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Default ah, yes, the latest on my company 401K


"bpuharic" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 22 Jul 2010 11:32:25 -0400, wrote:

On Thu, 22 Jul 2010 06:30:16 -0400, bpuharic wrote:

it's greed. there's a reason the financial sector accounted for 40% of
GDP in 2007 while the US did NOT become more competitive in world
markets. the financial sector added NOTHING to US assets


Where do you think the money for your retirement will be coming from?


that's the problem. there is none.


The whole basis for everyone's pension, 401k and IRA is that Wall
Street sector you seem to hate.


gee. that's why i'll have to work, like millions of others, until i'm
70

so you're right. wall street has our money for retirement

which means no one can retire. thanks. i already knew that

Retirees are by definition not adding
anything to the economy, they are living off of it.
The same is true of everyone on Social Security. You better hope Wall
Street stays 40% of the economy if you want your 401k to be worth
anything when you start sucking off the public tit.


bull****. wall street produces nothing. there is no value added in
trading CDO's

you know **** about business. if what you say is true, then why is the
economy a disaster?

answer: because too many people believe as you do.


Not sure how old you are, but if you're in your late 40s, there's still time
to have a shot at a decent retirement income. You might want to consider
alternative instruments, such as a modified whole-life insurance policy.
They're not just about death benefits. There are some that will give you a
payout that is tax-free income between say 70 and 85, and still leave you
some cash balance without taking away from the death benefit over much. I'd
suggest talking to a reputable agent, e.g., New York Life or another of the
biggies.


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Default ah, yes, the latest on my company 401K


"bpuharic" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 22 Jul 2010 10:14:04 -0700, "nom=de=plume"
wrote:


"bpuharic" wrote in message
. ..
On Thu, 22 Jul 2010 11:32:25 -0400, wrote:


you know **** about business. if what you say is true, then why is the
economy a disaster?

answer: because too many people believe as you do.


Not sure how old you are, but if you're in your late 40s, there's still
time
to have a shot at a decent retirement income.


that's true. unfortunately i'm 55. it's going to be a long hot summer

You might want to consider
alternative instruments, such as a modified whole-life insurance policy.
They're not just about death benefits. There are some that will give you a
payout that is tax-free income between say 70 and 85, and still leave you
some cash balance without taking away from the death benefit over much.
I'd
suggest talking to a reputable agent, e.g., New York Life or another of
the
biggies.


i'd thought about that but the matching from my employer's 401K is
pretty good...i also have been talking with my funds manager about the
slowing of the economy to see where we go from here.



At 55 you'd still see some benefit but it wouldn't be as good. I'd
definitely fund your 401K with the match but no more. The problem is that
taxes will increase, and you're going to have to take the money out at some
point. Even if you can offset somewhat, it'll still help.


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Default ah, yes, the latest on my company 401K

On Thu, 22 Jul 2010 11:49:19 -0700, "nom=de=plume"
wrote:


"bpuharic" wrote in message
.. .
On Thu, 22 Jul 2010 10:14:04 -0700, "nom=de=plume"
wrote:


i'd thought about that but the matching from my employer's 401K is
pretty good...i also have been talking with my funds manager about the
slowing of the economy to see where we go from here.



At 55 you'd still see some benefit but it wouldn't be as good. I'd
definitely fund your 401K with the match but no more. The problem is that
taxes will increase, and you're going to have to take the money out at some
point. Even if you can offset somewhat, it'll still help.


yeah i've been doing the minimum for awhile. lots of managers
recommend putting 10-20% in but no one has that kind of money and it's
nonsense to do that when it's far from certain wall street has a clue
about anything




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Jim Jim is offline
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Default ah, yes, the latest on my company 401K

nom=de=plume wrote:

"bpuharic" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 22 Jul 2010 10:14:04 -0700, "nom=de=plume"
wrote:


"bpuharic" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 22 Jul 2010 11:32:25 -0400, wrote:


you know **** about business. if what you say is true, then why is the
economy a disaster?

answer: because too many people believe as you do.


Not sure how old you are, but if you're in your late 40s, there's
still time
to have a shot at a decent retirement income.


that's true. unfortunately i'm 55. it's going to be a long hot summer

You might want to consider
alternative instruments, such as a modified whole-life insurance policy.
They're not just about death benefits. There are some that will give
you a
payout that is tax-free income between say 70 and 85, and still leave
you
some cash balance without taking away from the death benefit over
much. I'd
suggest talking to a reputable agent, e.g., New York Life or another
of the
biggies.


i'd thought about that but the matching from my employer's 401K is
pretty good...i also have been talking with my funds manager about the
slowing of the economy to see where we go from here.



At 55 you'd still see some benefit but it wouldn't be as good. I'd
definitely fund your 401K with the match but no more. The problem is
that taxes will increase, and you're going to have to take the money out
at some point. Even if you can offset somewhat, it'll still help.


Bad advice. With catch-up he can put $22k this year in the 401k.
He should be maxing that to shelter it from taxes.
Even if it's money market with no return.
The feds won't let MM go below par because the economy would collapse.
That tax savings is money in the bank.
Maybe about 5 grand for him.
When he takes it out upon retirement he'll be in a lower or no-tax bracket.
Save, save, save. Then you die.
Or you could gamble with equity funds. But don't cry about it.

Jim - Financial whiz kid. Hey, I ain't broke or complaining.



