Great retirement investment advice at the bottom of this article!

Dudes, relax. No one would pay me for this.

Ha
 
Man, all this agitation over a quick morning post I did before getting down to work. I thought the title was enough exposition, but admit to it being a lazy
post.

What I liked about it was the assumption of 5% return, 4 would have been better, but at least it wasn't 7 or 8, and the simple steps to assess your retirement stash and get it to generate income. Not sure I'd buy a 5 year annuity, and I might be a little less conservative, but I think the road map is pretty good. It's all old hat on this board, but it's nice to see it in a mass media article.
 
Must have been a slow day with no other controversy to beef about.

An easy (little effort) approach to show the general direction of the article is to take an interesting quote that sets the tone for the article and stick it in the post using the quote tool.

One thing I have noticed.... the media rehashes the same old generic background and advice over and over again. To me this article was a rough duplicate of a many other articles that have been written lately. I suppose it is probably news (or informative) to someone.
 
Dudes, relax. No one would pay me for this.

Ha

Given the apparently strong market for granny porn, fast food, and other more dubious consumer "goods," I bet you would have a string of paying customers with minimal advertising.
 
Ha, I started this but I am probably closer to your side of the argument than "my" side. I hate bare naked links (even though I often check them out as I did here) :) I don't think people should give a full report on the topic (I never do that) just a sentence or two that gives you something to decide whether it is likely an article you want to read. Maybe something as simple as: "...the article describes an interesting safe withdrawal approach."

Edit: now I notice Nun was actually caught by the 5% assumption. See - a whole nother discussion. I too wondered about the 5% but originally held back my snide "what was great about it" since I didn't want to be a dick. Instead I guessed Nun was interested in his bucket approach. Now I see Nun was using sarcasm in the title -- good one Nun.
 
An easy (little effort) approach to show the general direction of the article is to take an interesting quote that sets the tone for the article and stick it in the post using the quote tool.

One thing I have noticed.... the media rehashes the same old generic background and advice over and over again. To me this article was a rough duplicate of a many other articles that have been written lately. I suppose it is probably news (or informative) to someone.

Quote tool used ;)

the first 3/4 of the article is very familiar, but I haven't seen the step by step guide to income assessment and generation before. Maybe I should read more Kiplinger or Money articles......I actually avoid those publications I think they are part of the financial industry that takes advantage of many. So the simple approach to income generation from a 401k and the not terribly inflated returns assumed was refreshing.
 
Disregarding the comment/discussion on "naked links", I did find the article important to explain why a lot of early boomers enter their retirement years with a less than optimal plan...

And don't forget to read the fineprint,
 
Disregarding the comment/discussion on "naked links", I did find the article important to explain why a lot of early boomers enter their retirement years with a less than optimal plan.
...............

You'll be glad to hear that ER-Org is no longer charging extra for full size font.
 
:greetings10: Your post is appearing in about size 5 font. I needed glasses on top of my contacts to read it :)
Strange. It shows the same size fonts as other postings on my monitor. I always copy/paste to/from MS/Word to spell-check. Maybe something happened internally there, yet is showing up on my monitor as normal.

I'll delete and re-post. Please let me know if there is still a problem...
 
Disregarding the comment/discussion on "naked links", I did find the article important to explain why a lot of early boomers enter their retirement years with a less than optimal plan.

I'm 63. DW/me faced these exact conditions in our early 30's. I left a company after eight years and lost my pension since the federal rules said you had to be at a company ten years to be vested.

I didn't worry about that, since the company I was going to had a superior defined benefit (e.g. pension) plan and would more than make up for what I left behind.

DW was at another company that also had a DB plan. With both of us "promised" DB income (along with SS), we were following the same "retirement income path" of our parents/grandparents.

Only thing is that three years after I started with the new company, the DB plan was replaced by the "better" 401(k) plan. At the same time, the IRA came into being (for those that had a pension plan; before that time, you could only have an IRA if you were not covered by a pension).

So here we are, at age 34 with our DB plans eliminated, along with new, confusing options to pursue. Additionally, we now had to take a "pay cut" to participate in both the 401(k) and IRA (disregarding lower current taxes on deferred income).

It's quite a hurdle to jump, IMHO. Our parents/grandparents had better options; our children also do, since they know early on that retirement income is in their hands - along with having much more information available, early on.

