More than a third of working-age Americans have money in a 401(k) account, and another 18% have individual retirement accounts (IRAs). The median balance in those accounts is $30,000, according to the census.
So where exactly is all that money? Tech stocks, mostly.
Typically, people invest their 401(k) monies into funds, pooled investments that spread money across hundreds (if not thousands) of different stocks and other securities, including other funds with their own nested investments.
The Russian-nesting-doll setup helps spread out risk by investing broadly and diversely in the stock market, and it often maximizes returns by investing more heavily in reliably high-performing companies known as blue chips.
Some of the biggest retirement funds tend to have one aspect in common: a heavy emphasis on tech stocks like Microsoft, Apple, Nvidia, Alphabet (Google) and Meta, which can comprise nearly a quarter of a stock-based fund’s total holdings. That roughly aligns with the market value of those companies compared to others in the S&P 500.
“Over four of the previous five years, technology stocks have outpaced the broader stock market,” according to a recent U.S. Bank report. “It’s reasonable to expect that technology stocks will play a role in any broadly diversified portfolio.”
Depending on your age and investment strategy — the closer to retirement, the lower the risk and vice versa — there are different funds with different types of assets. Generally, more risk means more stocks, less risk means more bonds. And some funds specialize in different sectors or take a wider or more narrow sampling of the stock market.
While employer-sponsored 401(k) plans are often left on autopilot, individual investors can have a say about where the money is going.