Wealthy in L.A. plan to save a lot for retirement, but haven’t yet
Wealthy people in Los Angeles plan to save more money for retirement than the national average, while women are stowing away more than men, according to a new survey.
L.A. residents with $50,000 to $250,000 in household investable assets plan to save an average of $909,400 for retirement, more than the $736,200 national average, according to Merrill Edge, a consumer banking unit of Bank of America Corp.
Women are outpacing men, according to the report. They plan to squirrel away a bit more than $1 million versus $814,000 for men.
QUIZ: How well do you understand the Fed stimulus?
However, as with Americans of all income levels, they’ve put away only a fraction of that amount. The average L.A. resident has saved only $150,300, according to the report.
And they don’t have much time left to meet those lofty financial goals: The average L.A. poll respondent is 54 years old.
Perhaps not surprising, nearly two-thirds of L.A. residents — 64% — intend to retire later than anticipated. That’s an 18 percentage-point jump from Merrill’s last report six months ago.
In an apparent sign of growing retirement awareness, L.A. residents anticipate saving $377,400 more than they did six months ago.
As for college savings, the average wealthy Angeleno has saved, or plans to save, $62,000. However, one in three Los Angeles parents has saved nothing for their child’s education, according to the report.
ALSO:
How spending habits changed since ‘73? More housing. Less saving.
Alleged wrongdoing by stockbrokers often erased from records, study finds
Baby boomers may have no one to care for them in their old age
Follow Walter Hamilton on Twitter @LATwalter
More to Read
Inside the business of entertainment
The Wide Shot brings you news, analysis and insights on everything from streaming wars to production — and what it all means for the future.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.