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Member You - Annuities - Why You Shouldn't Annuitize
The Simplest Ways To Make Money Online payment, adjust it for inflation and possibly never even touch your principal. Even if you end up using some principal, the chances are much greater that there will be money leftover for your heirs.There are millions made daily online, through various programs, websites, and Internet businesses. Many people are taking their offline businesses online to tap into the online business world. Many shoppers these days are turning to online shopping for the ease and comfort of it, and this has created so many online business opportunities.From grandparents to house wives, doctors to professors, computer technicians to working mothers, these are just a few of the many people turning to online business opportunities to either make extra income or supplemen Some would rather let an insurance company bare the risks for them. There are risks to doing it yourself: interest rate risk, undisciplined spending, market risk, etc.. But these are easily mitigated in a well-managed portfolio, and are far outweighed by your ability to earn a higher return while maintaining access and control of your money. Have a financial question? Send me an email and I’ll personally respond, free of charge. Go to www.guardingyourwealth.com and click on ‘Ask Jeff’. SPECIAL REPORT: Did you know that you could pay as much as 3% a year in money management fees by hiring an investment advisor? I've just relea New Year Goal Setting For Your Career As more companies do away with their pension programs, the insurance industry and the media are heavily promoting the use of immediate annuities to provide a dependable income stream during your retirement. But is that in your best interest? Normally, I say it is not. Read on to find out why.It’s that time of year when we start looking towards the New Year and wondering what it has in store for us.When it comes to our career, the New Year is the time when we often start thinking about making a clean break and getting a fresh start by setting New Year goals.Often this means looking for a new job but setting New Year goals doesn’t necessarily have to be strictly related to looking for a new job. There are plenty of things you can do in your life that will help to make a positive impact not only in your work life but in your personal li An immediate annuity is one where you pay an insurance company a lump sum in return for a stream of income. You can decide if the income stream is guaranteed for a certain number of years (period certain), for a set number of years or your lifetime—whichever is greater; and whether your spouse should receive benefits for his/her lifetime after your death. Since you can receive a set payment for life and can also provide for your spouse after your death, this is seen as a ‘perfect’ pension replacement. There are four main reasons that I don’t advise this. First, when you buy an immediate annuity you exchange a lump sum for a series of monthly payments. The lump sum is gone…forever. At that point your return is dependent on how long you and/or your spouse live (unless you chose period certain). If you live longer than the life insurance company expects then you get a higher overall return on your investment. If you die before then your return drops considerably. For instance, Jack and Jill are both 62 and buy a joint life annuity for $250,000. In return, they’ll receive $1468 every month for the rest of their lives, regardless of who dies first. After the remaining spouse dies, that’s it. Nothing goes to your children. Assuming their joint life expectancy is 85 years old, the internal rate of return on the annuity is about 4.6%. If they both die at 75 years old their average annual rate of return is negative 1.3%. If at least one of them lives to age 95 then the return on the investment was 6.1%. So your expected return is 4.6%, but your actual return may be more or less. That illustrates another reason that I don’t think people should annuitize—all they are doing the first so many years is getting back THEIR money. Picture putting that same $250,000 under your mattress. Then each month you reach in and pull out $1468. You wouldn’t run out of money until 14 years later! That’s if you aren’t earning interest on it. If you just put the money in a money market earning 3% you could keep using it until age 80. Interest rates have been going up and some money market accounts are paying 4.75%. Use one of those (or buy a 30-year Treasury bond) and you would cover the payments until one of you reached 86. There are other benefits of not annuitizing. If your situation changes and you want/need access to more than the $1468 a month, you have access to the remaining principal. If you die before the money runs out the remainder can go to your children. The return you receive isn’t based on how long you live but on how it is invested. Over time, inflation is your greatest risk. Jack and Jill’s annuity payment does not increase for inflation each year. If it did, it would be much lower to start with. Doing it yourself allows you to increase your payments over time if needed and/or based on your return. Obviously, I feel there are better ways to invest $250,000 than putting it in a money market or CD. Over a similar period of time, a well-managed, well-diversified portfolio of stocks, bonds and real estate should average 8% or more. If so, you can meet the same income payment, adjust it for inflation and possibly never even touch your principal. Even if you end up using some principal, the chances are much greater that there will be money leftover for your heirs. Some would rather let an insurance company bare the risks for them. There are