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© 2011 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.

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Presentation on theme: "© 2011 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part."— Presentation transcript:

1 © 2011 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part. Planning for Retirement #14

2 Role of Retirement Planning At what age do you want to retire? How much money will you need? Set Your Goals

3 3 Biggest Pitfalls in Retirement Planning Starting too late Putting away too little Investing too conservatively Compounding magnifies these pitfalls

4 Determine future retirement needs Estimate retirement income Funding the shortfall Estimating Income Needs

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7 Social Security Benefits provided by payroll taxes employee and employer pay Amount of benefits may not be sufficient at retirement See it as an insurance system not a retirement plan

8 Normal retirement age is now 67 –If born in 1960 or later You must have been paying in for at least 40 quarters, or 10 years Early retirement results in a lower percentage of total benefits Later retirement results in an increased benefit SS Retirement Benefits

9 Old-age benefits (traditional SS retirement benefits) Survivor's benefits for spouses who are age 60 or older or who have a dependent child Survivor's benefits for dependent children SS Retirement Benefits

10 Selected Monthly SS Retirement Benefits

11 Pension Plans and Retirement Programs Employer-sponsored retirement programs Self-directed retirement program

12 Participation requirements Vesting Retirement age Contributions –Contributory –Non-contributory Qualifying Employer-Sponsored Programs

13 Defined Contribution company guarantees contribution, but not a return on it or a retirement benefit Defined Benefit company guarantees retirement benefit regardless of pension fund performance Employer-Sponsored Programs

14 Profit-sharing plans — employees benefit from company's earnings Thrift and savings plans — employer contributes to employee's fund –Employee contributions not deductible Salary reduction plans — employee contributes part of salary; contributions tax deductible; employer may also contribute Supplemental Plans

15 Evaluating Employer-Sponsored Pension Plans Eligibility requirements Defined benefits or contributions Vesting procedures Contributory or noncontributory Retirement age Voluntary supplemental programs Supplemental Plans

16 Keogh Plans — for professionals or small business owners and employees SEP Plans — for professionals or small business owners with few or no employees; simple to administer IRAs — for any working American; other self-directed plans may allow greater contributions Self-Directed Retirement Programs

17 Traditional Tax-Deductible IRA — for those with no employer-sponsored plan or with income below a certain level Non-Deductible (after-tax) IRA — for those with an employer-sponsored plan and income over a certain level Roth IRA — contributions not deductible; for those with incomes below a much higher level, regardless of employer-sponsored plans. Types of IRAs

18 Individual makes own investment decisions Fund with income-producing assets outside retirement account –Growth-oriented securities are more risky –Cannot write off losses from sale of securities in IRA or Keogh Self-Directed Accounts and Their Investment Vehicles

19 Annuities Tax-sheltered investment vehicles administered by life insurance companies Make contributions now in return for a series of payments later Contributions not tax deductible

20 Annuities Before Retirement: Accumulation Period annuitant purchases annuity by paying premiums into the account During Retirement: Distribution Period insurance company makes payments to annuitant. Portion not returned to annuitant prior to death goes to beneficiaries

21 Single Premium vs. Installments one lump-sum payment or a series of payments to purchase annuity Fixed vs. Variable investment grows at low guaranteed fixed rate or possibly a higher variable rate with no guarantee of return Classification of Annuities

22 Types of Annuity Contracts

23 Life annuity with no refund — payments made for life of annuitant; nothing to beneficiaries Guaranteed minimum annuity — at least a total minimum amount will be paid out; beneficiaries receive any remainder Annuity certain — payments made for a set number of years and cease, regardless of annuitant’s life span Deposition of Proceeds

24 Fixed versus Variable Annuity Fixed-rate annuity insurance company agrees to pay guaranteed rate of interest Variable annuity monthly income from policy varies based on insurer’s actual investment experience


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