Saturday, February 25, 2012

Get Wiser: I’d Like to Retire Yesterday

In this week's edition:  When do you want to retire?
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Get Wiser:  Your weekly dose of investment wisdom

I'd Like to Retire Yesterday
 
When I ask new clients when they want to retire, the most common answer is, “yesterday.”  Then I ask, “When do you think you could retire and maintain your current standard of living?” 

The most common answer is… silence.

Whether you are two or twenty years from retirement, considering expenses you will incur and how to meet them is critical.  And the sooner you do so the better.  Wherever you start, things will happen along the way that might throw you off track – all the more reason to plan for them.

1.  Stock Market Drop
Several years ago the catch phrase, “My 401(k) is now a 201(k)” took hold.  Retirement portfolios were crippled.   Many pre-retires realized their risk exposure only after the fact, and the time necessary on the job lengthened by years – if they were able to avoid massive layoffs.  Learn this: If you are within 10 years of retirement, your retirement accounts may need to be reallocated to take some risk off the table.

2. Boomerang Kids
As of 2009, over 50 million homes were “multi-generational.”  Meaning the younger generation was living at home.  But young adults, unlike kids, come with higher expenses such as transportation, insurance, college debt, etc.   The burden of additional living expenses eat away at the finances of the parents and often extend how long it will take to retire.

3. Divorce
There is an adage among financial professionals:  “The fastest way to go broke is to divorce.”  The lifestyle change is obvious, whereas the devastating financial impact is not so. Enormous income allocation shifts are required.  Assets are divided.  A partner may be required to go back to work after decades of being out of the work force.  Costs for the split can be in the tens or hundreds of thousands.  In short, the financial picture is halved and procedural costs reduce that further. 

4. Lifestyle Changes
Back in the day planners advised pre-retirees to expect needing 70% of the income required during your working life.  New studies reveal that most often, people will need 95%-120% of income during retirement.  Why?  Because people want to pursue hobbies, travel, and often have medical costs substantially greater than when they were working.  And then there is inflation.

5. Poor Planning
The majority of pre-retirees do little or no planning.  So it’s no surprise this is the most common reason for delaying retirement.  Churchill said it best:  “A failure to plan, is a plan for failure.”
 
A Word to the Wiser:
Don't be intimidated by your finances. The earlier you start planning the easier and less disruptive saving for your retirement will be.  If you haven’t started, do.  Contact us and we will show you how easy this can be.  Or take a look at this 2 minute video: 

http://goals.wiserfinancial.tv/


 I welcome your questions and comments.  becker@wiserfinancial.com

Marc Becker, AIF
Managing Partner, Wiser Financial Coaching
Columnist, The Advisor Sherpa     
 
Click here for more information on this subject.
To read past articles and view past videos, visit: www.marcbecker.tv
 


Golf Tip of the Week

Know Your Yardages

As a youngster, Deane Beman, now the former PGA Tour and Senior Tour commissioner, was one of the best amateur golfers in the world, not least because of his competitive smarts. I learned a lot from Deane over the years, but his best lesson came at the U.S. Amateur at Pebble Beach in 1961.

Although striking the ball beautifully, I was having trouble in practice judging distances of approach shots, particularly when the wind got up. Eventually, Deane said to me, "Why don't you do what I do--pace off the yardages and write them down?" I believe Gene Andrews, the fine California amateur, was the first to figure and record exact distances, but savvy little Deane was close behind him.

I paced off Pebble Beach and won that Amateur with some of the most accurate golf I've ever played. From that day on, I've rarely hit a shot in competition without knowing its exact distance. Once I began to have some success on the Tour, other pros began stepping off and charting yardages. Today, it is standard operating procedure in top golf worldwide.

Do you know exactly how far you need to hit your approach shots, even on your own course? If the answer is no, you might be surprised how much finding out improves both your club selection and your confidence over the ball.

Simply step off and note down yardages to the front and rear of each green from a permanent landmark like a tree or rock in the area where your drives usually finish. With that information, plus an estimate of how deeply the cup is cut into the green, it's easy to work out how far you need to hit the ball.

Source:  http://www.nicklaus.com/nicklaus_golftips/



Trivia Time  

This week's question:  We had crazy weather this week in North Carolina, from snow on Monday to thunderstorms and near 80 by Friday.  But North Carolina does not have the most extreme temperature changes in the US.  What state holds the record for the most rapid temperature change, the greatest 12-hour temperature change, and the greatest 24 hour temperature drop in the US?

Do you know?  E-mail your answer wendy@wiserfinancial.com and if you are correct, receive a free "Way to Go!", "You Rock!", or other congratulatory phrase.  Then brag to all your friends about how smart you are. 

The answers will be in next week's newsletter!

Last week's question:  What is the total amount expected to be spent for Valentine's Day in the US this year?

Answer:   The total spent on Valentine's Day in the US for 2011 was expected to be $17.6 billion.

Source:  National Retail Federation

The articles and opinions expressed in this newsletter were gathered from Marc Becker, The Advisor Lab, and a variety of other sources.  Articles are written by Marc Becker.  All sources are believed to be reliable but do not constitute specific investment advice. In all cases, please contact your investment professional before making any investment choices.

Copyright ©  2011 Wiser Financial Coaching LLC, All rights reserved.

