Posts Tagged ‘Retirement Planner’

 

Retirement Calculators

Monday, September 21st, 2009
Rex Truman asked:


A retirement calculator is one of the most useful things you can use when planning your retirement savings. You see most people plan for retirement without any idea of how much they need to save, or how much they want in retirement. A retirement calculator provides the answers.

A retirement calculator shows you how much to need to save to get the income you need when you retire. Or it may be how much you want! That depends how much you are making, and how young you are. Either way do use a retirement calculator.

You can find a retirement calculator on many web sites, so you do not need to get the services or a retirement planner or investment advisor to find the answers. In this way, you use the retirement calculator, calculate the amounts you need, and then visit an investment advisor or retirement planner.

To decide how much you need to save, you need:

1. The income you need to live on at today’s prices

2. The rate of inflation per annum between now and the retirement date.

3. The rate at which your fund will grow.

Let’s go through these and how they relate to a retirement calculator. First, how much do you need to live on? Remember, that retired people do not normally spend as much as people who work. When you retire, you won’t need:

special clothes for work the sort of car that keeps you up with the Joneses

you will be able to take holidays at off-peak times

and you will have time to do things – instead of paying to get them done.

So your costs will be lower. So let’s say you are earning $60,000 a year now, you might think that $50,000 would be enough. Next you need to remember that if you are healthy, you expect to live for 15-20 years, and so need to allow for inflation in that period – so actually you need more! This is where a good retirement calculator comes in.

2. The next thing the retirement calculator needs is the rate of inflation, or what you expect it to average until you retire. With the price of oil going up, we know that inflation over the next decade will be higher than it is now. Official figures put inflation at around 2-3%, but the true figure is more like 5%.

This means that you need to allow for at least 5%, and probably 7% and feed that into the retirement calculator.

4. At what rate will your retirement plan grow? A difficult one this. Five years ago, people were talking in terms of 10%, but not now experts suggest a lower figure. The problem is that a retirement fund or retirement plan has to be prudent – you don’t want to wake up one morning, a year or before you retire, to find that a crash on Wall Street has cut the value of your fund by 30%. You just won’t have the time to get that money back.

So you will be doing well to get 10% return, but could almost guarantee 5-6%. Maybe 7-8% would be a realistic figure to put into the retirement calculator.

The retirement calculator is just some software set up to make a calculation after you enter some figures. As I said earlier, the retirement calculator needs:

Required income

Inflation

Expected return

And of course, how long till you retire.

Here are some results from a retirement calculator:

Required income: $30,000 per annum

Years till retirement: 15 years

Annual inflation: 2.5% (unrealistic)

Annual yield: 5%

Income needed in 15 years: $43,448

Required value of retirement plan in 15 years: $825,000

Quite a lot of money for a modest retirement income. Here’s another one:

Required income: $30,000 per annum

Years till retirement: 20 years

Annual inflation: 5%

Annual yield: 8%

Required value of retirement plan in 20 years: $987,573

If you want an income of $45,000 when you retire – equivalent to less than $30,000 today – you will need: $148,000.

When you use a retirement calculator, make sure you use one that does calculate the income you will get at retirement adjusted for inflation – over 20 years, you will need 50% more than think you need today. If you do this, then you will benefit form using a retirement calculator.



Eric

 

Finance Help: Reassessing Your Retirement Game Plan

Friday, July 10th, 2009
Sam Williams asked:


The final quarter of the 20th century (especially the second part of this period) has seen the US economy being hit by one of worst phases of recession since the period of Great Depression (in the 1930s). Stock markets have crashed during this period, with an implosion of housing values and rates of returns from bonds being drastically lowered. All these have adversely affected the retirement plans of individuals (those who are planning for retirement and those who have already retired). Hiring a competent financial planner who is also an expert retirement advisor is, hence, of utmost importance to keep the retirement plans stable. A financial advisor can help his/her clients assess the effect of the economic downturn on retirement plans, and take steps accordingly.

A retirement planner generally recommends conservative measures to help clients survive the hostile impact of recession on retirement plans. Generally, individuals have pre-determined retirement plans that they plan to follow. However, once a depression sets in the economy, they need to re-evaluate their retirement plans, and modify them according to the market conditions. Finding a financial planner comes in handy during this period, for expert assessment and advice on retirement planning. With numerous financial planners offering their services, individuals need to wonder about how to find a financial planner either.

Recessionary market conditions have several adverse effects on retirement planning. Some of such effects, as would be pointed out by any expert retirement advisor, are:

a) Returns on stocks and bonds: The rates of return as well as the yields from them go down by significant amounts during a recession. During these periods, investment in high-risk financial instruments, hence, should be avoided. In order to keep plans for retirement stable, the contributions to retirement funds should be increased during a phase of depression,

b) Timing one’s retirement: Faced with recessionary conditions, individuals may tend to push back their dates of retirement. This may not be a sensible decision, particularly if the recession lasts for a lengthy time-period. Instead, transferring funds and assets to fixed, secure investments, selling off housing property makes more financial sense. Retirement dates should not be pushed back either,

c) Reduction in spending levels: Faced with acute recessionary forces, the US Federal Reserve has been forced to significantly cut down on the key interest rates. This has resulted in an upward spiral in prices of almost all products, denting any pre-determined retirement budgets one might have had. In such a situation, the only prudent option seems to be a significant reduction in consumption and spending levels. This would help to keep the retirement budgets more or less intact. Inflationary conditions, which are on the rise during these periods, can also be tackled in an effective manner in this way.

Retirement plans are, broadly speaking, significantly affected by a recession in the market. However, it is possible to minimize, if not totally eliminate, the impacts of depression on one’s retirement plan. For this, one needs to hire a top retirement planner, and follow the above-mentioned tips. A retirement advisor can surely help his/her client maintain a well-designed a prudent retirement budget.



Jacqueline
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