5 Ways to Torpedo Your Retirement

April 11, 2011 RSS Feed Print
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Couples who work hard all their lives often eagerly look forward to retirement. But working for 30 or more years doesn’t guarantee that you will be able to retire comfortably. Here are five common retirement planning errors that generally torpedo your ability to retire.

[See 10 Places to Go Carless in Retirement.]

1. Too much debt. Having debt is not the kiss of death for your retirement. But high interest debt such as credit card debt could be, especially if you can’t figure out how to get out of debt and begin saving for the future. It’s extremely difficult to invest for retirement when you are still paying off past purchases.

2. Spend your retirement savings on college. Some couples make it a financial priority to pay for their children's college so that they will not begin their careers with debt. However, when you tap your home equity, stop saving for retirement, or even raid your retirement accounts to pay for your children’s college, you may be sacrificing your own retirement security. On top of that, you will be missing a golden opportunity to teach your kids about money. There are a variety of ways to finance college, but you can’t take out loans for retirement.

[See Delay Retirement by Redesigning Your Job.]

3. No emergency plan. Most of us are completely dependent on the money we receive from a single job. Losing that job can easily exhaust your savings and jeopardize your entire financial plan. It’s important to develop an emergency fund and plan before you hit those stormy waters. Consider taking on a second job or developing a side business to diversify your income streams in case a layoff should occur.

4. No long-term investment strategy. Some people change their investment allocation based on the latest financial news. This can be a huge mistake. If you pulled money out of equities when the market tumbled in 2008, you also didn’t take advantage of the market recovery that has since occurred. Retirement savers need to accept that there will be fluctuations in mutual fund performance and invest for the long term. The only way to combat this type of emotional investing is to have a well thought out investment plan for retirement income that balances financial needs with emotional demands. Then you need to stick with that investment plan throughout financial storms.

5. No retirement plan. The most dangerous mistake individuals can make is having no retirement plan. Financial plans are not set in stone and you won’t be able to foresee every contingency. But having an approximate roadmap you can follow is better than having no plan.

[See 5 Ways to Make Saving for Retirement Easier.]

You can be smart, responsible, and hard-working and still end up without enough resources for a secure retirement. In order to make sure this doesn’t happen to you, take the time to put together a plan, track your spending, and don’t get into debt if you can help it. Think through your investment strategy and stick to it even when you feel tempted to change it.

Neal Frankle is a certified financial planner and runs Wealth Pilgrim, a personal finance blog that helps people make smart decisions about their money. As a start, he suggests that you strive to understand your credit score range.

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I've learned the hard way and am all the better off because of it. I started saving and investing a bit too late, but did get at it in my mid-thirties because my employer had the foresight to push all of their employees into investing for retirement with a very good 401k program. That program matched dollar for dollar for the first 6% of pay, me working for that same employer for 38 years. I started investing for retirement in only safe-fixed income insurance products, seeing the light and investing in equity and bond mutual funds in the mid-1980's. I became more aggressive as time wore on, breaking into individual stocks in the late 1980's. I learned a few lessons along the way by following the herd and timing the market, getting slammed in the process during the 2000 recession. That taught me the value of doing an assessment of risk tolerance, diversificiation and continued dollar cost average investing. I weathered the 2007 to 2009 market drop well, now more than recovered from that drop, even taking advantage of the low "sale" prices of equities during early 2009 by investing much of the cash hedge I was holding, waiting for opportunities.

I had the good sense to invest for retirement, and hold cash for emergencies, not saving a dime for college educations for our children. Our children got their educations by borrowing on their own and by help from me when I received unexpected bonus pay. Their loans are now paid off.

Now retired, I am finally now engaged in consultation with an advisor for estate, tax and spend-down planning as my wife and I do not want to be caught with a major mistake at this stage in life.

Al of GA 1:10PM April 19, 2011

Well, I guess I did all the wrong things, at least according to the "advisors". First, I didn't go into debt to help my three daughters get through University, but I sure never could save a dime during those years. It paid off, though, as they now have excellent jobs making three or four times what I made during my lifetime. I receive no Social Security at all for the 25 years I was in business with my ex-husband as the business was in his name. The best thing I ever did was to get out of that scenario. The next best thing I did was to buy a small, reposessed home - I knew that renting would only cost me dearly over the years. I paid that one off and bought a condo that I now rent, the profit from which is a major source of my income. What I get from 25 years of work in Social Security is only enough to pay my taxes with! I save it automatically and pay my income tax, state tax, and property taxes with it, and it itself is of course taxed as well! Now I have bought a home, since being single I had no deductions any more, so the interest is deductible and if I ever get sick at least I can sell it if necessary, or leave it to my kids, who earned it during those years we were all poor while they were in school.

Grammy of CA 4:15PM April 11, 2011

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