Retirement

Reading Your Employee Handbook Can Pay Off In A Big Way Before Retirement

Reading Your Employee Handbook Can Pay Off In A Big Way Before Retirement

Financial Planning, Retirement

Reading Your Employee Handbook Can Pay Off In A Big Way Before RetirementThere are a myriad of things that people must consider before they retire. They contemplate whether they will have enough money or not; if they’ll out live those fund; and whether they have their savings allocated correctly to name a few.

But many people don’t think about flipping through their employee handbook before retirement and as a result may be leaving unclaimed time and money on the table.

I was recently talking to a family member at an event and learned he was retiring. After congratulating him, I asked when the big day was and what led to him making the decision.

He was very specific, including both a date and time.“January 31, at 4pm” he said.“Okay, you’ve really got the date and time nailed down don’t you,” I replied… adding, “Any significance to the 4pm?”He laughed, “Yes I was going to retire at the end of the year but after I […]

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Life lessons from a life-affirming heart attack

Life lessons from a life-affirming heart attack

Health & Fitness, Lifestyle, Retirement

Life lessons from a life-affirming heart attackYou can’t judge the real impact of a life-changing event until you’ve lived some life afterwards. Only then can you take stock and measure the size of and commitment to the change.

Five years ago last week, I suffered a heart attack, caused when a building clot broke free, floated downstream until it got stuck, and created a 100% blockage in the artery known by cardiologists as “the widowmaker.”

The changes I expected in the immediate aftermath and a year after the event are, in some respects, different from the reality I live with today. (Read the column I wrote upon first returning to work) , and the column I wrote a year later.)

But life itself is a series of life-altering events. For example, a divorce completed early this year — after 30 years of marriage — was every bit as unexpected as the heart attack; it just wasn’t as […]

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Boomers In Retirement: The Greatest Giving Generation?

Boomers In Retirement: The Greatest Giving Generation?

Retirement

Boomers In Retirement: The Greatest Giving Generation?Watch with money One retirement study after another trumpets the boomers’ lack of saving for retirement and their need to work longer than previous generations. (Wells Fargo today said the median savings of working Americans 60 or older is $50,000.) Call these the “Me Generation” retirement reports.

But what will boomers do for others during retirement? Will they become the Thee Generation?

Maybe so. A fascinating new study from Merrill Lynch and the Age Wave research firm ( Giving in Retirement: America’s Longevity Bonus ) predicts that boomer retirees potentially will give the equivalent of $8 trillion through charitable donations and volunteering over the next two decades. The longevity bonus is the demographers’ term for the population’s increased life expectancy.

If they’re right — and I have some qualms about the precise dollar estimate, which I’ll explain shortly — this will make boomers the greatest giving generation in U.S. history. What the […]

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Andrea Coombes’ Ways and Means: Your grandchildren will save more for retirement than you

Financial Planning, Retirement

High-Frequency Monitoring: A Short-Sighted Behavior | DealbreakerYoung adults in the U.S. may be getting the message that saving for retirement is on their shoulders — they’re starting to put aside money for retirement years earlier than previous generations. That’s the good news. But when it comes to retirement saving in the U.S., there’s still plenty to worry about, too.

On the good-news front, Generation Y (currently ages 18 to 34) started saving for retirement at age 23, on average, according to a new survey of 1,000 U.S. investors, conducted by CoreData Research for Natixis Global Asset Management.

That’s six years earlier than Gen X (currently ages 35 to 50), who started saving at age 29 on average, and 10 years earlier than the boomer generation (currently ages 51 to 69), who started saving at age 33, according to the survey.

Where will technology be 30 years from now?

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The CEOs of Google Ventures and XPRIZE share their predictions for the state of technology 30 years from now.

“That is a significant difference,” said Ed Farrington, executive vice president of retirement at Natixis Global Asset Management. “Time is one of the great allies when it comes to an investment plan. If you start earlier, you have to save a whole lot less and you wind up with a whole lot more — that’s the power of compounding.”

Their smarter savings strategy may be a result of Gen Y, also known as millennials, growing up at a time when the traditional pension was already all but dead, Farrington said. “They perhaps never heard of the promises of a defined-benefit plan or pension,” he said. “They’ve grown up in a world where … they have to put money away for themselves. This is not foreign to them.”

But savers aren’t confident, don’t know how much they need

That said, there is still plenty of uncertainty among retirement savers of all ages. Only 50% of the survey respondents said they’re confident in their investing knowledge and abilities — and their fears appear well-founded. When asked how much money they could safely withdraw each year from a $1 million portfolio that needed to last for 30 years, 60% said 8% or more was a safe withdrawal rate. The safe withdrawal rate rule of thumb is closer to 4%. Read Is the 4% withdrawal rate right for you?.

