Thursday, February 2, 2012

Fidelity's O'Hanley talks of sex, drugs and revolution


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 Ronald O'Hanley has emerged as an outspoken force inside Fidelity Investments, giving a speech on Thursday that touched on sex, drugs and revolution as he warned that young Americans face getting a raw deal from the U.S. retirement system.

Top executives at the Boston-based mutual fund giant are known for being conservative and scripted in their public appearances. But since O'Hanley joined Fidelity in 2010 as the president of asset management and corporate services, he has demonstrated a more free-wheeling approach in his public comments.

The United States is facing a "real crisis in intergenerational inequity," O'Hanley said in explaining how Social Security's cash deficits continue to grow as retirees outnumber the people entering the workplace.

The crucial question that faces O'Hanley's college-age son and his friends, he said, is what kind of retirement system they will have when they grow old.

The United States is at the tipping point in dealing with problems affecting the retirement savings system, O'Hanley said. If the country doesn't deal with the issues now, he added, there will be a more severe crisis 10 to 15 years from now, such as a significant increase in homelessness.

"It's a truly raw deal for the young," O'Hanley said. "I don't mean to be a doomsayer, but revolutions are fostered by the young."