Will
the stock market crash when the boomers cash in?
Probably
not, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) says. The analysis
of national survey and other data suggests that retiring boomers are
not likely to sell financial assets in such a way as to cause a
sharp and sudden decline in financial asset prices.
A large
majority of boomers have few financial assets to sell. The small
minority who own most assets held by this generation will likely
need to sell few assets in retirement. Also, most current retirees
spend down their assets slowly, with many continuing to accumulate
assets.
If
boomers behave the same way, a rapid and large sell off of
financial assets appears unlikely. Other factors that may
reduce the odds of a sharp and sudden drop in asset prices
include the increase in life expectancy that will spread
asset sales over a longer period and the expectation of many
boomers to work past traditional retirement ages.
A wide
range of academic studies have predicted that the boomers’
retirement will have a small negative effect, if any, on rates of
return on assets. Similarly, financial industry representatives did
not expect the boomers’ retirement to have a big impact on the
financial markets, in part because of the globalization of the
markets.
Our statistical analysis shows that macroeconomic and
financial factors, such as dividends and industrial
production, explained much more of the variation in stock
returns from 1948 to 2004 than did shifts in the U.S.
population’s age structure, suggesting that demographics may
have a small effect on stock returns relative to the broader
economy.
While the
boomers’ retirement is not likely to cause a sharp and sudden
decline in asset prices, the retirement security of boomers and
others will likely depend more on individual savings and returns on
such savings.
This is
due, in part, to the decline in traditional pensions that provide
guaranteed retirement income and the rise in account-based defined
contribution plans.