Meanwhile, 47% of the survey respondents said they’re not sure how much money they need to save for retirement, and 54% of the survey respondents said they don’t believe their savings will provide enough retirement income. Read How much should you save for retirement?

When asked to pin down how much they need to save for retirement, Gen Yers said they need to save about $769,000, on average, and Gen Xers said $741,000. Boomers said they would need $946,000. Read Why you might be saving too much for retirement.

Getting savers on track

The survey also found that employers hold at least one key to improving the state of retirement savings in the U.S.: the power of the match.

Fully 74% of survey respondents cited their company’s 401(k) (or other defined-contribution plan) match as the reason for participating in their company-sponsored retirement plans.

And 50% of those have access to a workplace plan but don’t participate in it cited the lack of a match or said the match was too small, according to the survey.

“The plan sponsor has to make the plan as robust as possible, and then it’s up to the individual to participate, to understand it and to maximize it,” Farrington said, “so that when they get to that point in time [i.e., retirement] they’re prepared.”

Source: Andrea Coombes’ Ways and Means: Your grandchildren will save more for retirement than you

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How Thinking About Retirement Shapes Your Life

Financial Planning, Retirement

MW-DQ339_retire_20150717140558_ZH1Many people dream about what they would do all day if they didn’t have to go to work. The key is to dwell on retirement in such a way that it starts to shape your finances. Here’s how my retirement goals have shaped my saving and spending patterns.

I want to be financially secure in retirement, so every dollar I save is the best dollar I will ever spend. I highly value freedom. Saving enough to retire will mean I’m no longer working because I need the cash to survive. I envision a future where I can choose to work only when the endeavor excites me. Whenever I find ways to reduce my spending, I’m really just diverting that money toward a future use.

I want to retire sooner, so I make an effort to increase my income. Working hard throughout your career is a given. But don’t forget about other ways to bump up y…

Read the entire article: How Thinking About Retirement Shapes Your Life

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Are You Emotionally Ready for Retirement?

Lifestyle, Retirement

635689537398459416-ThinkstockPhotos-84214601Finally, it’s time. The long-anticipated day has arrived. You loosen your tie (or kick off your heels), sink into your leatherette desk chair one last time, and spin around for a final 360-degree view of the cubicle farm horizon before waltzing down to the parking garage and saying “sayonara” to your 9-to-5 working days (after turning in your security badge and boxing up your terrarium of mixed succulents, of course).

Ahhhh, retirement. Aaaaargh! Retirement! It may be time, and you may be financially ready. But there’s a key part of the retirement readiness equation that isn’t captured by asset allocation models and withdrawal-rate simulations: Are you emotionally prepared for retirement? “You mean, no more being woken by a shrieking alarm clock?

Entire Article: Are You Emotionally Ready for Retirement?

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How and why to consolidate your retirement accounts — Next — Bangor Daily News — BDN Maine

Financial Planning, Retirement

Brewer, Maine--04/15/2014--Mary Wardwell, left, and Dottie Russell, both residents at the Ellen M. Leach Memorial Home, react to finding plastic Easter eggs on the second floor during the second annual Easter Egg Hunt at the retirement home in Brewer on Tuesday. 160 eggs were hidden around the three story building, 120 containing prize numbers to be redeemed next Monday. Kevin Bennett|BDN

Retirement is approaching. Do you have a comprehensive overview of your retirement funds and how you will manage them when you actually do retire? A surprising number of people do not know much about their retirement funds other than that they exist. Some don’t even realize how many sources of retirement funds they have.This is one of the main reasons why consolidating your retirement funds makes sense as you get closer to retirement age. They will be easier to manage and may save you money in the end thr

Entire Article: How and why to consolidate your retirement accounts — Next — Bangor Daily News — BDN Maine

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15 Ways to Retire Early | GOBankingRates

Lifestyle, Retirement

slide_213987_777918_freeThe word “retirement” and number “65” are as linked in the American psyche as “bacon and eggs.” Then again, that all depends on how fast you want your eggs, right?

Retiring early — or leaving the work force for the golf course, if you like — might sound like an unattainable goal. That’s especially true if you look at the challenge from a pure cash paradigm. But there are many ways to make it, so long as you take numerous approaches into account.

