Income Distribution Ideas

April 10, 2011 by  
Filed under Mortgage

In terms of your finances, your pre-retirement earning years focus on accumulation and growth of your money. You earn money from your job or business to pay for your current living costs. You put some aside for emergencies and for future needs such as college and retirement. Your goal is to acquire as much as possible by earning it and investing it.

After retirement, you usually no longer have cash earned from your job or business to pay for your costs of living. You need safety and liquidity to ensure available funds for day-to-day costs of living along with growth to help make sure your funds last your lifetime. The growth-oriented portfolio structure of your earning years might not apply anymore, and you may have to change the way you evaluate your portfolio’ s performance.

In fact, in an effort to assist with reducing risk and protect principal, a lot of retirees alter their asset mix to a more conservative, income-based allocation. The outcome is a portfolio made to provide higher rates of current income and less volatility. In other words, your need to preserve what you have now typically outweighs your need to grow your money at a benchmark rate, although you still need enough growth to ensure inflation doesn’t minimize your buying power during retirement.

Depending on your age, your investment tendencies may lean too far toward growth or too far toward conservative income. If you’re at the leading edge of the Boomer generation, you might have experienced years of extremely high market returns, altering your expectations for your own portfolio toward the high end.

If you’re in the senior or “veteran” age group, however, you may harbor some distrust of stocks and over- confidence in bonds. Investors in this group also tend to underestimate their life expectancy, based on how long their parents lived. By overweighting your portfolio in the relative safety of fixed income and income investments, you increase the potential of outliving your money.

A retirement distribution plan looks to find that middle ground between reduced risk and greater return, taking into regard all income streams (i.e., Social Security, wages, pensions, investment income, annuity income), assets, inflation risk, investment risk and tax exposure. Plenty of variables can come into play, so each factor needs to be evaluated based on the individual situation.

Generally, a retirement distribution model will allocate a larger portion of assets to fixed income and income segments, followed by growth and income, growth, aggressive growth and most aggressive segments in progressively lesser percentages. The intended result is an inflation-adjusted income that lasts your lifetime by minimizing emotional investment decisions, keeping purchasing power, minimizing risk, preserving principal and maintaining an appropriate amount of long-term asset growth.

Putting together a retirement distribution plan could be complex and requires a thorough understanding of investment products and strategies and their associated risks. Your financial expert can help you determine the asset allocation model and products that best meet your needs.

I have to find, Debt Agency.

How Will A Debt Settlement Program Affect Your Credit History? Pt. 2

June 3, 2010 by  
Filed under Debt Consolidation

In the last article I spoke about debt settlement programs and whether it pays to agree to one or not. Keeping all of this information I relayed to you in mind, if you decide that debt settlement is not the best option for you, there are four other main choices: stay delinquent, come up with extra cash to make payments, work with a credit counselor, or file for bankruptcy.

Staying in delinquency will simply make your credit score lower, and the longer you wait, the harder your score will be hit. Just one thirty day late payment can cause your score to drop by up to one hundred and ten points. Ninety days? You are currently three times as late with your card payment, and you are only getting later as more time passes by.

Coming up with extra cash to make your payments might just be worth your while. Take a close look at your finances and budget. Is there anything in your budget that can be adjusted, or anything you owe that can be sold? Use any extra money to pay your debt and prevent any further damage to your credit score. For a lot of us, budgeting isn’t as easy as that. If you need outside help, seek out a credit counselor. They will get to the bottom of the issue, and find a solution for you.

Also, you can also have the option to file for bankruptcy. This means that you won’t have to repay the debt, but filing will cause your credit to be hurt even more than a debt settlement, by as much as two hundred and forty points. If you are thinking about bankruptcy, have a consultation with a bankruptcy attorney to discuss the details.

All told, experts say that talking to a good credit counselor is the best choice. They can assist you when it comes to assessing your financial situation, offer possible alternative choices, and show you how not to make the same mistakes at any point in the future.

Rapid Recovery Solution is a medical debt collection agency.

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