• 401k plan
  • living inretirement
  • retirement wealth
  • retirement planning

Social Security Spouse Benefits: How it Work?

It is common when most people talking about Social Security, they are also thinking about retirement benefits (retirement planning benefit and retirement transition benefit). But about one-fifth of all the benefits of social security benefits are the surviving spouse. So, if you plan for retirement, it is important to plan for you or your spouse to social security spouse benefits at some point in their lives. Is it possible for a non working spouse who does not receive retirement income from Social Security, to collect as the income of her husband for? (more…)

10.06.2011

Early Retirement Options Plan & Social Security Benefits

In just a few years, the first of an estimated 77 million Baby Boomers will become eligible for benefits and will have to make that decision. A full 32 percent of the workforce has no retirement savings set aside and 80 percent have no private pension. About two thirds of retirees receive 50 percent of their income from Social Security. Today about 20 percent of Social Security recipients rely on their checks as their sole source of income. Taking the Social Security check early at age 62 versus age 65 currently costs recipients 24 percent of their monthly social security benefits and that penalty is going up to 30 percent. Unexpected taxes and additional penalties can literally take away the rest. (more…)

5.05.2011

Estate Planning in Retirement - Considerations and Strategies for Seniors

Sense of financial security in retirement will elude anyone who worries about what will happen to them when someone else dies. Whether the risk is loss of investment expertise, the absolute loss of income (e.g., because a pension benefit has no survivor benefit), the loss of assets to probate and estate taxes, or other circumstance of financial loss, providing for survivors is an element of financial security in retirement. (more…)

26.03.2011

Cash Balance Pension Plans & Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA)

Employer-sponsored defined benefit pension plans in which the benefit is defined by account value rather than monthly lifetime retirement income. Cash balance plans are often referred to as “hybrids” because they have some of the characteristics of traditional “defined benefit” (DB) pension plans and some of the characteristics of “defined contribution” (DC) plans, such as 401(k). In general, traditional defined benefit plans promise qualified employees an income benefit for life (or some other period) starting at “normal retirement age,” without regard to how much (or little) the employer must contribute to the plan to fund the benefit. Defined contribution plans, on the other hand, promise only how much the employer will contribute to a qualified employee’s account from time to time until the employee retires but they make no promises with regard to investment earnings or results, let alone a monthly income benefit for life. (more…)

10.03.2011

Cash Flow Planning for Retirees: How to Manage Cash Flow & Assets During Retirement

Cash flow planning is the process by which the flow of income necessary to sustain a given standard of living in retirement is identified and financed. It is perhaps the most critical part of retirement planning. Cash flow planning for retirees depends crucially on two factors: (1) the resource constraints a retiree faces in terms of assets and other retirement income sources and (2) the desires and needs a retiree has for spending in retirement. Both of these, in turn, depend to a great degree on when the planning is done. (more…)

8.03.2011

How Should You Allocate your TIAA-CREF Contributions?

This question arises with the greatest frequency, and it ranks, as one would expect, as one of the most difficult to answer. We can only suggest general guidelines because your investment risk tolerance may differ from the next person’s. Also, investment choices should reflect one’s overall economic situation, and advertisements for online brokerage houses notwithstanding, not every form or method of investment suits every situation. In an age when most of us are at least aware of general movements in the market, if not actually participating in some way, most of us wish for a formula to provide the optimal investment mix for our particular situation. (more…)

7.01.2011

Asset Allocation and Building Diversified Portfolio for Retirement

Now that you have quantified your retirement objectives, identified the asset classes you should choose, and considered how this retirement account will work with existing assets, you can move to select the specific product(s) for your portfolio retirement.

If you are an experienced investor with the time, temperament, training, and money to select individual stocks and bonds, you can certainly include them in your portfolio. (more…)

25.10.2010

Identifying Your Financial Retirement Profile

financial retirement profile
The “ideal product,” then, may be a diversified asset allocation program. By selecting a proportion of assets from each category, you can tailor an overall portfolio retirement to suit your risk tolerance, time frame, and goals. Although there is no guarantee of performance, selecting asset classes based on your personal retirement profile may help insulate you from the worst effects of inflation, market, and interest rate risks, while positioning you for potential account growth. (more…)

4.01.2010

Risk of Inadequate Savings & Retiring Earlier Than Planned

risk savings retire earlier
It is hard fact that the best-designed 401k plan in the most prosperous investment condition can’t have an enough income for retirement, if the person is not contributing a significant amount to the plan regularly. This problem can be as result as no continuous access to 401k plan, financial instability to contribute due to low salary, other financial priority in life, family and life needs, (more…)

9.12.2009

Continuing Care Retirement Communities – Benefit for the Retirees

Continuing Care Retirement Communities
Not every Florida condominium complex built around a golf course is secretly a continuing care retirement community, but some may be. This type of community may offer options that range from completely independent living in retirement, all the way to round-the-clock nursing home care, with a variety of possibilities in between. Sometimes this housing arrangement is called a life care community. To join, residents must buy their unit and also pay a monthly fee. The community may provide transportation to the grocery store, the mall, or the concert hall, amenities that (more…)

9.11.2009
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