Source: 15 Ways to Retire Early | GOBankingRates

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How Remarriage Can Mess Up Your Social Security – Forbes

Retirement, Social Security

larry.lightSocial Security has a way of making your life decisions difficult. When divorce and remarriage enter the picture, things get very complicated.

The earliest age you can start claiming Social Security benefits is 62. You can also delay taking benefits to any age. If you wait until your full retirement age, which is 66 for the current crop of baby boomers, you receive a larger benefit. If you can get by without the monthly benefits for a few years longer, delaying further to 70 results in a maximized benefit for you.

Source: How Remarriage Can Mess Up Your Social Security – Forbes

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Why Retiring Early May Be More Affordable Than You Think | Money.com

Lifestyle, Retirement

For some, this question is as tantalizing as it can be vexing. After many years of saving and planning for a secure, fulfilling, and comfortable retirement, it’s natural to wonder, “How much is enough?” From my experience helping people answer this question over 25 years as an adviser, researcher, and writer, the answer is quite often, “Less than you may think.” Obviously, it depends on many factors. But a key takeaway is that what you believe and how you think about the financial resources already available to you is likely what matters most of all.

Source: Why Retiring Early May Be More Affordable Than You Think | Money.com

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How to Retire Early

Authored by Jeff, Behavioral Finance, Lifestyle, Retirement

smalljeffinacircleWhen I work with people about their finances, it usually ends up not being about JUST finances. There’s so much emotion wrapped up in how we view money that we end up working on an assortment of financial, emotional and behavioral issues.

Together with our clients, we are on a quest to find a combination of working / saving / spending attitudes that allow folks to not only work toward being able to retire before they need to, but also (and this is a biggie) to be able to live a happy, healthy and fulfilling life along the way.

We encourage everyone to consider building a strategy that will allow them to retire early. Although many clients are perfectly happy in their professions, (some even wishing to work well into their 70s) we still encourage building an early retirement strategy for two main reasons:

One, having built a plan to reduce or eliminate your financial dependence on your paycheck can actually increase enjoyment. I like to call it the “Johnny Paycheck Effect”. For many, being able to tell the world (or your boss), “You Can Take This Job and Shove It” can actually make it easier to enjoy your career. It can cleanse your emotional palate, lessen the chance for burnout and allow you to view your daily routine as more pure. Helping others, volunteering, achieving objectives, building something of lasting value etc. are all pursuits typically more fulfilling than the purely selfish pursuit of a paycheck. Thank you Johnny Paycheck.

The second major reason is the unpredictability of life itself. It’s possible that despite your best-laid plans, life just won’t allow you to execute them as you’d desired. A health crisis or injury to either you or a spouse can wreak havoc on even the most thoroughly planned strategy. By having an “early retirement” plan in place, you can use it as an escape hatch to a life that you could not have imagined years earlier. Maybe you won’t ever need it, but having the plan in place can make your life between now and then significantly happier and less stressful.

Everyone will need to design an early retirement plan that suits their particular situation. Both now and in an anticipated future. It’s not always about building a specific nest egg amount to insure a happy early retirement. Many early retirement plans we’ve constructed with clients involve some low-impact consulting income for a couple of years after full retirement, or a part time job in a completely unrelated field to help with the transition, or even a complete lifestyle transition to make it possible. Most importantly, it helps to think out of the box by reminding yourself that it’s not always about the money.

According to newly released data from Allianz Life’s 2014 LoveFamilyMoney study, there are six major traits that people who’ve fully developed and implemented early retirement plans have in common… and some of these traits may surprise you. Happily for most clients, coming from a life of privilege is not among them.

Have a happy marriage. Early retirees tended to describe themselves as in sync with their spouse. Some 76 percent of these people were married, compared to 68 percent of the people who never planned to retire, and they were also more likely to be in their first marriage. And 90 percent of early retirees found it at least somewhat easy to talk about money with a spouse or significant other, well above the 77 percent of people planning to never retire.

Appreciate what you have. People planning to retire early were significantly more likely to describe themselves as wealthy or financially comfortable, but that can depend on your perspective too. I’ve worked with a number of clients who struggle with drawing the distinction between being appreciative for what they have and complacency. They can be under the assumption that being appreciative of their present situation is akin to giving up or ceasing to strive for further success. Nothing could be further from the truth.

Follow your parents’ example. The would-be early retirers in the Allianz Life survey were more likely to compare their financial situation to their parents’, with 21 percent of them doing so, compared to 14 percent of those not planning to retire. They also tended to emulate their parents’ money behaviors. Of course, for this one to have a positive effect, you need parents who were or are fiscally responsible.

