My trick for valuing a retirement account is to look at the tax differential that you'll be 'earning' by putting the money into the retirement account, rather than a savings account. This means that they are only worth your time if you are in a high tax bracket now, and will be in a low tax bracket when you retire.
Take your current tax rate, and subtract the minimum tax bracket (15-20%) in your jurisdiction. Divide that number by the number of years until your retirement. This is the annual benefit of the retirement account. If its <3%, its not worth it, go buy a bond and keep access to the funds outside the retirement account. If its >3%, its starting to become worthwhile.
Anyone looking to invest for retirement should ignore this. The whole reason why you have IRA accounts it to save on the taxes yearly that will rape your dividends, reinvestment, and the power of compounding interest.
AdHustler said:
Im not sure what retirement accounts you are using but people must be confused or not make as much as they let on
Income limit on a roth IRA is 112k-127k for single Income Limits Updated for 2013
Income limit to take a deduction (hence the reason for locking the money in a retirement account) on traditional IRA is 60-70k AGI. iracontributionlimits2010
? ? ?
Everyone here should have some type of IRA no matter what they earn. I would recommend both Roth & traditional IRA or SEP-IRA.
Roth IRA's are great because if you make under $191K, I think in 2014 that's the limit, you can contribute $5,500 a year. You will not receive a tax break on it the year you contribute BUT when you invest those yearly contributions the ROTH is exempt from all income taxes for dividends & capital gains for the life of the account and even when you take distributions at 70 1/2 letting the compounding interest principle take effect.
And even millionaires can have traditional IRA account's -
2014 IRA Contribution and Deduction Limits - Effect of Modified AGI on Deductible Contributions if You are NOT Covered by a Retirement Plan at Work
Kiopa_Matt said:
If you don't have 30+ hours/week to spend on market research, then either just go with a firm like Edward Jones, or dump your money into Vanguard 500.
PS. You do realize that asking this on WF is the blind leading the blind, right? You might as well just go to Starbucks, and ask the barrister where you should invest your money.
I would listen to your own advice. Stick to programming buddy! :drinkup: Recommending Edward Jones is one of the worst pieces of financial advice you could post on this forum. The only reason they are in business is to take naive people's $$$ for retirement and transfer it to their pockets. 90% of people don't know or think this cus they aren't writing EDJ an actual check... their "Very attentive, personal advisor *cough* swindlers *cough*" with massive resources put them in a customized portofilo to match their own personal best interests *cough* commissions, promotions, bonus *cough cough* while raping their clients 1-2% AUM fees, putting them in high-load class A funds, 12b-1 fees, & commissions. Those fuckers even hit you with a $95 account closure fee when you smarten up and drop them clowns.
Hell, I'm sure they are really nice people and send their clients all types of perks like a sweet baked ham for Xmas and maybe some game tickets here or there. What's funny is the price of those tickets their clients are a free gift... they just don't realize what they are actually paying for them.
Let's hear from the people who know WTF they are talking about...
This first video is QFT.
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=idr6c8NHuWs]Buffett's best tip for personal finance - YouTube[/ame]
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0aegXd0Q1CI]John Bogle: How much do investors lose in charges and management fees? - YouTube[/ame]
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDYCwqmH1Ts]Lange-Bogle 3: What Hurts the Everyday Investor Now - YouTube[/ame]
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B7lizGrBAXM]THE LATEST NEWS : Vanguards Bogle Makes the Case for the Index Fund - YouTube[/ame]
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_4DREQgRZ6o&list=PLC81743DEAF303639]Jack Bogle: What the Business of Investing Is All About - Morningstar Video - YouTube[/ame]
As someone tagged below... post #3 /end thread hehehehe.
Read this book...
Read these to further your education on long-term investing for retirement:
Investment Books
Browse the Bogleheads forum -
Bogleheads • Index page
Seriously... it's best to educated yourself on this shit because ask yourself "who the fuck is gonna give a shit & have your best interest at hand about your assets, wealth, retirement, & $$$ that the person you see in the fucking mirror?"
Even if you do decide this shit is way over your head then take this advice please...
DO NOT USE A AUM CFP aka (Assets Under Management Financial Advisor) go with a Fee-Based CFP.
Read here why:
http://www.hullfinancialplanning.co...ke-getting-a-car-loan-from-a-used-car-dealer/
And that is another reason why I like Vanguard for my retirement accounts... if you have $50,000 in your accounts with them you get a CFP to give you a financial plan for like $100. If you have over $500,000 with them you can have a CFP on the line any time you need him for free. You have more than a mil you even get more sweet perks.
https://investor.vanguard.com/what-we-offer/personal-services/voyager-and-voyager-select-services
Again, my post is only about investing for long-term & retirement. mGrunin, day trading, & speculation is a whole different ball game.