Member You
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Finance > Wealth Building > 10 Ways to Protect Yourself from Broken Pension Promises

Tags

  • after
  • equity
  • extend investment
  • andor assets
  • having three

  • Links

  • Can Hypnosis Help With Pregnancy and Childbirth?
  • The Preschool Learning Difference
  • Using ClickBank To Find Winning Product Ideas Part 3
  • Member You - 10 Ways to Protect Yourself from Broken Pension Promises

    Problems With EFT
    EFT transactions are transmitted through an automated clearinghouse. This is known as an ACH operator and is a secured and preprogrammed system. It functions as a clearing facility controlled by private organizations or a Federal Reserve Bank and is a recognized system for inter bank electronic fund transfers. The National Automated Clearing House Association (NACHA) governs these systems and is responsible for their functionality.Problems with EFT become apparent when financial institutions do not abide by the NACHA operatives and regulations. These are detailed and stringent policies related to implementation, conformity and accountability. If these guidelines are not adhered to, it is not possible to eliminate problems of EFT.ACH transactions are stored in relate
    lves proper diversification and asset allocation which are key investing strategies. Risk management is achieved by managing your overall percentage of equities, being diversified, and allocating assets (rebalancing and shifting to maintain the appropriate investment strategy).

    o Don’t be derailed by details. There are many “little” things you can do to make your retirement planning and estate planning less complicated. Titling assets properly and naming the proper beneficiaries are just two of the many smaller things that can have a large impact on your financial plan. Keep a good record of all your assets, debts, and other obligations together in one location. Know what to keep in a safety deposit box and what to keep at home. Make sure everything is kept up to date by revising all information at least every three to five years, or sooner if you’ve experienced a major life event.

    o Ask an expert. Choose a financial advisor who specializes in working with retirees to position and/or reposition their assets to preserve and maximize their retirement income stream, minimize taxes, and reduce overall portfolio risk

    Why Should You Send E-Newsletters?
    Flashy public relations campaigns and advertisements are fine, but today’s consumers want to know more about the company behind the marketing campaigns. They need to have confidence in the company, know it behaves ethically, and has specific expertise and qualifications that can help solve their customers’ problems.Contribute to Your Readers’ Professional GrowthWith the economy being somewhat unpredictable today, anything you can do to help your customers gain useful information and add value to their companies is a good move. Your expertise, via an E-Newsletter each month, lets your readers know that your willingness to help and share useful information is always available.For example, some of the feedback from the Biz Talk E-Newsletter incl
    You’re retired – so now what? Hopefully you have spent the majority of your adult life appropriately budgeting, investing, and otherwise planning for retirement, and can spend the entirety of your golden years sailing around the globe on a well-appointed and professionally staffed yacht. Unfortunately, most throughout our nation will not live out their senior years quite this luxuriously, due largely to minimal, off-target, downright shoddy, or a complete lack of retirement-specific financial planning. Or, perhaps it’s due to the rampant “here today, gone tomorrow” pension plans that have plagued corporate America.

    What, then, can get our burgeoning senior population to the financial promise land - or at least able to live out a comfortable retirement - particularly if their pension plan nest eggs gets scrambled? Senior Financial Coach Hank Parrott, President of Estate & Financial Strategies, Inc., offers these ten fundamental, though key, strategies for retirement-based financial planning, which can and should be implemented by young and old alike in working to secure their financial future whether or not they are part of any pension plan:

    o Know where your money is. You probably have your retirement resources in a number of different accounts: 401(k)s and similar plans, IRAs, non-retirement accounts, your home, annuities, CDs, and other places. In addition, you may have other sources of retirement income and/or assets such as that from Social Security and company pension plans, which have been riddled with problems of late, as well as stock options, and life insurance policies.

    o Do a “needs analysis”. Determine your required retirement budget by reviewing your traditional, retirement income sources, such as pension plans and Social Security that may or may not be meeting your expectation; your employer-sponsored plans; and personal investments in stocks, bonds, and other investments. Contrast that with potential expenses such as that for medical, insurance, prescription medication, and long term care. Ensure that you can cover these possibilities on your own, without the aid of employer-based benefits.

    o Make assets work for you. Forget about using the traditional “risk tolerance” assessment profiles or programs. While this approach may have worked well before retirement, you need to know your money is secure and that you have an adequate retirement income stream. That means taking a whole new approach to asset allocation, which will provide a stable, predictable retirement income stream with minimal risk exposure.

    o Estate planning is mandatory, not optional. How many times have you heard it said, the only things in life that are certain are death and taxes? When it comes to retirement and estate planning, that truism is very appropriate. Estate planning consists of many actions, with almost all having three primary and oh-so-important purposes: to protect your privacy, to reduce taxes, and to make probate simple for your heirs. There are five essential documents for estate planning: Revocable Living Trust, Pour Over Will, General Durable Power of Attorney, Power of Attorney for Health Care, and a Living Will.

