Wall Street turmoil rattles retirement savers, turning financial planners into therapists

Wall Street turmoil rattles retirement savers, turning financial planners into therapists

Turmoil on Wall Street is keeping financial planners’ phones ringing as 401(k) holders watch their retirement account balances fall with the stock markets they’re tied to. For the most part, they’re being told to sit tight and breathe through it.

“I’ve seen more concern and fear with clients that I’ve talked to over the last month or so than I have since the financial crisis,” said Jude Boudreaux, a senior financial planner at the Planning Center, a New Orleans-based firm. He added that this week has been especially hectic. “People are really concerned.”

Vanese Pitts said she watched her husband’s 401(k) shed $8,000 on Monday, when a wide-ranging market sell-off pushed the S&P 500 to its lowest close since September . The sharp downturn in recent days followed several weeks of losses on Wall Street that have left the stock index about 4.8% lower than where it started the year. Many 401(k)s follow the broad-based S&P closely.

“It was just insane,” said the 41-year-old, who’s raising two kids alongside her husband, a software engineer, in Birmingham, Alabama.

Pitts was among those who took to social media platforms to crowdsource advice and commiserate this week, as President Donald Trump’s trade war with America’s closest allies sends tremors through millions of savers’ retirement investments. His chaotic rollout of new tariffs, the retaliatory levies they’ve triggered , and an ongoing purge of federal workers have stoked fears of rebounding inflation and a potential economic downturn.

Lee Baker, founder and president of Claris Financial Advisors in Atlanta, said he’d been fielding anxious calls from clients — most of them in or near retirement — for the past week or so. He was surprised to hear so much concern “from people who, mathematically, really don’t have a problem in terms of making it through whatever this might be,” he said.

“Clients, particularly in times like these, don’t want to hear ‘Essentially, do nothing. It’s going to be all right,’” Baker said.

That was the gist of Katie Szykman’s mother’s advice when the 23-year-old Philadelphian called in a panic. She had been contributing 6% of her paycheck to her employer’s 403(b) — a type of retirement account offered by public schools and charities — for barely two years and watched more than $1,000 vanished in a matter of days, she said.

“My mom was like, ‘Don’t even touch it,’” said Szykman, who works in marketing at a local nonprofit. “Everyone was always saying make sure you invest in your retirement, so [that was] the first thing I did once I got my first job outside of college. I can’t say that I’m surprised. It just feels disheartening a little bit.”

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