Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Avoid These Retirement Nest Egg 'Bandits'


After you have spent your whole life to date skimping and saving to accumulate enough funds with which to retire on, the last thing you want is to have them 'taken' from you, right? Unfortunately, there are many subtle and legal 'Bandits' that can rob you of your comfortable retirement.

All of these are perfect legal and most people give in to them willingly without thinking of the negative effect that they have on their nest egg. They have become routine expenses and are thought of as being minimal, but when you add them all together, their aggregate cost can be incredible!

Here are a few of the most obvious nest Egg 'Bandits'

Credit Card Interest

When you are on fixed income, you obviously need to also 'fix' your expenses so that you don't get into a negative situation. Whenever you use a credit card to purchase something that you don't have the cash for, you unconsciously agree to pay interest on that item in order to have it now. Debit cards, on the other hand, can be used at the same merchants to purchase products and services with the funds immediately withdrawn for your account. With a debit card, you never have to pay interest charges. For retirees on fixed income, credit card interest is perhaps the most violent of 'bandits'!

Brokerage Charges and Fees

When you invest your nest egg in stocks, bonds, index funds and mutual funds, there is usually a 'load' or brokerage fee or other thinly masked cost associated with the investments. You can research any mutual fund, stock fund, or index fund and look for their 'Expense Ratio". This is a number, expressed as a percentage that will be collected each year, out of you invested funds, for the honor and privilege of owning that particular account.

For mutual funds, this fee is somewhat higher since you have to pay for the team of people who routinely manage the fund on a daily basis. Since index funds are invested in a whole market segment, there is no management or research team and there is little buying and selling going on. Therefore, Index funds normally have Expense Ratios (.02% - .80%) considerably less than managed Mutual funds (1.2% - 3.4%). These fees can be 2% to 3% or more of your money and that's a pretty heavy load for you to carry when you are trying to live off of your investments.

After deducting fund's expenses from your profits, very few stock mutual funds have outperformed the index or the markets over the years. The broker's argument is that, through their careful management of your money, you earn considerably more in their fund than can be had elsewhere. That, in itself, may be true, but you must deduct the funds expenses before comparing. The only thing that is very certain is that they will deduct their fee from your funds!

Index funds are perhaps the best way of minimizing the expenses related to your nest egg investment. There are all sorts of index funds, Large Cap, Small Cap, Real Estate Investment Trusts (REIT's), Bonds, Emerging Markets, International, etc are just a few of the index fund types that are available with a very small expense ratio.

Service Contracts

Whenever you purchase an appliance or a car or some other 'big ticket' item, it is increasingly popular for the dealer or vendor to offer you an extended warranty on the product -for a fee. These typically extend the manufacturer's warranty for an additional period and can cost from 2% to 8% of cost of the product. More than 90% of extended warranties are never utilized and this is a very high profit item for the vendor. They routinely pay their salespeople very high commissions for selling these 'add-on' contracts.

Extended Warranties and Service Contracts are normally insurance products and the insurance company will pay the repair or replacement cost of the product should there be a problem after warranty expiration. By refusing all such extended warranty offers, you will likely save considerably more money than you will ever have to pay for out of warranty repairs. Avoid this Nest Egg 'Bandit'!

If you think about it, there are several of these bandits to avoid. If you do so, you can enhance your Nest Egg considerably! It is not difficult to do.




Resources: Don Seibert is a retired business executive who, as an Expert Author, writes timely articles and books on many issues concerning accumulated knowledge

Whether from their career, family life, hobbies or passions, everybody has accumulated their own personal set of knowledge. Don teaches people how to inventory that knowledge and to transform it into a meaningful and rewarding business opportunity.

An avid entrepreneur, he now writes a blog concerning this topic. Visit the site for a complete discussion of Transforming your knowledge




Baby Boomers Looking to Nurture Their Retirement Nest Egg


The irony for Baby Boomers is that even though you will be living longer than your parents or your grandparents, most of you expect to delay retirement longer than your parents or grandparents. This is a follow on effect from the reduced nest egg that was going to keep your retirement income at a level to give you the lifestyle you had dreamed of. The current economic crisis has caused many Baby Boomers to have to plan to work past their retirement date or scale down their retirement expectations.

What once looked like a sufficient retirement nest egg for travelling the world and building their new easy care retirement homes, might not even maintain their existing or even a restricted lifestyle for the rest of their lives.

Baby boomers are better educated, with higher incomes and longer life expectancies than the generations that preceded them. They also have fewer children and may not be married, leaving them with fewer options if they need help in their old age. People have been retiring at increasingly younger ages since the growth of superannuation and Social Security pensions began more than fifty years ago. However, the retirement trend appears to be reversing. The majority of men and a greater percentage of women over fifty five are still in the work force and experts believe it will increase even more as the oldest Baby Boomers reach sixty five.

People are living longer and leading more active lives and that increased longevity has been one of the crowning achievements of the last century, but is has to be financed somehow. Some will continue working by choice and many of those nearing retirement age may gradually reduce their workload rather than abruptly stop. Others may have to stay on the job full time to replenish their diminished retirement nest egg.

Many of the Baby Boomers have put off retirement because of the effect of the financial crisis on their long-term savings and some of them think they can recoup the losses by working on in their job an additional year or two, but can they?

Are you looking at retirement with a larger amount of debt than you would like, including home equity lines of credit, partly paid off mortgages, credit card debt and personal loans. For the last few years, there has been extraordinary asset growth and low interest rates, and that combination allowed people to increase their net worth easily and significantly, and that in turn made their expectation of paying off debts to be a simple matter.

If you are among those planning their retirement but are concerned about your level of debt, whether it is still an amount owing on the mortgage or in other categories of debt, it is time to take some definite steps to make some mindset and lifestyle changes. Remind yourself from time to time, that paying a mortgage and trying to pay off debts at the same time, while living on a fixed income isn't a whole lot of fun. For a pampered Baby Boomer, this is one of the most difficult things to do

Most Baby Boomers are computer savvy because of their jobs; and will be looking at ways to build and or increase their retirement nest egg and income by doing research on the internet into the many opportunities available. There are opportunities that involve starting your own home internet business and then you are in control of the amount of time you need to spend to make the business a success. You are also in control of the level of success you wish to have in your new venture. Obviously the more drive and effort you put into any business the greater chance you will have for achieving success at a much higher level.

All it takes is having the right mindset and understanding that the rewards will be there for the long term by putting in the effort now.

You may need to work for a few years yet to reach the level of financial freedom that is your goal, so do your research to make sure you start a business that you will love and that will give a good balance of fulfilling work and time for yourself and family and friends.

Look for a business that will give you step by step guidance in the best ways to achieve your goal of a financially rewarding, successful business. Look for a business that will have an exit strategy to enable you to receive an income stream after you cease to become active in your enterprise. Most Baby Boomers have at least basic computer skills and it is worth investigating the diverse opportunities for an online home business that will "tick the boxes" in their criteria list.




Just think what your life will be like if you stay on the same track and do not explore some of the many options out there that could dramatically change your life. For more information, click below:
http://www.HolisticWealthHomeBiz.com.