1 / 42

Solid Finances Sponsors

Solid Finances Sponsors. MSU Extension MSU Human Resources This program is made possible by a grant from the FINRA Investor Education Foundation through a partnership with United Way Worldwide. Solid Finances Retirement Planning for Younger Workers. Joel Schumacher. Schedule.

esma
Download Presentation

Solid Finances Sponsors

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Solid Finances Sponsors • MSU Extension • MSU Human Resources • This program is made possible by a grant from the FINRA Investor Education Foundation through a partnership with United Way Worldwide.

  2. Solid Finances Retirement Planning for Younger Workers Joel Schumacher

  3. Schedule • Employer Retirement Plans & Social Security • February 8th • 12:00 to 1:00 • IRAs, 457 Plans, 403b plans & Other Income Sources • February 15th • 8:30 to 9:30

  4. Question A: Which best describes your current retirement plan? • Final Draft • First Draft • Outline Stage • Thought Stage • What Plan? I thought retirement planning was for old people.

  5. What is the goal of saving for retirement? One Possible Answer: To have sufficient assets to achieve YOUR desired retirement lifestyle.

  6. What is special about planning for younger workers? • Time to set goals • Time to create a plan to achieve your goals • Time is on your side for achieving your goals

  7. Retirement Planning Step 1: Determine where you are today. Step 2: Determine where you want to get to. Step 3: Develop & implement an action plan to achieve your goals. Step 4: Repeat Steps 1 to 3 periodically.

  8. Financial Inventory List assets: • Retirement Plan Accounts • Individual Retirement Arrangements (IRA) • Bank Accounts • Certificates of Deposits • Insurance Accounts (annuities) • Brokerage Accounts (stocks, bonds, etc.)

  9. Financial Inventory List assets: • House • Land • Business • Cars • Valuable Collections (Art, Gun, Coin)

  10. Financial Inventory List debts: • Mortgage • Car Loan • Student Loan • Credit Card • Other Debts??

  11. Your List • Don’t make the list a HUGE project • Keep it simple • Don’t worry about exact values for land, cars, etc. • Review and update it annually. Why? • Progress report on your finances/retirement • Motivation to keep on track

  12. Question B: When was the last time you completed a “personal financial inventory”? • In the past year • 1 to 2 years • 3 to 5 years • More than 5 years • Never

  13. Retirement Planning Step 1: Determine where you are today. Step 2: Determine where you want to get to. Step 3: Develop & implement an action plan to achieve your goals. Step 4: Repeat Steps 1 to 3 periodically.

  14. What is your idea of retirement? • Travel (to warm places) • Time with family • Time for hobbies • Volunteering • Caring for relatives • Work

  15. Online Resources Retirement Calculators • Some are detailed; others are very general • Results are only as good as the information you provide • Very useful for people more than 10 years away from retirement

  16. Useful Resources Online Resources…..choosetosave.org Cost: None Contact: Your Employer Sponsored Retirement Plan Cost: None Contact a local investment advisor Cost: Varies

  17. Retirement Planning Step 1: Determine where you are today. Step 2: Determine where you want to get to. Step 3: Develop & implement an action plan to achieve your goals. Step 4: Repeat Steps 1 to 3 periodically.

  18. Creating Your Plan • Traditional Retirement Income Sources: • Social Security • Employer Sponsored Retirement Plan • Defined Benefit or Defined Contribution • Personal Savings • Other Sources: • Part time work • Asset sale • Reverse Mortgage (Smaller House)

  19. Question C: What was the average monthly social security benefit in 2011? • $780 • $989 • $1,181 • $1,384

  20. Question D: Are you concerned about the financial future of the Social Security System? • Yes, very concerned • Yes, a little concerned • No • I don’t think about it

  21. Will Social Security run out of money?

  22. Question E: Which type of Employer Retirement Plan do you participate in? • Defined Benefit • Defined Contribution • Both • I am eligible but I don’t participate. • My employer does not offer a plan.

