Friday, May 30, 2008

Retirement Planning at 20-years-old

Retirement saving is best done early and consistently. Retirement planning, the roadmap to how you will spend your after-work life is not as easy ­ especially when you are in your twenties.


Alyce P. Cornyn-Selby once wrote, "Procrastination is, hands down, our favorite form of self-sabotage." And who can deny that this is the single biggest hurdle we will need to jump in retirement planning.

As twenty-year olds, fresh out of school, whether it be high school, trade school, or college, we see the world in terms of the here and now. We are young and that youthful exuberance gives us the false sense that time is endless. We are undeterred, full of hope and rich in the belief that time is on our side. And in a way, it is.

We have our first job and with it, our first taste of financial independence. We divvy up our paychecks in terms of what it will buy: x-amount of dollars for rent, transportation, clothes and entertainment and not always in that order. Few twenty-year-olds are able to see the value of saving at this age. There are simply too many opportunities to seize and fun things to experience.

And your retirement plan should not take away from that time in your life. It should compliment it. But there are three things you must confront first before you begin the party that twenty is.


First, you need a financial mentor. This can be your parents, an uncle, aunt, grandparent or even a co-worker. This person will need to be older and wiser than you and someone you can trust.

This person will be nothing more than a sounding board for your financial decisions. They will, if they do the job correctly, play a sort of devil's advocate. Many of the big financial decisions we will make at this age will involve the use of credit. A financial mentor will allow you to ask yourself, while asking them, "do I need this now or can I wait until a time when I can afford it?" They will offer you a look at the mistakes they have made and what they would have done differently. Their experience becomes your lesson plan.

The second element of a retirement plan requires a clear understanding of how compounding works. When I am explaining compounding to beginning investors, I often tell use the story of the "Sultan'.

President Jackson once gave a gift to the Sultan of Muscat (now called Oman) after the ratification of a treaty between the two nations.

The gift was a silver coin with the minted date of 1804 (although the coin was actually struck in 1834) that was "sneaked" out of the country via secret emissary. Remarkably, the coin remained in its original condition for almost 150 years before it was purchased by the family of the late Walter Childs of Brattleboro, Vt. in 1945 for $5000.

The coin was then placed in a vault for the next 54 years. Until, of course, it was auctioned off for 4.14 million dollars!

Despite the "wow" factor of that fortune, many of you would be just as surprised to know, had that $5,000 been invested in a simple index fund that follows the S&P 500 (the 500 largest companies trading publicly in the US), you would have made $400,000 more than Mr. Child's family did when they took the coin to auction.

The key to compounding is beginning small, doing it consistently, and starting early. If your first job offers a 401(k) plan, a tax-deferred investment plan, sign up for at least a 5% deduction. In all likelihood, that small of an amount of pre-tax income will not affect your take-home pay.



The last thing you will need to do is avoid using credit for purchases under $500. That's right. Put the cards away until you absolutely need it.

At this level of borrowing, the purchase in more likely to be financed with a fixed rate, more apt to come after serious consideration, and it will probably be more of a necessity than a whim. A purchase of that size is much easier to add to your budget ­ the available money you have to spend on your life¹s necessities.

The best thing you do at twenty is develop a retirement philosophy that let¹s you live within your means ­ cash for everything that costs less than $500 to avoid unnecessary and unsustainable debt. When you do this while investing a small portion of your paycheck each week ­ just a 5% deduction from your payroll, you will be on the right road to retirement. If your employer doesn¹t offer a tax-deferred plan, have $25 a week automatically deposited into a savings account that you can set-up for automatic deductions to an IRA.

We will return to our retirement glossary next week.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

G is for Gross Income - Retirement Planning

We continue our look at some of the important factors of a good retirement plan. This alphabetical look at what you need to know continues with a look at gross income.

In Retirement Planning, G is for Gross Income



There are very few downsides to owning a Roth IRA. Of course there is the tax advantage. After five years, the money can be withdrawn tax-free. Unlike a traditional IRA, all of the withdrawals are taxed at your regular income. (The reason for this difference is based on whether the money was taxed prior to deposit – traditional IRA deposits were a deduction from taxes whereas a Roth IRA is funded with after tax contributions.)

A traditional IRA requires you to take withdraws by age 70 ½ (actually the date is April 1st in the year following your 70 ½ birthday). A Roth does not have any such requirements, allowing you to keep the money invested until you need it – if ever. And that “if ever” allows you to pass the Roth IRA on to your heirs who, although they would be required to take distributions, would find the added income from the inherited Roth IRA would be tax-free.

While there is no guarantee that your Roth IRA will grow without set-backs – what you pick for your investments determines the portfolio’s possibilities, the ability to save more is restricted not only by age but by gross income.

Age and Income


Your contributions before you reach fifty-years-old are limited in both the Roth IRA and the traditional IRA to $5,000. But after fifty, the annual contribution jumps to $6,000 with adjustments being made thereafter based on inflation.

But gross income also plays a role in how much you can contribute. More specifically, modified gross income. If you are single, that income cannot exceed $101,000 and if you are married, filing jointly, the income limit is set at $159,000. Modified gross income is calculated using IRS publication 590 (turn to page 61) and does not include any Roth conversions you may have made in the current tax year.

What if you make too much? It is a nice problem to have but to avoid not investing at all, the IRS allows you to make non-deductible IRA contributions. Conversions have income limits as well ($100,000 a year for individual or joint filers – sorry, married filers filing separately re not allowed to convert). But hold onto the non-deductible IRA until 2010 and convert without penalty.

There are still taxes to be paid on the conversion however but they can be spread over the following years (2011 and 2012).

A is for Asset Allocation

B is for Balance

C is for Continuity

D is for Diversity

E is for (Tracking) Errors

F is for Free-Float

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Retirement Planning - F is for Free-Float

F is for Free-Float

One of the best reasons to use an index fund in your retirement plan that is modeled on the benchmark S&P 500, besides the low cost is the methodology employed by the index to get the best possible measure of how your investment is doing. While all of the stocks in the S&P 500 are considered large-caps, the way they are capitalized is not necessarily uniform.

The simplest way to determine market capitalization is to multiply the price of the shares times the number of shares. This unfortunately makes the mistake of including shares of stock that are held inside the company and are not available for trade part of the company’s total worth.

A company is only as good as the price of its shares. The more shares that are available to the marketplace, the better this yardstick becomes as a measure. Closely held shares that are literally “off-the-market” blur the overall picture.

By using a method called free-float, the indexes can accurately determine what the true market value of a company is. The S&P 500 uses this method in its index.

Free-float drops those restricted shares, ownership holdings and other blocks of stock not available for the public and considers only the shares that could be traded.

These broad indexes have had a reputation for long-term out-performance. Out-performance is a nice way of saying they did better than funds that are similar and for some very obvious reasons. The high cost of running an actively managed fund means that the actively managed fund must overcome those costs in performance percentages before they can begin to post competitive returns.



A is for Asset Allocation

B is for Balance

C is for Continuity

D is for Diversity

E is for (Tracking) Errors