"Ned Johnson, the longtime leader of
Fidelity, changed the way the middle class thought about its money.
Among the trailblazers who made
finance more accessible to the masses starting in the 1970s — John Bogle of
Vanguard with his index fund, Charles Schwab with his discount brokerage and
Louis Rukeyser with his weekly interrogation of one Wall Street sage or another
— Edward C. Johnson III, the longtime leader of Fidelity Investments, was the
least well known yet arguably the most important.
The others were all public figures, but Mr. Johnson, who died last week at the age of 91,
was a Boston patrician with a patrician’s aversion to the spotlight. Despite
his upper-class background, he is credited with helping to change the way the
middle class thought about its money, transforming Americans from savers to
investors. That’s why he matters.
Mr. Johnson, widely known as Ned,
was 42 when he took over Fidelity, a small mutual fund company his father had
run for three decades. The year was 1972: The market was in the doldrums,
inflation was on the rise and Fidelity’s assets were in decline.
Like other financial executives,
Johnson realized that a new investment vehicle recently approved by the
Securities and Exchange Commission might offer a way to attract more money.
This vehicle was called a money market fund; by investing in
ultrasafe bonds, it could generate returns that matched real-world interest
rates.
At a time when bank interest was
regulated — fixed by law at
5.25 percent — these higher-yielding funds were sold as an alternative to
savings accounts.
They were not, however, consumer
friendly. While it was easy to move money in and out of a bank account, it
often took weeks to redeem money market fund shares, requiring onerous
paperwork. That was a turnoff to people who were used to having easy access to
their money.
As his obituaries have all noted, Mr. Johnson
threw that business model overboard by allowing Fidelity customers to write
checks against the company’s money market fund. In one stroke, he made it as
easy to take money out of a fund as to put money in. His thinking was that
people would be more willing to entrust their money to Fidelity if they knew
they could easily withdraw it. He would treat investors like consumers.
If you’re as old as I am, you’ll
remember what happened next. Inflation surged and interest rates followed. The
average 30-year mortgage rate peaked at close to 17 percent by 1981. Tens of
millions of Americans, seeing their savings eroded by inflation, made the leap
from a bank account to a money market fund. This was the first step in their
transition from savers to investors.
By the fall of 1982, the Federal
Reserve chair Paul Volcker had brought the inflation rate down sharply,
triggering a powerful bull market. Mr. Johnson was ready for the moment.
Fidelity had long before cut its ties with brokers, giving
the company a direct relationship with customers. As their money market fund
returns diminished, they looked for other vehicles that could provide the
yields they had become accustomed to. What Mr. Johnson could offer them was
Fidelity’s Magellan fund — or, more specifically, the genius of its manager,
Peter Lynch, whom he had installed five years earlier.
It’s hard to overstate how important Mr. Lynch was in
bringing the middle class to the stock market. It wasn’t just that his record
was off the charts — the Magellan Fund recorded a 29 percent average annual
return in the 13 years he ran it, between 1977 and 1990, with nary a down year.
It was also that Mr. Lynch did it while making stock-picking seem like
something anyone could do if they just used common sense. He demystified the
market for millions.
Mr. Lynch, now 78, famously invested in Hanes because he saw
his wife buying the company’s L’eggs pantyhose at the supermarket. He called
his big winners “ten-baggers.” He used to say, “I like to buy a business that
any fool can run because eventually one will.”
Mr. Lynch’s popularity begot the era
of the superstar fund manager, who became heroes for the new breed of
middle-class investors. The Magellan fund’s assets under management grew from
$18 million to $14 billion during Mr. Lynch’s tenure.
There was another factor pushing
people into the stock market around that time, and Mr. Lynch and Mr. Johnson
seized the opportunity.
In 1982, Congress created the Individual Retirement Account,
or I.R.A., which allowed people to defer taxes on $2,000 a year if they put it
aside for retirement. By 1984, Fidelity’s marketers were traveling the country,
talking up I.R.A.s as a great middle-class tax break — and mutual funds as the
way to make the most of it. Fidelity by then offered a variety of funds; Mr.
Johnson was also among the first to make it easy for customers to switch from
one fund to another, further enhancing the firm’s appeal.
The mutual fund era ended, more or
less, on Aug. 9, 1995. That was the date of Netscape’s blockbuster I.P.O. — its
stock more than doubled on its first day as a public company — and the
beginning of the dot-com boom.
The next few years proved that Mr.
Johnson’s goal of bringing the middle class into the market had succeeded.
Partly, people had to: How else could they afford to retire or send their kids
to college? For better or worse, they embraced those ever-rising tech stocks in
the same way they had once embraced Mr. Lynch and the Magellan fund.
I was living in a small town in
Massachusetts at the time, and I’ll never forget my neighbors — people I’d
never thought of as investors — crowing about the returns they were getting on
stocks like Cisco or Juniper Networks or, yes, eToys.
Fidelity had a discount brokerage by then but, more
important, it had switched the emphasis of its mutual fund business from
individuals to corporations offering 401(k) plans to their employees.
There are those who believe that
employees were better off when companies offered defined benefit pension plans
(I’m one of them) but, when
confronted with an array of mutual funds to choose from for self-directed
retirement plans, people took it in stride. It was no big deal anymore.
Americans had truly become investors.
Mr. Johnson retired as chairman of
Fidelity in 2014, turning it over to his daughter Abigail. Today, it holds over
$4 trillion in assets and has more than 30 million customers. But Mr. Johnson’s
real legacy isn’t just that he turned a small firm in Boston into a financial
behemoth, but how he did it — by making investing a part of everyday
middle-class life."
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