be tempted to retire at
that point,” Yao said. “The problem with this strategy is that the economy runs
in cycles, meaning that after a peak, the market will take a downturn. People
who have retired shortly before an economic downturn run a serious risk of
losing a significant portion of their retirement savings, which will shorten
the longevity of their retirement income. This could result in many retirees
outliving their retirement savings and facing financial hardships toward the
end of their lives.”
Yao added that it makes sense that many married couples
would want to retire around the same time. “However, if both spouses decide to
retire close to the end of an up market, the household would have little to no
cushion should their retirement portfolios be affected by an economic downturn,”
he said.
Yao believes these findings show the need for retirement
planners, employers, and financial educators and practitioners to help
pre-retirees better understand the challenges they face in order to reduce the
likelihood of financial problems after retirement.
The study examined data from the Health and Retirement
Study—a national biannual survey conducted by the University of Michigan. The
study reviewed the financial and retirement statuses of more than 4,000
households with retirement-age Americans from 1992 to 2008.