The public debate over target date funds has spread to the
New York Times. The Times' Leslie Wayne
follows up on the joint
Department of Labor-
SEC all-day hearing on target date funds last week. (Wayne also highlights a
speech SEC chair
Mary Schapiro gave last week at the New York Financial Writers' Association Annual Awards Dinner.)
For more on last Thursday's hearing, see
coverage from our sister publication,
The 401kWire.
The Times notes Schapiro's worry that "funds with the target date in their names can be structured, and thus perform, very differently," and indeed the article itself largely centers around the debate over those discrepancies in returns.
Representative
Rob Andrews (D-New Jersey), Senate Aging Committee chair
Herb Kohl (D-Wisconsin), Pension Advisors president
David Krasnow, Target Date Analytics principal
Joe Nagengast and ICI chief
Paul Schott Stevens, most of whom testified at the hearing last week, all gain ink in the article as experts.
On the fund firm side, the Times notes
AllianceBernstein's and
Fidelity's 2010 funds as ones with more equity exposure (and bigger 2008 losses); the paper also points to 2010 funds from
Deutsche Bank and
Wells Fargo as more heavily bond-weighted (with lower 2008 losses). Yet, the paper makes no mention of how those different funds are performing so far in 2009. 
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