    o Plan for taxes: an unavoidable, though containable, reality. During your lifetime you pay many different types of taxes: Federal, state, local, property, use, auto, business, capital gains, and on and on. When you die you may also have to pay federal and state taxes. Taxes don’t end when you die. That means planning for taxes both during your retirement, and after your death. Failing to plan can result in some horrendous tax bills, penalties, and interest.

    o Near term planning for long term care. Develop a plan for long-term care because it is expensive and can quickly deplete your retirement funds. It is important to educate yourself in advance on the type of long-term care, the ways to pay for it without using all your assets, the limitations of programs such as Medicare and Medicaid, and the provisions involved in long-term care insurance.

    o Benefit from built in guarantees. Consider the power that equity index annuities (EIAs) can play in guaranteeing principle while maximizing retirement income. EIAs have many of the advantages of the market but without the inherent risks. One of the best benefits of an EIA is safety and its ability to accumulate money with guarantees of principal.

    o Prudently extend investment allocations. Consider investing in stocks, bonds, and mutual funds, but assure an approach that involves proper diversification and asset allocation which are key investing strategies. Risk management is achieved by managing your overall percentage of equities, being diversified, and allocating assets (rebalancing and shifting to maintain the appropriate investment strategy).

    o Don’t be derailed by details. There are many “little” things you can do to make your retirement planning and estate planning less complicated. Titling assets properly and naming the proper beneficiaries are just two of the many smaller things that can have a large impact on your financial plan. Keep a good record of all your assets, debts, and other obligations together in one location. Know what to keep in a safety deposit box and what to keep at home. Make sure everything is kept up to date by revising all information at least every three to five years, or sooner if you’ve experienced a major life event.

    o Ask an expert. Choose a financial advisor who specializes in working with retirees to position and/or reposition their assets to preserve and maximize their retirement income stream, minimize taxes, and reduce overall portfolio risk

    How To Understand Cross-Cultural Analysis
    Cross-cultural analysis could be a very perplexing field to understand with many different viewpoints, aims and concepts. The origins of cross-cultural analysis in the 19th century world of colonialism was strongly grounded in the concept of cultural evolution, which claimed that all societies progress through an identical series of distinct evolutionary stages.The origin of the word culture comes from the Latin verb colere = "tend, guard, cultivate, till". This concept is a human construct rather than a product of nature. The use of the English word in the sense of "cultivation through education" is first recorded in 1510. The use of the word to mean "the intellectual side of civilization" is from 1805; that of "collective customs and achievements of
    rt of any pension plan:

    o Know where your money is. You probably have your retirement resources in a number of different accounts: 401(k)s and similar plans, IRAs, non-retirement accounts, your home, annuities, CDs, and other places. In addition, you may have other sources of retirement income and/or assets such as that from Social Security and company pension plans, which have been riddled with problems of late, as well as stock options, and life insurance policies.

    o Do a “needs analysis”. Determine your required retirement budget by reviewing your traditional, retirement income sources, such as pension plans and Social Security that may or may not be meeting your expectation; your employer-sponsored plans; and personal investments in stocks, bonds, and other investments. Contrast that with potential expenses such as that for medical, insurance, prescription medication, and long term care. Ensure that you can cover these possibilities on your own, without the aid of employer-based benefits.

    o Make assets work for you. Forget about using the traditional “risk tolerance” assessment profiles or programs. While this approach may have worked well before retirement, you need to know your money is secure and that you have an adequate retirement income stream. That means taking a whole new approach to asset allocation, which will provide a stable, predictable retirement income stream with minimal risk exposure.

    o Estate planning is mandatory, not optional. How many times have you heard it said, the only things in life that are certain are death and taxes? When it comes to retirement and estate planning, that truism is very appropriate. Estate planning consists of many actions, with almost all having three primary and oh-so-important purposes: to protect your privacy, to reduce taxes, and to make probate simple for your heirs. There are five essential documents for estate planning: Revocable Living Trust, Pour Over Will, General Durable Power of Attorney, Power of Attorney for Health Care, and a Living Will.

    o Plan for taxes: an unavoidable, though containable, reality. During your lifetime you pay many different types of taxes: Federal, state, local, property, use, auto, business, capital gains, and on and on. When you die you may also have to pay federal and state taxes. Taxes don’t end when you die. That means planning for taxes both during your retirement, and after your death. Failing to plan can result in some horrendous tax bills, penalties, and interest.