The article does describe the reason so many early boomers are having problems. Life changed radically for them as related to retirement. The few that understood and accepted the "new reality" were able to learn (on their own) what they needed to do to make up time, with the new financial "tools" afforded them. They also understood that they could not live in the same manner as before (e.g. no reason to save for retirement) and accept a lower lifestyle (e.g. LBYM). That's hard to accept when you've been living the life that your parents had.

No wonder the majorities (IMHO) of those boomers currently are of traditional retirement age will continue to work. They have no option.

That, along with many of them taking care of their grandchildren (due to the challenges of their children with today's "social problems") just puts more of a financial strain on them...

(PS: The font is now too large but I'm not going to play around with this post any longer. Hopefully, you will not need your reading glasses :LOL: )...
 
Success Rescueme. Now it is too big :ROFLMAO:

Edit: just a little big. Now we know you are using MS Word to carefully craft your posts to avoid typos and stupid sounding phrasing like the rest of us.
 
Now we know you are using MS Word to carefully craft your posts to avoid typos and stupid sounding phrasing like the rest of us.
The important thing is that I can blame all my posts (and even my "theory's") on the software. I had nothing to do with it :LOL:...
 
(PS: The font is now too large but I'm not going to play around with this post any longer. Hopefully, you will not need your reading glasses :LOL: )...

Excellent Post! Thank you for re-submitting it.
 
Ha certainly does not need little old me to give a "+1" but I will. As poster, it's a good idea to provide context, thoughts or whatever. But I would not initially discount a post or think less of a poster just because of that - though I may not click on it if there is not enough info to catch my interest or make me feel safe. Sorry if we've moved on - I'm late reading this thread.

Also, don't the small fonts save room on the server?
 
Disregarding the comment/discussion on "naked links", I did find the article important to explain why a lot of early boomers enter their retirement years with a less than optimal plan.

I'm 63. DW/me faced these exact conditions in our early 30's. I left a company after eight years and lost my pension since the federal rules said you had to be at a company ten years to be vested.

I didn't worry about that, since the company I was going to had a superior defined benefit (e.g. pension) plan and would more than make up for what I left behind.

DW was at another company that also had a DB plan. With both of us "promised" DB income (along with SS), we were following the same "retirement income path" of our parents/grandparents.

Only thing is that three years after I started with the new company, the DB plan was replaced by the "better" 401(k) plan. At the same time, the IRA came into being (for those that had a pension plan; before that time, you could only have an IRA if you were not covered by a pension).

So here we are, at age 34 with our DB plans eliminated, along with new, confusing options to pursue. Additionally, we now had to take a "pay cut" to participate in both the 401(k) and IRA (disregarding lower current taxes on deferred income).

It's quite a hurdle to jump, IMHO. Our parents/grandparents had better options; our children also do, since they know early on that retirement income is in their hands - along with having much more information available, early on.

The article does describe the reason so many early boomers are having problems. Life changed radically for them as related to retirement. The few that understood and accepted the "new reality" were able to learn (on their own) what they needed to do to make up time, with the new financial "tools" afforded them. They also understood that they could not live in the same manner as before (e.g. no reason to save for retirement) and accept a lower lifestyle (e.g. LBYM). That's hard to accept when you've been living the life that your parents had.

No wonder the majorities (IMHO) of those boomers currently are of traditional retirement age will continue to work. They have no option.

That, along with many of them taking care of their grandchildren (due to the challenges of their children with today's "social problems") just puts more of a financial strain on them...

This is a good point, and one that I haven't really thought about before. Thanks for pointing it out. Although there's no way to know if the younger w*rkers will have any more stability in their "retirement" planning than we did. Just in the past 10 years there's been the additions of Roth 401(k)s, companies stopping (and sometimes restarting) matching, automatic enrollment, etc. Some of these seem like good ideas, but so did the 401(k) at the time.

If you get down to the basics, the ones who managed to handle the changes that came along are the ones who LBTMs and saved without paying too much attention to the various vehicles and distractions. That will be true in the upcoming years too. If you save well, you have a chance of beating the odds. If you don't, you probably won't.
 
(PS: The font is now too large but I'm not going to play around with this post any longer. Hopefully, you will not need your reading glasses :LOL: )...
When I saw your original post I was sure you were giving us the details on a variable annuity. I'm disappointed.:D
 
This is a good point, and one that I haven't really thought about before. Thanks for pointing it out. Although there's no way to know if the younger w*rkers will have any more stability in their "retirement" planning than we did. Just in the past 10 years there's been the additions of Roth 401(k)s, companies stopping (and sometimes restarting) matching, automatic enrollment, etc. Some of these seem like good ideas, but so did the 401(k) at the time.

