Posts Tagged Retirement Income

The Retirement Process

By Linda Stern

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Many workers and financial companies talk about retirement as if it’s a day on which everything changes. The day you retire is the day you need X amount in the bank, an annuity, a Social Security check and an old person’s portfolio, they suggest. It’s the day you’re done: with work, with commuting, with consuming and more.

But that’s far from the truth. For most people, retirement isn’t a day, it’s a process. You may lose a job and spent time seeking a second one before realizing you just got retired, involuntarily. Or you may leave a 9-to-5 government job and keep tinkering with an eBay business or other hobby. You may stop working one day, but wait several years before collecting Social Security benefits.
abcnews.go.com

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Early bird gets fat retirement worm

Starting at age 35, or even 25, is key to success

By Garry Marr, Financial Post

If we can’t convince a 35-year-old to save for retirement, why would someone 10 years younger contemplate it?

It’s not that we don’t see the need to plan. A recent Bank of Montreal survey of 35-to-44-year-olds found 90% of respondents believe there is a need to plan before the age of 35. The problem is only 40% of people in that age group had done any planning.

“You’ve got to start early and you have to start by 35,” says Tina Di Vito, head of BMO Retirement Institute, about the general response from Canadians. “You ask if they are doing it and the answer was very different.”

Forget 35, there is a very strong argument to beginning your retirement planning a decade earlier, she says. If you put away $100 a week in a RRSP at 25, it would grow to $663,724 by age 65, based on a compounding rate of return of 5%. But if you wait until you are 45, even saving $200 a week will only grow your investment to $357,131 by age 65 at the 5% rate. That same 25-year-old could stop making contributions at 45 and his or her investment would still grow to $473,787 by 65.
montrealgazette.com

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To retire comfortably, under-40 workers need to seriously bulk up savings

By Jonathan Kern
Special to The Washington Post

If your junior-high soundtrack was more Bangles or Britney than Beatles, I am going to try to scare some sense into you with three words about life in retirement, based on personal experience: The paychecks stop.

I retired last year after 30 years as a broadcast journalist. Unlike most baby boomers who have retired, I do not receive a pension. This surprises and appalls my fellow early retirees, who are either enjoying income from a spouse who’s still working or receiving checks from old employers.

If you’re, say, under 40 — and especially if you’re under 30 — you probably have worked only at firms or agencies that offered 401(k)s or their nonprofit cousin, the 403(b). That means that when you finally do retire 25 or 35 years from now, you will be responsible for providing for your own income. No pension for you!
washingtonpost.com

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Retirement may mean a lifestyle downgrade

As a nation, we are far from retirement-ready, so prepare to live frugally or save more

By Robert Powell, MarketWatch

BOSTON (MarketWatch) — If you’re a baby boomer, the odds are high you’ll exhaust your retirement savings after 10 or 20 years of retirement, according to the latest Retirement Readiness Rating report released this week by the Employee Benefit Research Institute.

Nearly half of younger boomers — those now aged 56 to 62 — and some 44% of older boomers — aged 46 to 55 now — are at risk of not having sufficient income to pay for basic retirement expenses and uninsured medical expenses, according to the study.

The study, which assumed that boomers would retire at age 65, also found that lower-income retirees are most likely to run out of money after 10 and certainly 20 years of retirement, while higher-income retirees are least likely to run out of money.
marketwatch.com

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Report sounds alarm bell over Americans’ retirement plan

Close to half of Americans between the ages of 36 and 62 are at risk of not having enough money set aside in a retirement plan, according to a new report.

By Mark Trumbull

Millions of Americans are nearing retirement age without enough savings to get by – but for many there’s still time to get back on track.

That’s the conclusion of a study released Tuesday, which looked at the financial outlook for Americans age 36 to 62.

The report finds that nearly half of “early baby boomers,” currently age 56 to 62 are at risk of not having sufficient income to pay for basic retirement expenditures and uninsured medical expenses. The “late baby boom” generation is not much better off, with 44 percent at risk. And 45 percent of Generation X (age 36 to 45) are in a similar position.
csmonitor.com

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My Credit Cards Ate My Retirement!


The recent recession was tough for all of us. But for those struggling with credit card debt, the economic meltdown was especially painful. Dealing with debt and an unpredictable job market pushed many people into a financial crisis.

Geoff Williams, a freelance writer and blogger for AOL’s WalletPop, is one of those people. He’s the co-author of Living Well with Bad Credit, and in his book, he writes candidly about his financial struggles and how it eventually led to bankruptcy.

You’ve Got Debt

Williams says that the debt he accumulated in his twenties motivated him to make more money. “Unfortunately, as I made more money, I also took on more debt,” he says.
foxbusiness.com

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Retirement age ‘should be scrapped’ says an Age UK survey

Most people want to chose when to stop work

Most people want employers to lose the right to tell people when to retire, according to a survey by the charity, Age UK.

It says the government should scrap forced retirement immediately, currently set at 65 years for both men and women.

The survey showed more than two thirds thought the principle of forced retirement was wrong.

Age UK is asking the government to make clear its plans for the retirement age.

Under the current system, employers can tell any member of staff to leave work once they pass their 65th birthday, whether the individual wants to stop work or not.
bbc.co.uk

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Pensioners hit as annuity rates tumble to 20-year low


Private sector workers approaching retirement are being hit by the worst pension annuity rates in history, experts have warned.

The rates, the key factor in how much most people receive in retirement, have fallen to a 20-year low.

Someone who has saved a £100,000 pension pot through their working life would now receive an annual pension of £6,350 – down from £6,760 at the start of the year, and 16 per cent less than two years ago.

In the 1990s they could have expected £15,000 a year from the same pot.

Many will already have been hit by poor returns on their savings after the Bank of England cut interest rates to the lowest in its 300-year history. They also face a possibly crippling increase in capital gains tax, hitting stock market and property investments.

“Anyone approaching retirement now will watch these annuity rates with mounting alarm and despair,” said Tom McPhail of Hargreaves Lansdown, a financial adviser.
telegraph.co.uk

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Canada’s boomers largely lack retirement plans

Fewer than half surveyed have retirement income strategy

TORONTO, (Reuters) – Canada’s baby boomers are generally ill prepared to pay for retirement living, with few having considered the possibility that they could outlive their savings, a study by Bank of Montreal (BMO.TO) said on Wednesday.

The baby boom generation started turning 65 this year and within 20 years, all the boomers will be eligible for retirement.

A poll of 1,542 Canadians, conducted by Leger Marketing on behalf of BMO Retirement Institute, found that just under half of those aged 55 or older were planning to, or already had, discussed post-retirement income strategies with a financial adviser.
reuters.com

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