  23. Defined Benefit Plans Basic Benefit Calculation: Monthly Benefit = Years of Service x Average Salary x Retirement Factor • Typical Retirement Factors 1.5% to 2.0% • Average salary is typically calculated over a 36 to 60 month period

  24. Benefit Examples • Employee Age 60 • 24 years x $2,500 x .01785 = $1,071 • About 42% of final salary • Employee Age 60 • 30 years x $3,500 x .02 = $1,800 • About 60% of final salary

  25. Other Options • Individual Retirement Accounts • Traditional • Roth • Defined Contribution Plans • Employee & Employers can contribute • One “pot” of money • Other Savings • Savings, Investment, Brokerage, CDs, etc. • Rental Property

  26. Retirement vs. Other Important Goals • Other goals • Daily living • Paying down debt • Mortgage, auto, student, credit card • Save for other things • Emergency account, car, home purchase, vacation, children’s college

  27. Prioritizing your Goals • Security/Risk • Protecting you & your family from the what ifs • What is the “worst case” outcome? • Rate of Return • Compare after-tax interest rates • Challenge: Future returns are unknown • Personal Preferences • For example: My child’s education is more important that a new car.

  28. Question F: Which of these is more important to you today? • Saving for a non-retirement goal • Paying down debt • Saving for retirement

  29. Question G: Should you have your mortgage paid off before you retire? • Yes • No, as long as your payments are manageable • It doesn’t matter if your mortgage is paid off

  30. Debt in Retirement • Your “retirement plan” might include paying off your mortgage • Lowers your “cost of living” in retirement • Lower “expenses” is similar to higher “income”

  31. Retirement Planning Step 1: Determine where you are today. Step 2: Determine where you want to get to. Step 3: Develop & implement an action plan to achieve your goals. Step 4: Repeat Steps 1 to 3 periodically.

  32. Time = Money • Retirement Slide Calculator • If you don’t have one and would like one…please email khayes@montana.edu to request one.

  33. Slide Calculator “Why Save for Retirement?” • If you are age 35 and you start contributing.. • $10 per week…value at age 65 is $64,582 • $25 per week…value at age 65 is $161,456 • If you are age 45 and you start contributing.. • $10 per week…value at age 65 is $25,524 • $25 per week…value at age 65 is $63,811

  34. Slide Calculator“Why Save Now?” • If you are age 35 and you wait 1 year to start contributing an extra… • $10 per week…it reduces your savings by $5,448 • $25 per week…it reduces your savings by $13,619 • At age 45 • $10 per week…it reduces your savings by $2,454 • $25 per week…it reduces your savings by $6,136

  35. Who has more money at age 65? Early EarlLate Luke Saves $50 per month $150 per month From Age 30 to 39 50 to 59 Total Deposits $6,000$18,000 Interest rate 6%6%

  36. Question H: Who has more money at age 65? • Early Earl • Late Luke

  37. Rate of ReturnEarly EarlLate Luke 4% $20,371 $27,892 6% $37,058 $34,665 8% $66,860 $43,034

  38. Who has more money at age 65? • Carrie (age 35) • Invests $10,000 in a savings account • Earns 2.3% • Sarah (age 35) • Invests $5,000 in a corporate bond mutual fund • Earns 4.8%

  39. Question I: Who has more money at age 65? • Carrie • Sarah

  40. Who has more money? • Carrie • Balance at age 65: $20,237 • Contributed: $10,000 • Sarah • Balance at age 65: $21,388 • Contributed: $5,000

  41. Homework • Part 1: Complete a Financial Inventory • Compare it last years • Part 2: Your Retirement Goals • Write it down & Estimate the cost of this lifestyle • Part 3: Will your current plan get achieve your goal? • If not, what changes are your willing to make? • What if your don’t meet your goal?

  42. Keys to Retirement Planning: • Don’t Get Overwhelmed! • Take it charge of your retirement one step at a time. • Use the resources available to you. • It’s never too early or late to start planning.

More Related