Displaying items by tag: retirement

Thursday, 06 January 2022 21:18

Annuities Poised to Take off in 2022

Annuities have been criticized for their lack of a national advertising campaign that could really rally interest, but that will change in 2022. A large number of retirees should give companies enough desire to boost their annuities exposure. In addition to this many of the fundamental changes in regulation such as the secure act are paving the way for annuities to be introduced in new ways. Finally, the stock market has performed better than anyone could expect coming out of the pandemic, and bonds provided now yield and little security. Investors will need to protect their gains and retirement and expect big companies to pitch to these investors more frequently.


FINSUM: Protecting existing stock gains is a great argument for individuals to consider annuities in 2022.

Published in Wealth Management

Millions of Americans are reliant on the social security payments as they shift into retirement, and while SSA boosted the amount in checks by 5.9% it pales in comparison to the record CPI numbers. The CPI climbed at a jaw-dropping 6.8% in November, which skims a healthy amount from the bottom line. Another large factor eating at people’s retirement social security is Medicare Part B premiums and are cost-of-living reducer. Medicare Part B premiums will subtract 29% percentage points from the Social security Take home over the next 30-years. Finally, retirees should be wary that their prescriptions are covered by Medicare because otherwise, they will be a hefty retirement expense.


FINSUM: It’s outrageous that social security and other retirement accounts aren’t keeping pace with the actual costs of retirees, and needs to factor into investment decisions.

Published in Wealth Management

There have been widespread attempts by the new administration and private financial companies to expand the access to retirement vehicles, but a ‘fiduciary only’ regulation will kill retirement hopes for many low-income communities. Nearly half of black families and almost two-thirds of Hispanic families have no retirement savings account, and a stricter fiduciary rule would make it virtually impossible for these communities to get access to financial securities like annuities which allow them access to guaranteed lifetime income. Previous strict fiduciary rules like in 2016 left 10 million small retirement account owners without financial advisor access and a new rule could have a similar impact. Regulators and public officials should look into alternative approaches if they are interested in building retirement savings in underserved communities.


FINSUM: Unintended consequences of policies most often impact those the policies are seeking to help!

Published in Wealth Management
Wednesday, 22 December 2021 19:05

These Big IRA Changes Have Bipartisan Support

Think Advisor has put out a piece outlining pending changes to IRAs that are making their way through the legislative process. Importantly, some of these have bipartisan support and seem likely to make it into law. The biggest changes in the cards have to do with Roth IRA conversions. A lot has been made in the press about the mega rich doing massive IRA to Roth IRA conversions and thus congress is set to take action. Conversion between the two would be banned for those with incomes over $400,000.


FINSUM: Advisors should start helping clients plan for this change. However, there is a massive caveat here: the current congressional plan calls for this loophole to close, but only starting ten years from now!

Published in Wealth Management
Wednesday, 22 December 2021 19:02

Social Security Badly Underweights Healthcare Costs

Inflation is a concern for retirees, but they should be more concerned than ever becauseSocial Security is tracking the wrong index. Currently Social Security bases its cost of living adjustments on the consumer price index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W). However, the CPI-W doesn’t fully account for the costs of healthcare and housing that burden retirees more than other groups. Instead social security should track the Consumer Price Index for Elderly (CPI-E) because this is the demographic they are targeting. Research shows that the average social security account since 1983 is in a 0.2% compounded deficit. The rate of inflation for healthcare is slowing which could end up benefiting retirees moving forward but that's just a prediction.


FINSUM: Social security won’t be keeping up with your healthcare costs and investors should augment their portfolios to compensate.

Published in Wealth Management
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