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Female Millennials & Retirement

Submitted by The Participant Effect on August 24th, 2016

Millennials are generally defined as people born after 1980, who grew up using digital technology and consuming mass media. In general, millennials have good financial habits, according to a 2015 Retirement Saving & Spending Study conducted by T. Rowe Price. However, the survey showed millennial women are falling behind on saving for retirement.

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Retirement Income Planning Requires Realistic Spending Assumptions

Submitted by The Participant Effect on August 23rd, 2016

If you have read any literature on retirement planning or have received advice from a financial professional, chances are you were presented with the 70% rule, the one that suggests that retirees will need between 70 and 80% of their pre-retirement income in order to maintain their standard of living.

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Getting the Most from Your 410(k) Plan

Submitted by The Participant Effect on August 23rd, 2016

401(k) plans were established by Congress to encourage individual savings towards retirement. Offered through employers, the plans are generally available to eligible employees who are allowed to contribute a percent of their salary to the plan.

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Planning for the New Normal Retirement

Submitted by The Participant Effect on August 23rd, 2016

The need for retirement planning didn’t really exist until well into the 1970s. Up to that point, people worked until age 65, spent a few years in leisure through their life expectancy which was about 69. Many retirees of that era were able to coast into retirement with a cushy pension plan.

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How to Achieve the Highest Quality of Life in Retirement

Submitted by The Participant Effect on August 23rd, 2016

Today’s retirees are finding that retirement requires at least as much psychological and emotional preparation as it does financial preparation. So, retirement planning needs to include a thorough assessment of human assets and liabilities along with an assessment of financial assets and liabilities.

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Warren Buffet Retirement Planning Rules: What Would Warren Buffet Do?

Submitted by The Participant Effect on August 23rd, 2016

Everyone can learn some valuable lessons from Warren Buffet, arguably the most successful investor of all time. Buffet has two strict rules about investing that anyone would find, well, frustratingly simplistic.

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Why You Need a Serious Retirement Investment Strategy

Submitted by The Participant Effect on August 23rd, 2016

With rising retirement costs, longer life spans, and the need to rely almost exclusively on one’s own assets for income, there is little margin for error in investing for retirement. When we’re talking about securing a comfortable income that needs to last as many as 25 or 30 years, mistakes made early on can be magnified to tragic proportions.

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Why You Need a Serious Retirement Investment Strategy

Submitted by The Participant Effect on August 23rd, 2016

With rising retirement costs, longer life spans, and the need to rely almost exclusively on one’s own assets for income, there is little margin for error in investing for retirement. When we’re talking about securing a comfortable income that needs to last as many as 25 or 30 years, mistakes made early on can be magnified to tragic proportions.

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Three Key Elements to Early Retirement Success

Submitted by The Participant Effect on August 23rd, 2016

With the long financial nightmare of the recession and financial crisis shrinking in the memories of those who endured it, Americans are, once again, setting their sights on a shorter retirement time horizon.

Tags:
  • early retirement
  • education
  • retirement planning
  • risk management
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Why You Should Prioritize Retirement Savings over College Savings

Submitted by The Participant Effect on August 23rd, 2016

Young families with an eye to the future are faced with a daunting choice – to save earnestly for a secure retirement or to save for their children’s education. Can you do both?

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Latest Blog Posts

I’ve Depleted My Emergency Fund. Now What?

Submitted by The Participant Effect on February 4th, 2021

Perhaps you’ve lost a job, faced an illness or have been delt a family crisis that emptied out your emergency fund. What are your next steps?

 

Tags:
  • budget
  • emergency fund
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How Much House Can I Afford?

Submitted by The Participant Effect on February 4th, 2021

You’re eyeing center-hall colonials in your neighborhood and dreaming about the garden you want to plant in the backyard and all the holiday celebrations you’ll host. You’ve saved toward this goal and think you’re ready to pull the trigger. But the real question is: How much house can I afford?

Or is it?

Tags:
  • budget
  • buying a home
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Is Social Security “Going Broke”?

Submitted by The Participant Effect on September 30th, 2020

Social Security’s financial cliff is coming closer into view. Experts project that the fund that pays for government retirement benefits through FICA taxes will be depleted within the next 15 years.

 

Tags:
  • retirement
  • retirement planning
  • social security
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