Savings
tanked, didn't plan, expenses too high.
Here's how people are saving their
retirement
Retirement
may mean different things to different people, but most agree on one thing.
It
should be stress-free.
However,
lack of stress usually comes from years of planning and decades of saving —
which not everyone can do.
The
average savings balance in the U.S. is less
than $60,000.
Few people can depend on pensions. Baby
boomers heading into retirement may find themselves struggling because
of inadequate savings and high
health costs.
Even
with the best of plans, despite saving and investing diligently, economic
forces can derail everything.
When plans go belly up
Moving
is never fun. Moving to a foreign country comes with even more logistical pain.
"It creates anxiety plus the thought of leaving behind life as we've known
it, including family and friends," said Cynthia Staton, an expat retiree
in Ecuador.
In
2008, Staton and her husband, Edd, now both over 65, found their retirement
savings had been crushed.
"The
whole concept of the side hustle was always about Gen X and millennials. But
baby boomers are realizing this is something they have to do, and they are
doing it."" -Winnie Sun, founder of Sun Group Wealth Partners
The
financial meltdown created an economic tsunami that swept away not just their
jobs but even the fields they worked in. Edd was a marketing rep at a bank that
specializes in auto loans. Cynthia worked in high-end new construction.
In
addition to their home, the couple owned investment properties that made up a
large portion of their retirement portfolio. All lost substantial value almost
immediately.
"We
had great careers and a great retirement plan — until we didn't," Edd
Staton said.
Think outside the box
The
Statons realized they'd have to think outside the box if they wanted a decent
quality of life. It was like facing three doors on a game show: Give up and
accept a miserable retirement; keep on working and hope things would work out;
or move abroad for a lower cost of living.
"After
working so hard our entire adult lives, giving up wasn't going to happen,"
Edd Staton said. And continuing to work was equally unappealing. The Statons
say they lost too much, too fast. "Time wasn't on our side," he said.
They felt ready for a new chapter and did not want to work.
Their
original retirement dream involved travel: They were going to chase perfect
weather around the globe. Living abroad was more a shift in focus than an
unwelcome idea.
Their
wish list had three top items: proximity to the U.S., a lower cost of living
and a temperate climate. Cuenca, Ecuador, seemed to have all three, so they
moved there and haven't looked back.
Since
then, they've enjoyed living in a four-bedroom penthouse apartment they rent
for $700 a month, paying under $60 a month for utilities. They have a weekly
housekeeper and regular massages, facials and mani-pedis.
The
Statons, who have written several
books
on retirement, have a new project — an
educational course called Retirement Reimagined! — that they hope will help
bring more attention to moving abroad as a retirement option for U.S. citizens.
Shifting definitions of
retirement
Longer
life expectancy
means many people will have more years in retirement or in the years we
consider retirement age. These days, retirement
doesn't necessarily mean the end of work — and it's not just the need for income
that keeps people working.
We
all know people who worked as long as possible because they love what they do.
More people are finding out their life's purpose may change, but they still
thrive in the retirement years when they have something to wake up for each
day. The last year and a half has seen a big change in how people think about
retirement.
"Today's
retirees are much more realistic than even 10 years ago," said Winnie Sun,
founder of Irvine, California-based Sun Group Wealth Partners. "They
realize they can't just simply retire and get on a cruise ship."
More
and more, people are starting to think about retirement earlier. And, according
to Sun, those who haven't planned far enough in advance almost immediately feel
the need to find another source of income in retirement.
Sun
works with several clients who retired because they felt burnt out after
decades in the same industry. "A lot of them are nervous [about money],
but they need to come up with income for that mortgage payment," she said.
Many
people are finding they need to pivot, Sun added. "The whole concept of
the side hustle was always about Gen X and millennials," Sun said.
"But baby boomers are realizing this is something they have to do, and
they are doing it."
One
client plans to retire at 75, an age when people typically want to spend more
time with their grandkids. Instead, Sun's client hopes to create a radio show
for seniors.
Retirement scramble
Brian
Scott Lipton, 58, is an editor in New York. His parents retired somewhere near
his age, but he's unsure about his own future. He'd like to be able to stop
working somewhere between ages 60 and 65 but doubts that will happen.
"The
difference is, they had pensions," Lipton said. "They started working
young, and they worked steadily."
Lipton
has money in traditional and Roth IRAs, as well as a 401(k) plan. "But
most of my life I worked at companies that either didn't have a 401(k) or those
that did, did not have a matching component," Lipton said. He currently
contributes to a 401(k) at a level that gets him the employer match.
Like
many people, Lipton is uncertain about how
much he can expect
in retirement income. After chatting with a friend, Lipton realized he had no
idea what his Social Security income would be, so he checked. "It will be
helpful," he said. "But I won't be able to live off it."
For
now, Lipton's retirement strategy includes investing at an aggressive risk
level in a professionally managed account and considering a relocation.
Lipton
and his husband don't have a destination in mind, but it's a near constant
subject. "We can't maintain our current life in New York City on a retirement
budget," he said.
"I
think I will always want to write, but perhaps not eight to 10 hours [a
day]," Lipton said. "Perhaps someday I will switch from journalism to
books or essays. But I'd also like time to travel and to play bridge on a
regular basis."
Neither
Lipton or his husband drives, so they'd like a city. Retirement, Lipton says,
brings mixed feelings. "I'm always looking for the happy medium,"
Lipton said. "So it's probably a little bit of both terror and
excitement."
Size matters
Kathy
Gottberg, 63, and her husband, Thom, who live in Quinta, California, began
reading and learning more about sustainability in their 50s.
Gottberg
had been thinking about what retirement might look like. At the same time, her
interest in living in a way that would sustain the environment was sparked
because of friends from Colorado. "They were really into
sustainability," Gottberg said. "And it started seeping in."
The
couple had a luxurious home, and Gottberg's husband was earning a decent amount
of money, but their savings was not as healthy as they would have liked. They
decided to look for something a bit smaller. The home they gave up had a pool,
a spa, a three-car garage and four bedrooms — just for the two of them.
"We
looked at what that house was costing us," Gottberg said. "We were
spending $3,500 a month." As self-employed people without children, they
knew they couldn't rely on anyone.
After
some house-hunting, they decided on a somewhat smaller home in a slightly less
upscale neighborhood. Their first house had enough equity that they could buy
the second one without a mortgage. They did some remodeling to boost energy
efficiency. "Our utilities are probably less than $500 a year,"
Gottberg said.
Without
homeowners association fees and more expensive utilities, their monthly
expenses took a nosedive — and they can still entertain friends in the new
house. Gottberg recommends shifting your mindset to determine what you really
need.
Rightsizing
is more than simple downsizing, Gottberg says. It is about living with purpose.
"I feel more wealthy than lots of people my age," she said. "My
husband says it is about freedom and peace of mind."
When
Gottberg and her husband scouted the options, rightsizing felt like a series of
conscious choices that would pay off in the long run — rather than sacrificing
anything.
Happy Investing
Source: Yahoofinance.com
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