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Archive for the ‘Retirement’ Category

If You Are Retiring Don’t Rely On Living On Less

February 19th, 2012

Advance Loan BlogCost of living does not automatically drop the day you retire
We all assume we will need to spend less in retirement. But is this true? You have probably heard of the "income replacement ratio" – the amount of money you will receive after retirement compared with your pre-retirement salary. Most retirement plans will feature an income replacement ratio some way below 100%, partly because those planning for retirement and their financial advisers assume that monthly expenses will be lower.
 
Inflation
For those of us considering a clean-break retirement in our 60s, the prospect of inflation and rising living costs is scary. A research actuary at Alexander Forbes and university lecturer recently carried out research as part of her Master of Science degree, in which the income and expenditure profiles of around 3000 households were analyzed. According to findings, consumption did not decrease voluntarily at the point of retirement, and in fact some households reflected higher consumption, mostly due to increased spending on healthcare. Only households whose income was restricted actually made spending cuts. "If not limited by their lower incomes, these households would spend at similar levels to what they did while working."
 
Equivalent level
The research shows that if you’d like to maintain an equivalent level of household expenditure post-retirement, you may need to put away a greater lump sum than you expected to, particularly if you are single. She said most retirement funds used income replacement ratio targets of 70% to 79%, but research showed that even a replacement level of 79% was inadequate for at least 82% of single females and 88% of single males.
 
Couples
The picture for couples was less bleak, "particularly if the younger partner continued working after the older partner retired. That said, only about half of couples would find a target of 79% enough to avoid a consumption drop at retirement." What do the findings tell us? They leave you with four options:
  • delaying retirement and working part time or full time;
  • increasing your retirement savings rate;
  • increasing the return on your investments while still carrying an acceptable degree of risk;
  • having the younger partner in a couple continue to work when the older partner reaches retirement age.
 
Advice
Try to put away 10% to 15% of your total income as retirement savings, avoid dipping into savings before retirement, swallow the disagreeable pill of working until at least 67 and avoid the temptation of cashing in retirement savings when changing jobs.
 
The basic rule
The longer you work, the more you put away while you are still earning. According to Alexander Forbes, to retire at 60 the average household needs to have accumulated 14 to 18 times its annual income. But this reduces to 12 to 17 times with a retirement age of 65, and down to 10 to 15 times for retirement at 70. Their research also indicates that single women need to accumulate more than men, given that they can be expected to live longer.

 

How would you like to be money-free?

February 14th, 2012

Advance Loan BlogMeaning you don’t have to earn any longer
It’s an age-old dream: to be independent of money. Not to have to worry about working. Not to have to worry whether you will earn enough to get you through the month. Not worrying about being fired. Well, my old friend Sid has done it. He is “money-free” as he put it. He sold his large apartment and bought a much smaller one in a retirement home. “I’m getting a lot of change out of the deal. I will invest it and the income will be enough for us,” he said.
 
Sudden decision
Sid made a sudden decision to take this giant step. I asked him many questions about it and in the end it all came down to money. Of course the fact that he is 79 also influenced him. “Apartment prices in our particular area were moving up at very quickly and I decided to sell our apartment before the bubble burst. I called an agent, got an estimate of what we could expect and then did a tour of the retirement homes in the area. It didn’t take long to understand that I would get quite a chunk of change if I bought an apartment not in a 10-star home but in a 5-star, I would not have to rely on other income, so I went for it.”
 
The money
“I then went to my bank and sat with the investment manager, much to the chagrin of the other customers who were waiting in line to see him. I spelled out my needs and he slowly and carefully built an investment plan for me which will produce the amount that I need each month. These retirement homes are not cheap you know. There is a monthly maintenance fee which has to be paid. It covers most, but not all of one’s monthly living costs such as utilities and various other costs. A resident still has to provide himself with food and run his car.”
 
Investing
I asked him where he was investing his money so that it would be perfectly safe. “The bank counselor suggested bonds and debentures in blue-chip companies and perhaps even some in government bonds. The interest rates are low but the money is supposedly completely safe, well, as safe as anything can be in this world going crazy. The money is split among many different entities and it’s unlikely that all of them will go bust at the same time. In the worst scenario I will use money from my capital to pay the monthly maintenance fees and my heirs will get a little less.”   
 
Up to now
I asked Sid how he has managed with money up to now. “I get the old age pension. Then I have a small monthly stipend from a pension fund. I am still attached to my old accounting firm and they call on me from time to time to help out, which I can do from home. If it all continues that way I’ll be fine!” Good luck, Sid!

 

Can I Raid My Own Retirement Fund To Raise Cash For An Emergency?

January 31st, 2012

Advance Loan BlogI’m more than short and my car just died
I need money desperately. My small engineering practice, meaning me, has been having a hard time finding work. Then I was offered a construction supervision job in the next town. It means I have to be on the site about 3 times a week. The money is good and the sixty mile drive is easy. All went well for the first month or so. I watched the excavations get under way and the foundations went smoothly.
 
Breakdown
It was early on a Monday morning g when the car died on the freeway. I managed to get it off the road and called a tow service. In the workshop the mechanic finally stood up and said “Go and buy yourself a new car, this one is finished.” After all these months with little or no income I finally found work and now the car is dead? I couldn’t believe it. What will I use for money? I remembered an ad I had seen in a paper a week ago. “Money from your retirement fund”? At home I prayed that I hadn’t thrown that paper away. It was lying in the recycle bin waiting to be collected.
 
The article
I read ether article quickly: When in dire financial straights it is possible to turn to one’s retirement accounts as a source of emergency cash. The Financial Security Index, an annual survey by Bankrate.com, found that people in the survey who are employed full time reported dipping into their retirement account at some point in 2010. Early withdrawals indicate that the people who withdrew the money did not have much money put away in case of emergency.
 
Retirement
According to CNN, retirement is becoming a dream that not many people believe they will be able to realize. A survey by the American Institute of CPA’s revealed that nearly 40 percent of working people surveyed believed they would not be able to afford to retire. Almost 56 percent said that they couldn’t afford retirement savings because food and gas costs were too high, and 55 percent had no idea how much would be necessary to save to retire. As a result of less confidence in the ability to retire, the younger set in the workforce are more apt to stay with an employer who offers a top shelf pension plan, according to Daily Finance. A Towers Watson survey revealed that 43 percent of respondents believed it was a great reason to stay at a job, up from 28 percent in 2009.
 
Retirement fund
My retirement fund is looking very healthy. I have been contributing for years and no matter what, I always managed to pay the premiums. Suddenly I’m faced with no money and I read in the papers that retirement is becoming a dream anyway. I need money now so I can keep working to the point where I can make my own decision about retirement. What I need is a car so I can make money. I’m off to the bank to visit my retirement fund.

 

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