Die Amerikaner ziehen zu Rekordraten Geld aus ihren 401(k)-Fonds ab

https://www.businessinsider.com/401k-hardship-withdrawals-record-retirement-savings-investment-accounts-stock-market-2025-3

34 Kommentare

  1. Super-Character-5290 on

    This is what happens when your emergency fund gets wiped out by inflation. The system is failing regular people.

  2. DukeStamina on

    If done for emergencies such as health issues or even putting food on the table, it’s a sad but necessary thing to do.

    If done because of a decline in the stock market, its the wrong thing to do, especially if you are years away from retirement. The ups and downs of the market with steady investing is beneficial to higher overall earnings than saving at a flat rate. (See dollar cost averaging)

  3. Agreeable_Job4878 on

    And what are they going to do with it? Buy a GIC paying 2%? buy gold? Too late. Buy crypto? It’s doing worse.

  4. papibigdaddy on

    If you’re not 55, you pay a steep penalty every time you withdraw. There was a little breathing room during the height of Covid. It’s not a good idea to dip into your retirement account, but the majority of this country is paycheck-to-paycheck, private equity and the ultra-rich are pricing people out of their own communities, buying a house is not possible for most people, Eversource and National Grid are charging out the ass with impunity, and companies are running under „you will own nothing, fuck you“. The DOE is being stripped, that means sports and arts are gonna disappear all over the place. It’s gonna be tough for people not to dip into their funds. Don’t even get me started on healthcare and nutrition.

  5. I’ve used the hardship loan option before, and it helped me as I stabilized my balance sheet, but people opting to full withdrawals to make ends meet seems like last resort actions.

    The consumption economy has been an overextended bubble for a long time, and the current administration has no tools left (nor the inclination) to provide any meaningful assistance in putting the brakes on a systemic collapse of the economy.

    Anyways, I love my girlfriend and I still have a job for now, so I guess not everything is bad.

  6. 401ks were failing to get boomers, the richest generation, through their retirement years before all this noise started.

    Can’t imagine what the millennial retirement era is going to look like.

  7. I work at a hospital in revenue/billing. My hospital was barely solvent before this idiot took office, hospitals were required to pay back their COVID loans.
    My organization is merging with a larger in less than a year. Best case scenario I lose all my seniority, saved up pto and keep my job. Worst case I get laid off.
    I’ve been looking for another job but it’s tough, hospitals are losing doctors and everything is slowing.
    My point being, I may be forced to join this group if I am laid off. It’s going to take years to recover from this and I’m 53……good times

  8. If you’re young, don’t pull your money out! Leave it in and ride it out unless you absolutely need the money.

  9. 401k is retirement right ?

    In Europe you can’t touch that money until 60-67(depending on countries)

  10. Mean_Rule9823 on

    I mean at the rate its going ww3 will be here before retirement lol why not live now.

  11. Made mistake of even looking at my 401k. We are quite a ways down from the highs. Ugh…and it’s all self inflicted.

  12. I literally just did a hardship withdraw to cover rent. Hoping that’s the last time I have to do that but glad I had the option for now to not be homeless.

  13. People in this thread have absolutely no clue that more than half of Americans don’t have a 401ks.
    200 million Americans.

  14. Mission-Meaning377 on

    Last 3 years have been such an unprecedented run up, it’s wise to take some of the money off the table.

  15. Venusian2AsABoy on

    I liquidated mine a year ago, and just took a year long vacation at age 41 after my kid moved out and my job was ruined by AI. Starting in a new field next week. Everyone deserves a year or two off NOW, not in 2050 or whatever.

  16. emb4rassingStuffacct on

    Can we have a class action lawsuit against Trump voters for the damage they’ve done to this country?

  17. I did. Had to or I couldn’t keep up with my bills. Sucks but at least my bills are paid for now. My new retirement plan is to win the lotto. Wish me luck.

  18. It’s amazing how quickly we can go from consequetive years of record 401K growth to significant losses.

    All Trump had to do was nothing

  19. CharlieBravo74 on

    Americans are making record numbers of mistakes then.

    My step father did this back in 2009. I’ll never forgive him for it. He ruined their financial future in retirement. He’s 81, my mother is 76 and has a lot of health problems now and they barely scrape by.

  20. EatRichGrains on

    Gee. Well, when you make the cost of living double triple quadruple in less than a decade a bunch of folks cannot afford to even **exist** quite literally right now.

    Billionaires are the cause and problem.

  21. How is this possible? We have had Day 1 lower energy, insurance, grocery, and cost of living.

  22. Doubble_pounder on

    I had $14k in my 401k account in September, saved up over seven or eight years or so. I withdrew half of it in October and the rest of it in January, and by now I’m already back to strategically buying just enough groceries to get by before over-drafting my bank account to cover monthly rent. I usually get back up to a positive balance just in time to do it all over again the next month.

    It didn’t even take a precipitating surprise expense like an auto or medical bill to get me to this— just regular cost of living in my city as a 29yo single dad. I’m not in a coastal city either; I’m in a medium-sized city in the Midwest.

    Living on the financial brink like this is so exhausting and draining. I’m just grateful that my daughter and I are fortunate enough to have family we can fall back on if it comes to it, unlike many fellow Americans who are worse off.

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