Teach your kids about money. Only 14 percent of people planning to retire early taught their children about money and finances, but that was well above the 6 percent of people not planning to retire who did so. Boomerang kids and supporting adult children can decimate your retirement nest egg. Better to prepare the kiddos from an early age to be self sufficient.

Save the drama for your mama. Having a fairly calm financial life also seems to encourage people to plan early retirement. Some 46 percent of those people said they had not experienced financial hardship as an adult, versus just 31 percent of those planning to stay in the workforce.

Plan for the worst, hope for the best. On the downside, early retirees were more likely than other workers to worry about dying young. Only 47 percent of them worried about running out of money in retirement, but 53 percent worried that they would not live long after they retired. But don’t sweat it, the good news is that leaving the workforce won’t hasten the process.

With some out of the box thinking to help build an agile financial plan, while adopting as many of the above traits as possible, you should be well on your way to an early retirement.

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Are You Ready to Retire? That Depends – NBC News.com

Lifestyle, Retirement

If you have socked away money in a 401(k) and your 60th birthday is behind you, chances are you are thinking about when to retire.

Chances are, too, that you are planning to retire sooner rather than later. The average retirement age seems to have stabilized at 62 for women and 64 for men, according to new research from Boston College’s Center for Retirement Research. But retiring too young can be very harmful to your financial health, the study found, and older workers would do well to hang in a bit longer.

Continuing to work reduces the amount of time when people need to live on their savings. It can also lead to more guaranteed retirement income. “An individual who delays claiming Social Security from age 62 to age 70 receives a monthly benefit that is 76 percent higher,” said Alicia Munnell, director of the center.

The retirement age is stabilizing largely because the forces pushing it higher have been played out. Consider the shift in retirement plans, for example. In 1979, 74 percent of workers participating in retirement plans had a defined benefit pension that would provide a fixed income stream, according to Labor Department data.

As more workers became responsible for generating their own retirement income through 401(k) accounts and the like, older workers started putting off retirement. The center found that workforce participation rates for men and women age 55 to 64 started gradually increasing in the mid-1980s.

“Studies show that workers covered by 401(k) plans retire a year or two later on average than similarly situated workers covered by a defined benefit plan,” the study found.

Read more…

Are You Ready to Retire? That Depends – NBC News.com.

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Death By Golf: Why Retirement Is a Bankrupt Industrial Age Idea | Inc.com

Lifestyle, Retirement

death plays golfDeath By Golf: Why Retirement Is a Bankrupt Industrial Age Idea | Inc.com.

Retirement was invented by Otto von Bismarck in 1889 to get old people off the machines and out of the way. But exhaustive research now shows it’s not what it’s cracked up to be.

BY CHUCK BLAKEMAN

Founder, Crankset Group@ChuckBlakeman

A 90-year study of 1,528 Americans called The Longevity Project shoots holes in the retirement dream. Turns out goofing off for the last thirty years of our lives is a really bad idea. The idea that work is leading you to an early grave is a myth. This massive study proved what some of us have been saying for years now.

Know where you’re going.

People with the most focused long-term paths in the study were the least likely to die young. Looking at the participants in the study who were in their 70s, those that had not retired were looking at much longer lives than their golfing counterparts: “The continually productive men and women lived much longer than their laid-back comrades.”

Also, those who moved from job to job without a clear progression were less likely to have long lives than those who went deep and long in a focused direction with their business lives. We call this commitment to the long term, “conation”.

Conate, You’ll Live Longer.

Conation is the most important business word you’ve never heard, but is central to a long life. We define conation as, “Committed Movement in a Purposeful Direction.”

“It wasn’t the happiest or the most relaxed older participants who lived the longest,” the authors write, “It was those who were most engaged in pursuing their goals.”

Knowing where you’re going, and being committed and focused to get there (conation), is going to make you live longer.

Conation–Committed Movement in a Purposeful Direction.

Live With Purpose, Not Just to Play.

This study doesn’t mean you need to go to work for 90 years. It means you need to rethink going out to pasture at 65 to play golf. Amusement isn’t the goal. Think of the Latin roots of that word–“a” means “without”, and “muse” means “to think”.

Amusement–something you do without your brain.

Make Meaning

A commitment to a life of retirement leisure is a great way to die sooner. You don’t have to go to work; you just need to figure out how to continue to Make Meaning, even if you’re done making money.

Retirement is a bankrupt Industrial Age idea. Live a life of significance your whole life, not just the first two thirds of it.

Conate. You’ll live longer.

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