Title | : | How Much Do You Need To Retire | What The Experts Say |
Lasting | : | 12.33 |
Date of publication | : | |
Views | : | 81 rb |
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I’m 56 and have no interest or intention to retire As long as I’m not incapacitated? Men work I will work, produce and contribute Our society has a lifelong goal to sit on their backsides and play? Not for me Comment from : Michael Shine |
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Here's a question Let's say you're a recently retired debt free couple in your early 60s and you both have some good investments, Roth IRAs, 401ks, stocks, etc You both have company pensions so there are incoming funds to cover day to day expenses Now you'd like to purchase your dream toy, a boat, a fancy camper van, or a nice car, and you want to spend (blow) 160k How much of an overall nest egg should you have as a couple to afford this type of expense? Comment from : rustyme1122 |
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Every crash /collapse/inflation or a recession offers an equal market opportunity if you are well prepared and knowledgeable I've seen people accumulate up to $800,000 during crises and even pull it off with ease in a bad economy Without a doubt, the bubble or crash has made someone extremely wealthy Comment from : Toni Warrington |
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I will be forever be indebted to you, you have changed my entire life and I continue to preach on your behalf for the whole world to hear that with just a small investment you saved me from going into huge financial debt Thank you Mrs Desiree Madison Comment from : Jamie Corral |
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My wife and I have started speaking with a financial advisor His fee structure is set up as a choice of two ways to approach #1 is a flat fee in which we are free to take his plan and treat it like a blurprint for our financial goals and not tied to any other business or product he's affilliated with #2 would be is a commission base where we pay nothing up front, and he get's compensated by any commission he's earn from the products (eg insurance, 401K management etc) would suggest to us in the overall plan He is a registered CFA, which from what I understand, acts as a fiduciary He's told us regardless of which fee structure we choose, is reccomendations would be the same Questions? Comments? The #2 option, just by human nature, would be subject to self interest - Not sure which way is best or cost effective Comment from : David Cron |
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is the 4 rule (pretax) based upon your gross income generated from investments or does it include a 4 reduction/withdrawal of your investments as well? Comment from : Gary Smith |
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I like this vid Giod insight Interesting to hear rhe differences berween those personalities Comment from : GerrysPlace |
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None of those people are experts In fact several are complete frauds in ever sense of the word Comment from : WMBCS |
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The average retiree, I believe, should have been able to have enough to last the rest of his days I t just depends on choices during your working days, just as I came to realize later Surprising how I still netted more $2m by retirement And this is while living in New York! Comment from : Albacus |
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I'm retired My goal is to avoid dipping into our nest egg We've invested in moderate dividend generating mutual funds After being and out of the market I decided to leave the choice of my investments to experts Most of our income comes from the dividends and our SS benefits But here's the kicker - we have no debt (own our home, vehicles, etc) and we moved to a place where the cost of living is significantly less than in any comparable area in the US (Near Valencia, Spain) Consequently or SS benefits pretty much cover our living expenses The dividend income covers our taxes and fun money It's working well for us so far Comment from : Eric Marsh |
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Keep working until you die, you'll never have enough money to retire I have to keep sending all your tax dollars to Ukraine and illegal immigrant benefits, brought to you by Biden CIA operation mockingbird youtube trolls Comment from : Jeffrey Flick |
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Those who were unable to accumulate enough money during their active years to meet their demands are the retirees who now struggle to meet their fundamental needs Numerous factors are determined by retirement decisions My wife and I both served in the government for the same number of years; she invested through a wealth manager and I did so through a 401(k) After our retirement, both of us are still working Comment from : Jaküb Ageter |
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Funny how you tend to go with 8 when the S&P has averaged 118 for the last 85 years or so This is a fact, not a feeling The 4 rule is so conservative, Dave Ramsey and Robert Kiyosaki are both correct It just depends on which method you are more comfortable with Dave is appealing to the normal working class guys and Robert is appealing to entrepreneurs and investors Jim Cramer is a stock trader, not a retirement expert The main problem you have is that we have all heard of Dave Ramsey, Robert Kiyosaki, and Jim Cramer, but we've never heard of you Therefore, your opinion is not relevant Comment from : Anthony Dooley |
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Why would you have Jim Cramer on as an expert? Comment from : Hopefully222 |
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I've lived in the USA for 30 yrs but now i want to move back to the true north and free, CANADA, Are you available to hire for a consultation? Or could you recomend a business like yours that would hire a 60 yro? This area facitanates me I used to be a neuroscience profressor Comment from : Cycloide |
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I did lots of planning before retirement, but a big consideration (that is easy to minimize) is the cost of repairs and upkeep to your property Unexpected expenses (for example, having to remove a dead tree, painting, and other repairs that I didn't plan for) can really throw a wrench into using a 4 withdrawal Comment from : Don Mottolo |
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I'm not retired yet, but I've calculated that my current annual expenses are only 2 of my net assets Based on that I really see no scenario where I'd pull double that out during a year Comment from : Bill L |
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I feel like my 5 years of budgeting (thanks to D Ramsey) makes me really know what i need in retirement I won't be rich or living very large at retirement but it will be great 5 more years to goGod willing Comment from : Rachel Carter |
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What's all this crap about starting a business isn't the plan retirement work all your life now you want to start again this is not retirement,my retirement will be done with work for ever Comment from : Ray Osullivan |
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