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Results tagged “retirement” from Missing Manuals Blog

The previous post explained why it makes sense to try to wait out a down market before withdrawing money from your retirement accounts. But wait, there are even more benefits to waiting--literally.

Retiring at 65 could mean as many as 30 to 35 years running seniors' marathons, dipping your toes in tropical waters, or just cooling your heels. Over long periods of time, the ups and downs of the stock market even out. That's no help when retirement is looming and the market is in the tank along with your retirement portfolio. But getting your spending money by selling investments whose values have dropped could be the torpedo that sinks your retirement ship.

It only hurts if you sell

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UPDATE: President Bush on Friday signed legislation that increased the amount of savings insured by the FDIC in an account from $100,000 to $250,000 (until December 31, 2009).

With the stock market gyrations the last few days, several people asked me if I was in trouble because of the stock market. My answer was simple, "No, because I don't have to sell any investments."

The recent roller-coaster highlights an important aspect of personal finance: the stock market really isn't rational.

Taming personal finance

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Why does finance turn normal human beings into boring, complexity-obsessed fiends? Used to be, you had a job and a pension -- you worked, you retired, and your company took care of your benefits. You cashed your pension check and wore fluorescent golf clothes. These days, you have to choose from three bazillion types of tax-advantaged retirement accounts, contribute your own money, and pick the investments.

Flex spending accounts, health insurance applications, tax returns--you can spend a lifetime trying to decide whether they save you money or deciphering their instruction booklets, which are written in your native language, but are totally incomprehensible. No need. They probably don't answer your questions anyway. The Medicare prescription plan is my favorite: more complicated than the space shuttle and designed for older folks (I'm getting hair-grayingly close) who have trouble remembering why they walked into a room.

Quicken can help you manage your finances, but  it's more of a trusty sidekick than advisor. You have to know what you want to do with your finances first. And then, how to record those transactions in the program.

In future posts, I'll explain how to manage your money wisely and how to wrangle Quicken into helping you do just that. And I'll do my best to help you have fun in the process.



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