    o Near term planning for long term care. Develop a plan for long-term care because it is expensive and can quickly deplete your retirement funds. It is important to educate yourself in advance on the type of long-term care, the ways to pay for it without using all your assets, the limitations of programs such as Medicare and Medicaid, and the provisions involved in long-term care insurance.

    o Benefit from built in guarantees. Consider the power that equity index annuities (EIAs) can play in guaranteeing principle while maximizing retirement income. EIAs have many of the advantages of the market but without the inherent risks. One of the best benefits of an EIA is safety and its ability to accumulate money with guarantees of principal.

    o Prudently extend investment allocations. Consider investing in stocks, bonds, and mutual funds, but assure an approach that involves proper diversification and asset allocation which are key investing strategies. Risk management is achieved by managing your overall percentage of equities, being diversified, and allocating assets (rebalancing and shifting to maintain the appropriate investment strategy).

    o Don’t be derailed by details. There are many “little” things you can do to make your retirement planning and estate planning less complicated. Titling assets properly and naming the proper beneficiaries are just two of the many smaller things that can have a large impact on your financial plan. Keep a good record of all your assets, debts, and other obligations together in one location. Know what to keep in a safety deposit box and what to keep at home. Make sure everything is kept up to date by revising all information at least every three to five years, or sooner if you’ve experienced a major life event.

    o Ask an expert. Choose a financial advisor who specializes in working with retirees to position and/or reposition their assets to preserve and maximize their retirement income stream, minimize taxes, and reduce overall portfolio risk

    Computer Consulting Training: Should You Get this or Clients First?
    A big question when starting out is comparable to the chicken and the egg dilemma. Do you get computer consulting training first and then look for clients? Or do you look for clients and then get the relevant training. In this article, you'll learn why it's best to do them both at the same time.How About Both?When guiding owners of new computer consulting firms, my general preference is to do both client recruitment and skills development at the same time. You shouldn't take six months off to do computer consulting training because six months later, how are you going to pay the bills? You need paying clients to survive and thrive in the computer consulting business.On the other hand, if you let six months to a year go by and you're not keeping your technical
    ile this approach may have worked well before retirement, you need to know your money is secure and that you have an adequate retirement income stream. That means taking a whole new approach to asset allocation, which will provide a stable, predictable retirement income stream with minimal risk exposure.

    o Estate planning is mandatory, not optional. How many times have you heard it said, the only things in life that are certain are death and taxes? When it comes to retirement and estate planning, that truism is very appropriate. Estate planning consists of many actions, with almost all having three primary and oh-so-important purposes: to protect your privacy, to reduce taxes, and to make probate simple for your heirs. There are five essential documents for estate planning: Revocable Living Trust, Pour Over Will, General Durable Power of Attorney, Power of Attorney for Health Care, and a Living Will.

    o Plan for taxes: an unavoidable, though containable, reality. During your lifetime you pay many different types of taxes: Federal, state, local, property, use, auto, business, capital gains, and on and on. When you die you may also have to pay federal and state taxes. Taxes don’t end when you die. That means planning for taxes both during your retirement, and after your death. Failing to plan can result in some horrendous tax bills, penalties, and interest.

    o Near term planning for long term care. Develop a plan for long-term care because it is expensive and can quickly deplete your retirement funds. It is important to educate yourself in advance on the type of long-term care, the ways to pay for it without using all your assets, the limitations of programs such as Medicare and Medicaid, and the provisions involved in long-term care insurance.

    o Benefit from built in guarantees. Consider the power that equity index annuities (EIAs) can play in guaranteeing principle while maximizing retirement income. EIAs have many of the advantages of the market but without the inherent risks. One of the best benefits of an EIA is safety and its ability to accumulate money with guarantees of principal.

    o Prudently extend investment allocations. Consider investing in stocks, bonds, and mutual funds, but assure an approach that involves proper diversification and asset allocation which are key investing strategies. Risk management is achieved by managing your overall percentage of equities, being diversified, and allocating assets (rebalancing and shifting to maintain the appropriate investment strategy).

    o Don’t be derailed by details. There are many “little” things you can do to make your retirement planning and estate planning less complicated. Titling assets properly and naming the proper beneficiaries are just two of the many smaller things that can have a large impact on your financial plan. Keep a good record of all your assets, debts, and other obligations together in one location. Know what to keep in a safety deposit box and what to keep at home. Make sure everything is kept up to date by revising all information at least every three to five years, or sooner if you’ve experienced a major life event.

    o Ask an expert. Choose a financial advisor who specializes in working with retirees to position and/or reposition their assets to preserve and maximize their retirement income stream, minimize taxes, and reduce overall portfolio risk