risks to doing it yourself: interest rate risk, undisciplined spending, market risk, etc.. But these are easily mitigated in a well-managed portfolio, and are far outweighed by your ability to earn a higher return while maintaining access and control of your money. Have a financial question? Send me an email and I’ll personally respond, free of charge. Go to www.guardingyourwealth.com and click on ‘Ask Jeff’. SPECIAL REPORT: Did you know that you could pay as much as 3% a year in money management fees by hiring an investment advisor? I've just releas Finding The Right Franchise Opportunity .There are thousands of people looking for a way to stop working for someone else and become the owners of their own businesses. But the odds of succeeding, quite frankly, are not good.There’s a commonly held “theory of thirds” among business experts; it states that of all new businesses one-third never get out of the red; one-third just break even; and one-third actually make money. For those which do make money, there does not seem to be a theory regarding how many of them make enough money to support their owners. Statistics from the US Small Busine First, when you buy an immediate annuity you exchange a lump sum for a series of monthly payments. The lump sum is gone…forever. At that point your return is dependent on how long you and/or your spouse live (unless you chose period certain). If you live longer than the life insurance company expects then you get a higher overall return on your investment. If you die before then your return drops considerably. For instance, Jack and Jill are both 62 and buy a joint life annuity for $250,000. In return, they’ll receive $1468 every month for the rest of their lives, regardless of who dies first. After the remaining spouse dies, that’s it. Nothing goes to your children. Assuming their joint life expectancy is 85 years old, the internal rate of return on the annuity is about 4.6%. If they both die at 75 years old their average annual rate of return is negative 1.3%. If at least one of them lives to age 95 then the return on the investment was 6.1%. So your expected return is 4.6%, but your actual return may be more or less. That illustrates another reason that I don’t think people should annuitize—all they are doing the first so many years is getting back THEIR money. Picture putting that same $250,000 under your mattress. Then each month you reach in and pull out $1468. You wouldn’t run out of money until 14 years later! That’s if you aren’t earning interest on it. If you just put the money in a money market earning 3% you could keep using it until age 80. Interest rates have been going up and some money market accounts are paying 4.75%. Use one of those (or buy a 30-year Treasury bond) and you would cover the payments until one of you reached 86. There are other benefits of not annuitizing. If your situation changes and you want/need access to more than the $1468 a month, you have access to the remaining principal. If you die before the money runs out the remainder can go to your children. The return you receive isn’t based on how long you live but on how it is invested. Over time, inflation is your greatest risk. Jack and Jill’s annuity payment does not increase for inflation each year. If it did, it would be much lower to start with. Doing it yourself allows you to increase your payments over time if needed and/or based on your return. Obviously, I feel there are better ways to invest $250,000 than putting it in a money market or CD. Over a similar period of time, a well-managed, well-diversified portfolio of stocks, bonds and real estate should average 8% or more. If so, you can meet the same income payment, adjust it for inflation and possibly never even touch your principal. Even if you end up using some principal, the chances are much greater that there will be money leftover for your heirs. Some would rather let an insurance company bare the risks for them. There are risks to doing it yourself: interest rate risk, undisciplined spending, market risk, etc.. But these are easily mitigated in a well-managed portfolio, and are far outweighed by your ability to earn a higher return while maintaining access and control of your money. Have a financial question? Send me an email and I’ll personally respond, free of charge. Go to www.guardingyourwealth.com and click on ‘Ask Jeff’. SPECIAL REPORT: Did you know that you could pay as much as 3% a year in money management fees by hiring an investment advisor? I've just relea Identifying Potential in Ourselves and Others e of return is negative 1.3%. If at least one of them lives to age 95 then the return on the investment was 6.1%. So your expected return is 4.6%, but your actual return may be more or less.If there is someone nearby as you read this look in their eyes. Look closely and you will see great potential inside this person regardless of how “successful” or accomplished they are. If you are alone, get up, find a mirror, and look in your own eyes. There is great potential there too! If you don’t believe this premise - that great potential is inside each of us - there is no reason to continue reading. Why? Because this article will give you concrete steps to help you recognize and find that potential in yourself and others. If you d That illustrates another reason that I don’t think people should annuitize—all they are doing the first so many years is getting back THEIR money. Picture putting that same $250,000 under your mattress. Then each month you reach in and pull out $1468. You wouldn’t run out of money until 14 years later! That’s if you aren’t earning interest on it. If you just put the money in a money market earning 3% you could keep using it until age 80. Interest rates have been going up and some money market