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Default ah, yes, the latest on my company 401K


"Jim" wrote in message
...
nom=de=plume wrote:

"bpuharic" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 22 Jul 2010 10:14:04 -0700, "nom=de=plume"
wrote:


"bpuharic" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 22 Jul 2010 11:32:25 -0400, wrote:


you know **** about business. if what you say is true, then why is the
economy a disaster?

answer: because too many people believe as you do.


Not sure how old you are, but if you're in your late 40s, there's still
time
to have a shot at a decent retirement income.

that's true. unfortunately i'm 55. it's going to be a long hot summer

You might want to consider
alternative instruments, such as a modified whole-life insurance
policy.
They're not just about death benefits. There are some that will give
you a
payout that is tax-free income between say 70 and 85, and still leave
you
some cash balance without taking away from the death benefit over much.
I'd
suggest talking to a reputable agent, e.g., New York Life or another of
the
biggies.

i'd thought about that but the matching from my employer's 401K is
pretty good...i also have been talking with my funds manager about the
slowing of the economy to see where we go from here.



At 55 you'd still see some benefit but it wouldn't be as good. I'd
definitely fund your 401K with the match but no more. The problem is that
taxes will increase, and you're going to have to take the money out at
some point. Even if you can offset somewhat, it'll still help.


Bad advice. With catch-up he can put $22k this year in the 401k.
He should be maxing that to shelter it from taxes.


Nope. Right now, taxes are low, so it's doubtful that a it'll push him into
a higher bracket, and even if it does, you're talking about a couple of
percent. The future is much more uncertain, but it's very clear that taxes
will likely go up, and as a retired person, he should be minimizing his tax
exposure.

Even if it's money market with no return.


?? That makes no sense at all.

The feds won't let MM go below par because the economy would collapse.
That tax savings is money in the bank.


?? There tax savings of investing in a 401K is minimal at this point.

Maybe about 5 grand for him.
When he takes it out upon retirement he'll be in a lower or no-tax
bracket.


Actually, that's doubtful and thee money he'll be taking out will be much
less than he's likely to be used to living on. By putting money into
something that basically gives you back your own money, you can take it tax
free and mitigate what will have to come out of your 401k/ira and be taxed.

Save, save, save. Then you die.


Amend this with, save, save, save, spend, spend, spend, die, get a death
bene for your heirs.

Or you could gamble with equity funds. But don't cry about it.

Jim - Financial whiz kid. Hey, I ain't broke or complaining.


I'd suggest talking to a qualified financial advisor who gets a fee vs. a
percentage, and not listen to me or anyone else on this newsgroup. I also
wouldn't rely on "fund" managers. They've got an axe to grind also.



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Jim Jim is offline
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Default ah, yes, the latest on my company 401K

nom=de=plume wrote:

"Jim" wrote in message



Bad advice. With catch-up he can put $22k this year in the 401k.
He should be maxing that to shelter it from taxes.


Nope. Right now, taxes are low, so it's doubtful that a it'll push him
into a higher bracket, and even if it does, you're talking about a
couple of percent. The future is much more uncertain, but it's very
clear that taxes will likely go up, and as a retired person, he should
be minimizing his tax exposure.


From what he's said he's in the 25-28% range already.
Why do you suppose he'll be in a higher bracket when retired?
The flies against most experience.

Even if it's money market with no return.


?? That makes no sense at all.

Pretty simple. You can't lose your contribution money as you could in
equity funds.
Remember, this is retirement money.

The feds won't let MM go below par because the economy would collapse.
That tax savings is money in the bank.


?? There tax savings of investing in a 401K is minimal at this point.


Don't know what you're talking about there.

Maybe about 5 grand for him.
When he takes it out upon retirement he'll be in a lower or no-tax
bracket.


Actually, that's doubtful and thee money he'll be taking out will be
much less than he's likely to be used to living on. By putting money
into something that basically gives you back your own money, you can
take it tax free and mitigate what will have to come out of your
401k/ira and be taxed.


Not doubtful at all. It's all very simple.
Put $22k in the 401k and pay no taxes on it.
Or don't and give the feds 25% ($5500.)
That's not financial advice, and it's not voodoo economics, or financial
adviser mumbo jumbo.
It's plain old taxes that anybody can quickly test with TurboTax or tax
tables.
He didn't spend $22k and he didn't pay $5500 in taxes on it.
That's $27,500 more he has for retirement - at a lower tax rate too.
Nothing could be simpler.

Save, save, save. Then you die.


Amend this with, save, save, save, spend, spend, spend, die, get a death
bene for your heirs.

Or you could gamble with equity funds. But don't cry about it.

Jim - Financial whiz kid. Hey, I ain't broke or complaining.


I'd suggest talking to a qualified financial advisor who gets a fee vs.
a percentage, and not listen to me or anyone else on this newsgroup. I
also wouldn't rely on "fund" managers. They've got an axe to grind also.


You don't need to pay a financial adviser to make simple risk decisions
for you. None of this is rocket science.
The way he talks he listened to people who told him Wall Street equity
mutual funds were a sure way to get rich.
So he got suckered.
But since he's part of the "middle class" he can probably do simple math
and see the tax savings in maxing 401k contributions at his stated
income level, which I think was about $150k.


Jim - Surprised I'm having trouble getting this understood.


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