    Five Attributes of Entrepreneurs
    Entrepreneurs have personality traits that make them ideal people to work for themselves. These same traits, while helpful as an entrepreneur can be irritating and dangerous for normal on-the-job relationships with bosses, managers, and supervisors.1. Willingness to take risks. Being an entrepreneur is demanding. Everything is a risk to someone who only depends upon themselves. Entrepreneurs learn to take calculated risks. They can’t throw complete caution to the wind, but they are much more willing to take a risk which seems within reason.2. Ability to identify good business ideas. For an entrepreneur one of the greatest abilities is that of identifying a good business idea. If a person sees a good business idea, even if it is already being done, just recognizing t
    ie you may also have to pay federal and state taxes. Taxes don’t end when you die. That means planning for taxes both during your retirement, and after your death. Failing to plan can result in some horrendous tax bills, penalties, and interest.

    o Near term planning for long term care. Develop a plan for long-term care because it is expensive and can quickly deplete your retirement funds. It is important to educate yourself in advance on the type of long-term care, the ways to pay for it without using all your assets, the limitations of programs such as Medicare and Medicaid, and the provisions involved in long-term care insurance.

    o Benefit from built in guarantees. Consider the power that equity index annuities (EIAs) can play in guaranteeing principle while maximizing retirement income. EIAs have many of the advantages of the market but without the inherent risks. One of the best benefits of an EIA is safety and its ability to accumulate money with guarantees of principal.

    o Prudently extend investment allocations. Consider investing in stocks, bonds, and mutual funds, but assure an approach that involves proper diversification and asset allocation which are key investing strategies. Risk management is achieved by managing your overall percentage of equities, being diversified, and allocating assets (rebalancing and shifting to maintain the appropriate investment strategy).

    o Don’t be derailed by details. There are many “little” things you can do to make your retirement planning and estate planning less complicated. Titling assets properly and naming the proper beneficiaries are just two of the many smaller things that can have a large impact on your financial plan. Keep a good record of all your assets, debts, and other obligations together in one location. Know what to keep in a safety deposit box and what to keep at home. Make sure everything is kept up to date by revising all information at least every three to five years, or sooner if you’ve experienced a major life event.

    o Ask an expert. Choose a financial advisor who specializes in working with retirees to position and/or reposition their assets to preserve and maximize their retirement income stream, minimize taxes, and reduce overall portfolio risk

    Top Tips For Affiliates – If Only You Desire Success
    I am sure that you are reading this stuff because you already know that some people are earning fat checks monthly from affiliate programmes and you probably want to duplicate their success story. However, your case has been different and opposite. Affiliate programs have never put enough money in your bank account; rather, all your efforts are being wasted, or perhaps you are even losing money. But what have you been doing wrong? How can you slide from your current position towards becoming a super affiliate? It is by learning some tricks and secrets being used by these super affiliates which you have been ignoring.Let me give you some tips which will take you to the top. (You have a bunch on my website)Tip One. I will recommend that you pick the best of affili
    lves proper diversification and asset allocation which are key investing strategies. Risk management is achieved by managing your overall percentage of equities, being diversified, and allocating assets (rebalancing and shifting to maintain the appropriate investment strategy).

    o Don’t be derailed by details. There are many “little” things you can do to make your retirement planning and estate planning less complicated. Titling assets properly and naming the proper beneficiaries are just two of the many smaller things that can have a large impact on your financial plan. Keep a good record of all your assets, debts, and other obligations together in one location. Know what to keep in a safety deposit box and what to keep at home. Make sure everything is kept up to date by revising all information at least every three to five years, or sooner if you’ve experienced a major life event.

    o Ask an expert. Choose a financial advisor who specializes in working with retirees to position and/or reposition their assets to preserve and maximize their retirement income stream, minimize taxes, and reduce overall portfolio risk. This specialist should be able to help you with referrals for other essential advisors, including elder law attorneys, estate planning attorneys, tax specialists, and senior advocates.

    Parrott notes, “Ensuring a comfortable retirement in today’s volatile business and investment climate is not always easy, but it is quite doable. By carefully analyzing your available assets and resources, and making strategic adjustments in the types of investments you own, you can both preserve your hard-earned assets and have the retirement income stream that meets, and perhaps even exceeds, your needs.”

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.memberyou.net/article/120299/memberyou-10-Ways-to-Protect-Yourself-from-Broken-Pension-Promises.html">10 Ways to Protect Yourself from Broken Pension Promises</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.memberyou.net/article/120299/memberyou-10-Ways-to-Protect-Yourself-from-Broken-Pension-Promises.html]10 Ways to Protect Yourself from Broken Pension Promises[/url]

    Related Articles:

    Medical Billing - GD0 Field Requirements

    Returns, How To Handle Them, And Save The Sale

    Success Secrets Of A Famous Vacuum Salesperson

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com