If you get down to the basics, the ones who managed to handle the changes that came along are the ones who LBTMs and saved without paying too much attention to the various vehicles and distractions. That will be true in the upcoming years too. If you save well, you have a chance of beating the odds. If you don't, you probably won't.
Right. The article is accurate for a subset of boomers who got blindsided by the demise of the DB plan. But that was always a minority. Most were always on their own, and most didn't adequately save. I suspect all the attention to current boomer retirement woes will spur a larger percentage of younger workers to save but not the majority. Talk to workers in their 30s and 40s and you will hear the same old same old. They are not maxing their 401Ks, they are not saving beyond that, they have CC debt, they will work till they drop, etc. A lot of people need to be forced to save -- that is why SS is such a cornerstone of old age. It probably wouldn't take too much to tilt a lot of people toward savings - setting max 401K contributions as an employment default with cigarette box style warnings if you opt out might be enough for many. ;)
 
When I saw your original post I was sure you were giving us the details on a variable annuity. I'm disappointed.:D
I hate to disappoint you. While we do have an SPIA (and it works very well, for our specific need), I would only recommend an SPIA, and only if can be used in a specific situation (not all people need an annuity, IMHO).

As far as variable's? I would only strongly suggest the vehicle to those that I truly hate and will be assured that they would never talk to me again :LOL: .
 
Right. The article is accurate for a subset of boomers who got blindsided by the demise of the DB plan. But that was always a minority. Most were always on their own, and most didn't adequately save. I suspect all the attention to current boomer retirement woes will spur a larger percentage of younger workers to save but not the majority. Talk to workers in their 30s and 40s and you will hear the same old same old. They are not maxing their 401Ks, they are not saving beyond that, they have CC debt, they will work till they drop, etc. A lot of people need to be forced to save -- that is why SS is such a cornerstone of old age. It probably wouldn't take too much to tilt a lot of people toward savings - setting max 401K contributions as an employment default with cigarette box style warnings if you opt out might be enough for many. ;)

Rescueme and harley make good points in their previous posts. I think that this post gets to the heart of the matter which is how many laws and regulations do we want in place to force people to do what is good for them. I am against most laws that force people to behave in a way that doesn't prevent them from harming others so that would include this situation on its face. However, if a person doesn't save and cannot work they run the potential risk of becoming a burden to society. I don't have the answer. I do feel that having the insight to save in your 20s or even 30s for retirement is a rare trait (in general, not here) and the 401K is a generally good vehicle so I lean toward something of an opt out that is fairly difficult.

My thoughts on the naked link: Don't click on it if you don't want. It doesn't hurt you by being there. Chances are someone will click on it and provide a summary in a subsequent post anyway.
 
Rescueme and harley make good points in their previous posts. I think that this post gets to the heart of the matter which is how many laws and regulations do we want in place to force people to do what is good for them. I am against most laws that force people to behave in a way that doesn't prevent them from harming others so that would include this situation on its face. However, if a person doesn't save and cannot work they run the potential risk of becoming a burden to society. I don't have the answer. I do feel that having the insight to save in your 20s or even 30s for retirement is a rare trait (in general, not here) and the 401K is a generally good vehicle so I lean toward something of an opt out that is fairly difficult.

I don't think it has to be a law. I think employers can set it up that way without having to be forced. But I'm not sure how well it will work, anyway. Most people don't stay with one employer for very long, and therefore won't "set it and forget it". They'll change jobs, cash in the 401(k), and still end up short of money. The ones who save will save, the others won't. To quote the other Buffett, "There's no dumbass vaccine."
 
I don't think it has to be a law. I think employers can set it up that way without having to be forced. But I'm not sure how well it will work, anyway. Most people don't stay with one employer for very long, and therefore won't "set it and forget it". They'll change jobs, cash in the 401(k), and still end up short of money. The ones who save will save, the others won't. To quote the other Buffett, "There's no dumbass vacine."

I don't think many employers will voluntarily force contributions without an opt out in the absence of a legislative requirement, but I could be wrong.

You're absolutely right about changing jobs and cashing out. I've seen people that are highly intelligence in their fields make these types of moves.

There is a potential benefit for 'highly compensated employees' in that the more contributions that are made at the lower compensation the greater % contributions available for top hat employees.

Maybe the solution is to teach people that they need to save for themselves and hammer in the consequence is dog food for dinner. And if they don't, 'let them eat dog food.'
 
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