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Last Year’s Stock Market Plunge Wiped Out a Third of 401(k) Millionaires
By Adam Hardy MONEY RESEARCH COLLECTIVE
The number of IRAs and 401(k) accounts worth $1 million or more has shrunk considerably.
After a dismal year for the stock market, the number of folks who can claim 401(k) millionaire status has shrunk considerably.
What the research says
The number of 401(k) millionaires has plummeted by 32%, according to data the asset management firm Fidelity Investments shared with Money.
- A “401(k) millionaire” is someone whose 401(k) retirement account is worth at least $1 million.
- At the end of 2021, Fidelity says it managed 442,000 401(k) accounts with balances of $1 million or more. One year later, that total dropped to 299,000 — a decrease of more than 32%.
- Similarly, many Americans lost their status as individual retirement account (IRA) millionaires due to plunging balances of those accounts as well.
- Fidelity says there were 280,320 IRAs worth at least $1 million at the end of 2022, a 25% decrease from the prior year.
Of the roughly 22 million 401(k)s managed by Fidelity, only a tiny fraction — about 1.4% — are 401(k) millionaires.
Key context
In 2022 investors suffered through the stock market’s worst year since 2008.
- The S&P 500 — the benchmark stock market index — tumbled more than 19% last year, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell almost 9% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq cratered 33%.
Because many Americans have their nest eggs in retirement accounts tied to stock performance, the balances of 401(k)s, IRAs and 403(b)s were clobbered as markets fell and hardship withdrawals ticked up.
- Last year, average 401(k) balances dipped 20.5% — from $130,700 in 2021 to $103,900 in 2022, according to Fidelity.
- IRA balances saw a loss of 23% on average, tumbling from $135,600 to $104,000 over that same period of time.
Not long ago, the number of retirement account millionaires was at a record high: 753,600 in mid-2021, according to a previous analysis by Fidelity. At the time, stocks were soaring, and Americans — whose spending was limited by pandemic-related lock downs — were socking away their cash at record rates.
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How to Save for Retirement Even When You’re in Your 20s and Broke
Adam Hardy is a reporter at Money who strives to help everyday folks make sense of their personal finances. Prior to joining Money, he covered personal finance, entrepreneurship and tech topics at The Penny Hoarder and Forbes. He holds a bacheloru2019s degree in magazine journalism with a minor in sociology from the University of South Florida as well as a multimedia storytelling certificate from Poynter's News University.