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The 3 Things You Need to Retireby Chuck Saletta - October 6, 2007 - 0 comments
The trend is clear. Nobody else will take care of your financial future. With the social safety net failing, and guaranteed pensions falling by the wayside, if you ever want to retire, you need to take matters into your own hands. So if you want your golden years to be comfortable, you'd better get started. Now. Your keys for success The first of those should be pretty obvious -- of course you'll need money to retire. Just because you plan to stop working doesn't mean you plan to stop spending. You'll still have to eat, and you may just want to travel the world, spoil your grandkids, or do any number of other wonderful things with your newfound freedom. And all those wonderful things require cash. So you'll need a target. Let's pick $1,000,000 as a starting point for a goal -- you can adjust it from there to match your own idea of a successful retirement and your own projections for inflation. Time's a wasting Time 8% Annual 9% Annual 10% Annual 11% Annual 10 $5,466.09 $5,167.58 $4,881.74 $4,608.33 15 $2,889.85 $2,642.67 $2,412.72 $2,199.30 20 $1,697.73 $1,497.26 $1,316.88 $1,155.22 25 $1,051.50 $891.96 $753.67 $634.46 30 $670.98 $546.23 $442.38 $356.57 35 $435.94 $339.93 $263.39 $202.91 40 $286.45 $213.61 $158.13 $116.28 45 $189.59 $135.05 $95.40 $66.90 50 $126.08 $85.70 $57.72 $38.57 As you can see, the earlier you get started, the easier and cheaper it is to reach your goal. Get there from here Company One-Year Gain (Loss) Countrywide Financial (NYSE: CFC) (44.7%) DR Horton (NYSE: DHI) (38.0%) Archer-Daniels-Midland (NYSE: ADM) (11.1%) FedEx (NYSE: FDX) (6.9%) H&R Block (NYSE: HRB) 4.6% Tiffany (NYSE: TIF) 57.6% Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) 108.8% On one end, the mortgage meltdown is hampering lenders like Countrywide and homebuilders like DR Horton. On the other end, the strong luxury goods market is helping move jewels from Tiffany's and iPhones from Apple. Mix them up with 493 other companies, and you get the performance of the index on average. The problem with investing only in stocks, though, is that sometimes, even a broad stock index can fall. To temper that risk, many investors further diversify their holdings into bonds as well as stocks. That risk reduction doesn't come free, though -- the price for calm is a lower overall expected return. Depending on the specifics of your holdings, it's quite easy to see your expected returns fall from the 10% to 11% range to the 8% to 9% range -- or even lower. Get started the right way As you've probably noticed, there are several questions you need to answer before you can build and execute a retirement plan that works for you. Yet you must answer them if you want any chance of both retiring well and of reaching retirement without excessively sacrificing your quality of life along the way. © 2007 Universal Press Syndicate. |
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