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The Takeaway: Anxious Investors Day Trading Retirement Savings

250-day-trading-seniors

While most Americans with 401(k)s or individual retirement accounts embrace a "set it and forget it" philosophy, some anxious retirement savers are getting increasingly aggressive with their investmentsaccording to the Los Angeles Times. Worried about the toll the past decade has taken on their savings, Americans nearing retirement are  day trading mutual funds and stock options in a bid to make up for lost time.

Though always considered risky, day trading was popular during the booming 1990s. It fell out of favor when the tech bubble burst, but its resurgent popularity now is driven by boomers who are "close to" desperation, said Jeff Fischer, an options advisor at Motley Fool investment website.

Ten years of a flat stock market bumps up against reality for people in their 50s or 60s who are running out of time to see appreciation" in the stock market, he said.


This includes Vlad Tokarev, 49, who took a major nest-egg hit in the last bear market. "I didn't see a lot of returns using the buy-and-hold method," he told the Times. So these days, Tokarev has taken to day trading the mutual funds in his 401(k) account.

Minutes before the market closes every day, Tokarev buys or sells a mutual fund linked to the Standard & Poor's 500 stock index. His goal is to profit from temporary fluctuations in stock prices, so he buys when stocks are falling and sells when they're rising.


A cottage industry of financial advisers has been preaching the gospel of 401(k) day trading, the  Times notes. But most financial planners say this sort of strategy will backfire for investors.

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Photo: Peter Dazeley/The Image Bank/Getty Images

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