accounts are paying 4.75%. Use one of those (or buy a 30-year Treasury bond) and you would cover the payments until one of you reached 86. There are other benefits of not annuitizing. If your situation changes and you want/need access to more than the $1468 a month, you have access to the remaining principal. If you die before the money runs out the remainder can go to your children. The return you receive isn’t based on how long you live but on how it is invested. Over time, inflation is your greatest risk. Jack and Jill’s annuity payment does not increase for inflation each year. If it did, it would be much lower to start with. Doing it yourself allows you to increase your payments over time if needed and/or based on your return. Obviously, I feel there are better ways to invest $250,000 than putting it in a money market or CD. Over a similar period of time, a well-managed, well-diversified portfolio of stocks, bonds and real estate should average 8% or more. If so, you can meet the same income payment, adjust it for inflation and possibly never even touch your principal. Even if you end up using some principal, the chances are much greater that there will be money leftover for your heirs. Some would rather let an insurance company bare the risks for them. There are risks to doing it yourself: interest rate risk, undisciplined spending, market risk, etc.. But these are easily mitigated in a well-managed portfolio, and are far outweighed by your ability to earn a higher return while maintaining access and control of your money. Have a financial question? Send me an email and I’ll personally respond, free of charge. Go to www.guardingyourwealth.com and click on ‘Ask Jeff’. SPECIAL REPORT: Did you know that you could pay as much as 3% a year in money management fees by hiring an investment advisor? I've just relea Surprise! Accounting is the Hot New Major efits of not annuitizing. If your situation changes and you want/need access to more than the $1468 a month, you have access to the remaining principal. If you die before the money runs out the remainder can go to your children. The return you receive isn’t based on how long you live but on how it is invested.There was a time when accounting was the boring college major that many people regretted signing up for. A constant barrage of numbers, statistics and spreadsheets was none too interesting.Boy, have times changed! Thanks to recent accounting scandals by companies like Enron, there is a high demand for accountants and auditors.According to the Job Outlook 2005 survey, accounting comes out on top as the most in-demand major on college campuses. Forget dot com start ups. Cleaning up a company’s accounting books is what’s in.But can accounting Over time, inflation is your greatest risk. Jack and Jill’s annuity payment does not increase for inflation each year. If it did, it would be much lower to start with. Doing it yourself allows you to increase your payments over time if needed and/or based on your return. Obviously, I feel there are better ways to invest $250,000 than putting it in a money market or CD. Over a similar period of time, a well-managed, well-diversified portfolio of stocks, bonds and real estate should average 8% or more. If so, you can meet the same income payment, adjust it for inflation and possibly never even touch your principal. Even if you end up using some principal, the chances are much greater that there will be money leftover for your heirs. Some would rather let an insurance company bare the risks for them. There are risks to doing it yourself: interest rate risk, undisciplined spending, market risk, etc.. But these are easily mitigated in a well-managed portfolio, and are far outweighed by your ability to earn a higher return while maintaining access and control of your money. Have a financial question? Send me an email and I’ll personally respond, free of charge. Go to www.guardingyourwealth.com and click on ‘Ask Jeff’. SPECIAL REPORT: Did you know that you could pay as much as 3% a year in money management fees by hiring an investment advisor? I've just relea Your Various Alternatives To Debt Elimination-Learn To Fight Debt Outright payment, adjust it for inflation and possibly never even touch your principal. Even if you end up using some principal, the chances are much greater that there will be money leftover for your heirs.Multiple credit cards and store cards accumulates a large amount of debt. With the passage of time, the credit card holder will not be in a position to get out of the debt trap that he’s fallen into. Tackling debts at the right time is the need of the hour.Some simple self-initiated actions include:You set a monthly amount Pay all your minimum amounts and get rid off smaller debts Get rid of too many credit cards, pay of the smaller balance Pay extra money toward your debts with the highest interest rateBy setting asi Some would rather let an insurance company bare the risks for them. There are risks to doing it yourself: interest rate risk, undisciplined spending, market risk, etc.. But these are easily mitigated in a well-managed portfolio, and are far outweighed by your ability to earn a higher return while maintaining access and control of your money. Have a financial question? Send me an email and I’ll personally respond, free of charge. Go to www.guardingyourwealth.com and click on ‘Ask Jeff’. SPECIAL REPORT: Did you know that you could pay as much as 3% a year in money management fees by hiring an investment advisor? I've just released a groundbreaking report will show you in clear and concise ways why hiring an investment advisor may be one of the most costly mistakes you'll ever make -- and what the profitable alternatives are.
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