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Retirement Strategy

How Women Can Take Control Of Their Retirement – And Prevent Financial Destitution

Americans on the whole are underprepared for retirement. This is especially true for women over 50, with today’s article noting that “they fall way behind men when it comes to retirement preparedness.” While there are multiples reasons for this reality (including an acceleration in the divorce rate for this group), what can women do to prevent against the prospect of… 

Getting Your Tax Withholding In Retirement Just Right

When it comes to withholding taxes in retirement, the author of today’s article advises that you want to withhold just the right amount: over-withhold and you miss out on earned interest; under-withhold and you risk getting hit with a penalty tax by the IRS. However, despite the importance of getting your withholding as close as possible to your actual tax… 

Meet (And Beat?) “The Four Horsemen Of The Retirement Apocalypse”

“Basically, retirees, whether they and their advisors realize it or not, are staring four problems squarely in the face: historically high stock valuations, low bond yields, increased longevity, and increasingly expensive health care,” states the author of today’s article in regards to the four problems that one financial advisor is calling “the four horsemen of the retirement apocalypse.” He proceeds… 

Floor-and-Upside: A “Safety First” Retirement Strategy

The retirement financing strategy highlighted in today’s article is sometimes referred to as “safety first” – a notion that may be taking on even greater importance for retirement savers in light of recent market gyrations. The strategy in question is the “floor-and-upside” strategy, where “the basic idea…is that a retiree devotes some of her retirement funding assets to building a… 

Researchers Believe This Is The Best Retirement Income Strategy

What’s the best way to ensure that your retirement funds will last as long as you do? A research team at Stanford sought to answer that question, and after analyzing 292 retirement income strategies, has identified what it believes is the best strategy – one which “produces more average total retirement income expected throughout retirement compared to most solutions… and… 

Rebalancing: An Overlooked Retirement Income Strategy?

The author of today’s article argues that people make a critical mistake when it comes to retirement income planning: “limiting their strategy to interest and dividends and neglecting the power of rebalancing to capture portfolio growth as an additional income source.” So how can rebalancing be used to create a paycheck in retirement? The author outlines an example of how… 

ETF Your Way To Retirement With These Strategies

Whether you are still young and have high risk tolerance, are middle-aged with moderate risk tolerance, or are at retirement and need reliable income, today’s article seeks to answer the following question: “How can you buy ETFs to build a comprehensive, long-term retirement portfolio?” For each of the aforementioned life stages, the author outlines the types of core – and… 

Should Retirement Investors Forget Dollar-Cost Averaging And Just “Take The Plunge”?

If you have a large sum of money that you want to invest for retirement, the commonly-held financial wisdom is that you should use the dollar-cost averaging strategy and move that money into the market gradually so that the entire amount is not at risk of a market setback. But, as today’s article explains, it turns out that this seemingly… 

What Low Returns, Longer Lives And Legacy Goals Mean For Retirement Saving Rates

How much do you need to save in order to fund your desired standard of living in retirement? More than you think, according to a new study. Dramatically more. The reasons for this gap between the rates at which Americans are saving for retirement and the rates at which they should be saving? Low returns, longer lives and legacy goals.… 

Keeping Your Retirement Strategy Sensible In The Face Of “Trump-o-mania”

Everyone everywhere is hypothesizing about what effect the Trump administration will have on everything – including retirement. But the author of today’s article cautions that, while “this unrelenting focus may be understandable (and even possibly helpful)…it can also be a bothersome distraction, perhaps even enticing you to make moves you later regret.” What, then, is the author’s advice for those…