Wednesday, March 23, 2005

Five steps to early retirement

Five steps to early retirement
By Leah Gliniewicz • Bankrate.com

Even if you fail to win the lottery, don't give up your dreams -- you can still plan for an early retirement. But wait too long, and you won't have a nest egg to sit on.

According to the 2003 Retirement Confidence Survey by the American Savings Education Council in Washington, D.C., only 21 percent of saving Americans are very confident of having enough money to live comfortably after they retire. And, the study found that three in 10 workers have not saved for retirement.

Debt can play havoc with retirement planning.

"Debt is a deterrent to growth, says Jeffrey Levine, a certified financial planner in Albany, N.Y. and a member of the Financial Planning Association." You want to get rid of debt, especially if you have high interest rates like credit cards."

So how do you begin?

Step 1: Develop a plan
Figure out how much your present lifestyle costs you. Then think about the type of life you want to lead after retirement. Realize that you could be retiring at the midpoint in your life, and you'll be on a fixed salary, Levine says. Don't forget to consider your long-term health care costs.

Step 2: Think in two's
Make financial plans for two stages of retirement: the periods before and after you are 59 ½ years old, says Les Abromovitz, author of You Can Retire. First, secure the after-59 ½ stage of retirement with investments such as 401(k)s, Individual Retirement Accounts, pensions, annuities, Social Security and savings.

"If you're serious about early retirement, you also want to look for ways to fund the pre-59 ½ stage of retirement," Abromovitz says.

Figure out what assets you have that produce income. And you might want to begin investing more aggressively, with investments that produce a greater rate of return.

If your home won't suit your retirement lifestyle, remember that the Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 allows you in many cases to keep the capital gain when you sell the home, Abromovitz says. That money could help carry you through the first years of early retirement.

Step 3: Take advantage of tax-deferred opportunities
To secure the back-end of your retirement, maximize the money you put into your retirement fund, says Ileen Malitz, certified financial planner and author of The Modern Role of Bond Covenants. She stresses starting a 401(k) and a Roth IRA from day one of employment.

"If you're willing to enroll in a 401(k) you're taking a major step to retiring early," Abromovitz says. "401(k)s and IRAs are can't-lose situations as long as you continue investing in the long haul. You take advantage of tax shelters and compounding for decades by doing so. So it's hard to go wrong."

Putting money in an IRA does not mean paying penalties if you go fishing earlier than planned. For the purpose of early retirement, you can withdraw from your IRA if you take advantage of the annuity payout.

Step 4: Invest it
The third place to stick your left-over money is in non-tax sheltered mutual funds. Figure out where to invest it so it produces a decent return. Look in the mutual fund column of the newspaper for funds with no custodial fees and no commissions, known as loads.

"It's best to combine it into a money market that earns good interest and stock mutual funds. It will be taxable, but it still is probably the best place for it," Malitz says.

While mutual funds outside an IRA or 401(k) may not be tax sheltered, they can be tax efficient. In the case of mutual funds, this means the fund managers buy and sell the fund's assets with an eye to tax consequences.

No matter where you invest your money, your best bet is to do it on a regular basis. "For people who don't find it easy to save, the best thing to do is to get into an automatic investment program," Abromovitz says. A fixed amount such as $50 to $100 is deducted from your paycheck monthly and invested in mutual funds. The result is dollar-cost averaging, which means you buy more shares when prices are low and fewer when prices are high.

Abromovitz says the last thing a would-be retiree should consider is investing on hot stock tips: "To me, you should have all of these solid investments first. If you hear about something, it should be money you're ready to lose. It should be a lower priority."

Step 5: Stick to your plan
Early retirement requires a long-term savings and investing plan, and it takes discipline. This means keeping debt down and perhaps not living as lavishly now, so you can reap the benefits later.

You make a choice between lifestyle and high wealth accumulation. If you want wealth accumulation, you have to live a modest lifestyle. It has to be a written, conscious choice.

Time is on your side. The earlier you start and the longer you leave your money untouched, the more compounding can work for you.

When you haven't saved, it's hard to go back and make up for it. Malitz says the easiest thing is to decide to save 10 percent of your income. You'll probably never miss it.

Tuesday, March 15, 2005

stupid system administrator

I feel like killing my system ad. He's bloody supposed to upgrade my pc. and he's there taking his own sweet time. i really hate him when it comes to work. slow lazy bug.

Monday, March 07, 2005

Don't Piss Off Mommy!

My eight-year-old son's hamster had eight little hamster babies two weeks ago. They were doing great, in another week we can separate them from the mommy hamster.

Today, I was checking on the brood and could only count seven babies. I took all the critters out and carefully sifted through the bedding (they bury themselves) - no eighth baby.

I sat son down to explain to him what had happened when he came home from school. He sat quietly and a tear welled up when I told him about the tragic demise of one of his babies. He accepted this, taking it rather well.

About an hour he walked up to me and asked if he would ever have to worry about a similar fate.

I confess that my brilliant, eight year old son is concerned that I may one day eat him.

He is so cute!

(I told him he would never, ever have to worry his pretty little head about that!)

Sunday, March 06, 2005

just another damn fuckign week

just another damn fuckign week. now i'm left with the last sunday of the week. let's hope it would b better. and to the hell with japan

Friday, March 04, 2005

Who's That Fattie?

You know how when they speak about the obesity crisis on the news, they will sometimes show random fat people going about their lives? Of course, they never film their faces.

I confess that I saw myself on the news tonight - I was eating a burger. And even though they didn't show my face, it was pretty darn obvious it was me.

So nice to know that I am example of the obesity crisis in America.