Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#16
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Seek a certified financial planner -- if not, Vanguard does have financial planners who can assist.
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#17
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#18
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Good recommendation on Vanguard for investments.
If you have handled your investments during your savings phase, why wouldn’t you be comfortable handling your $$$ during your spending years? What a lot of people don’t realize is that you need to keep making money during your retirement years but you have to be a little more cautious on what you invest in. Buy and hold good index funds in good and bad times, since you can’t time the market. If you look at history, recessions only last a couple of years at most and usually the market comes back to be higher than before the recession. I don’t understand why people look at annuities. You have high fees, and when you start receiving your annuity payout, you are also receiving social security payments and starting to make your RMD’s. You add all of this up, you will be in a high tax bracket and probably have much more disposable income than what you need. I use a modified bucket system: a cash bucket that I can live on for a couple of years that gets replenished by dividends, and another bucket of investments (diversified index funds). If the market goes down like last year, you don’t need to sell anything to live on. Without selling, you don’t need to try to time the market for when it’s a good time to get back in. I use Schwab to make my trades, I don’t pay Schwab for any brokerage services, I do my own trades. I have been using Schwab for over 25 years and get access to a lot of free services that you normally pay for. I have had questions in the past about tax harvesting, social security, annuities, and others and Schwab gave me access to their specialists. |
#19
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Five star mid cap growth funds? I am not qualified to give investment advice but I am regularly discovering things that I don't know. A five star midcap growth fund earns five stars compared to other mid cap growth funds. It does not show how it compares to other funds. Retirement funds up 15%. This has been a good year for stocks. I am up more than that. Neither of us are up as much as the S&P 500. The rude wake up for all-if you have 10,000 and make 10% one year and loose 10% the next year you are not even 10,000+10%=11000 11000-10%=9900. |
#20
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Call Blackston Financial on Rt.466 and ask for an appointment with Travis. He is a fiduciary, and I have done extremely well with him. He listens well and gives great information. No pressure whatsoever. It's worth your time, and you won't regret it.
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#21
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Thank you all for these great suggestions! It feels a bit less daunting now.
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#22
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#23
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The interest rate might be high, but the actual cash outflow is (relatively) minimal Pledge your assets as collateral. 'Borrow' 75-80% with an LoC. Pay Monthly Interest Only on any cash/advances you take on the LoC. from your excess income. Pay off the principal over time with your excess income or the sale of any non-producing assets. Over time, you owe nothing and have retained your assets and your income. ===================== |
#24
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#25
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Do a search on something like this - bucket retirement plan.
Basically split your money into buckets. First basically cash to cover say 2 year of living expenses. Second assets to cover say 8 to 10 years of expenses and the third long term. Then an emergency/big exp bucket. This would pick up your home repairs, new car etc. Do some reading and you will get the idea and should be able to do it yourself. For withdrawal consider using the IRS RMD (required minimum distribution table) if you do not come up with something better. It considers life expectancy and the value of your portfolio. Also search for safe withdrawal rates. This will get you educated on the subject. Remember that interest rates are lower than what they were for most of the studies, and that bonds will lose value as interest rates increase. You might try a CPA. Ask if they have experience in the area you need help. |
#26
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I'm finding out in my retirement to stay healthy, enjoy this time in our lives, and do all this while keeping our
retirement funds pretty much intact. Why? Because we are/were the generation of savers and my financial adviser keeps telling my wife and I to start spending down our retirement next egg. I receive our SS every month and a RMD payout every year and it's more then enough to live on. I'm always asking myself what would happen to our savings in a medical emergency. Maybe I shouldn't worry about that as much as I do. We have one adopted son that makes more money today per month then my wife and I made together. He lives 5 mins. away and says he don't expects a dime from our estate, also has his $450,000 house pay for. |
#27
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#28
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Add this contact to your research... excellent free advice from one who is well informed from years of financial experience. Dan is on the radio at 720 AM... not FM every morning.
Contact Us - Financial Issues From this website, you can choose to listen to any of his radio programs: Radio Program - Financial Issues Best of luck to you in whatever you do! |
#29
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#30
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Camarda Wealth Advisory Group <j@camarda.com:
Fee only group (1-1.5% of monthly portfolio. Have used them for years and trust them implicitly.
__________________
Patridgeman |
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