Marc Becker
Wiser Financial Coaching, LLC
2741 Campus Walk Ave.
Bldg 400 Ste 400
Durham, NC 27705
Tel: (919) 477-3355
Fax: (919) 477-3366
becker@wiserfinancial.com
Securities offered through Triad Advisors Inc., Member FINRA/SIPC








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Saturday, February 11, 2012

Get Wiser: Stupid is as Stupid Does

In this week's edition:  Like Mama always says. . .
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Get Wiser:  Your weekly dose of investment wisdom

Stupid is as Stupid Does
 
Forest Gump often quoted his wise mother, “stupid is as stupid does.” 

The meaning: stupid is defined by what people do, not what they say.  In investing there is a harsher saying:

“If you follow the herd, eventually you get slaughtered.”  

With that I submit the media, its herd mentality, and the resulting devastation incurred by investors following it. 

I’ve reported improving economic conditions for over a year.  Until recently, most media argued these facts were meaningless, including stocks more than doubling on average during this time. As improving data continues to emerge, the S&P 500 just had its best January since 1997, and other indices here and abroad followed suit. 

Suddenly I’m not hearing many stalwart projections that have become a hallmark since 2008. When I do they now contain disclaimers such as, “I’m waiting for a pullback before buying more stocks, though this might be as much pullback as we get.” (Morning CNBC interview 2/8/12).

Now that’s a heck of a forecast:  “I think the market will go down, but if it doesn’t I just predicted that too.” 

“Stupid is…”

For several years experts have proclaimed with certainty: globally encompassing recession risks were growing and the market would falter in the aftermath – tank, to be more accurate.  The last few months the tune has changed – now pundits are singing about when is the best day to get into stocks.

I avoid the words always, never, anytime, etc.  They are absolute the universe tends not to be.  So mildly diluted - Virtually anytime someone is trying to figure out the best day to buy stocks, he/she has already missed the best day. 

Back at the ranch unemployment continues to decline, manufacturing is accelerating, and the service sector is ramping up. 

"It's not hard to see how this recovery could become self-sustaining.”  [Nobel Economist and notable policy pessimist Paul Krugman.] "The downside risks are evaporating." [Harm Bandholz,Chief U.S. Economist at Unicredit Research.]  "Late last summer, I saw a 50-50 chance of recession. I have dialed that down quite a bit." [Robert Dye, Chief Economist at Comerica.]

Deutsche Bank, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and other institutions are re-adjusting growth forecasts for 2012 substantially higher than those just predicted. 

“As Stupid Does…”

These are intelligent, experienced specialists and firms. They now, however, find themselves far behind the market…along with those acting on their previous predictions. Safety in numbers I suppose.

If you stopped investing when things were scarier, start.  If you didn’t stop, keep going (and congratulations on capturing the 100% return when all the super geniuses are only now figuring out the best day to invest was in March of 2009).

In closing, another absolute word this time undiluted:  I can’t tell you if the next 20% market move will be up or down.  But I can tell you the next 100% move is always up.

Run Forest, run.

 I welcome your questions and comments.  becker@wiserfinancial.com

Marc Becker, AIF
Managing Partner, Wiser Financial Coaching
Columnist, The Advisor Sherpa     
 
Click here for Returns since 2009
Click here for an article about the improving economy
Click here for the January Market returns
Click here for changing projections
 
To read past articles and view past videos, visit: www.marcbecker.tv
 


Golf Tip of the Week

Beware of Over-Practicing Putting

I've never believed that quantity of practice alone will make a golfer a good putter. Without feel, touch and timing, I would not have holed the ball when it mattered, regardless of how many hundreds of putts I'd hit on a practice putting green.

Consequently, I've never practiced putting beyond a point where I knew I was doing what I wanted to with my stroke. This goal has always been the product of constant rhythm or tempo, marked by the putterface making solid and square contact with the ball. The physical feel and the mind-picture this produces is one of great fluidity between my hands and the putterhead.

Once I attain these goals in a practice session, I quit, even if I have stroked only a handful of putts. By continuing beyond that point, I risk becoming too mechanical or losing my sense of touch. You, too, should beware of spoiling a good thing by overdoing it.

Source:  http://www.nicklaus.com/nicklaus_golftips/



Trivia Time  

This week's question:  What is the total amount expected to be spent for Valentine's Day in the US this year?

Do you know?  E-mail your answer wendy@wiserfinancial.com and if you are correct, receive a free "Way to Go!", "You Rock!", or other congratulatory phrase.  Then brag to all your friends about how smart you are. 

The answers will be in next week's newsletter!

Last week's question:  What is the maximum capacity of the largest passenger ship currently in service?

Answer:   Royal Caribbean International's Allure of the Seas is currently the world's largest passenger ship with a maximum capacity of 6,360 people.

Congratulations to David R. for getting the correct answer!  Big applause!

Source:  www.wikipedia.org

The articles and opinions expressed in this newsletter were gathered from Marc Becker, The Advisor Lab, and a variety of other sources.  Articles are written by Marc Becker.  All sources are believed to be reliable but do not constitute specific investment advice. In all cases, please contact your investment professional before making any investment choices.

Copyright ©  2011 Wiser Financial Coaching LLC, All rights reserved.

Marc Becker
Wiser Financial Coaching, LLC
2741 Campus Walk Ave.
Bldg 400 Ste 400
Durham, NC 27705
Tel: (919) 477-3355
Fax: (919) 477-3366
becker@wiserfinancial.com
Securities offered through Triad Advisors Inc., Member FINRA/SIPC








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