Retirement

For months, multiemployer pension plan sponsors, participants, and their advocates have been waiting to see how the PBGC (Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation) would interpret the American Rescue Plan’s legislation providing bailout money to multiemployer pensions, the The Emergency Pension Plan Relief Act of 2021 (EPPRA), which, as regular readers will recall, left multiple issues very
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Millions of Americans have switched jobs during the coronavirus pandemic. Beyond that, some 12,000 baby boomers have been entering retirement every day, which has led to a flood of 401(k) rollovers. Along the way, many workers will make one or more of the following seven 401(k) rollover mistakes. ADVERTISEMENT The result of a 401(k)-rollover mistake can
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A handful of the largest U.S. public pensions, such as CalPERS and STRS Ohio, facing increased public scrutiny claim that their compliance with voluntary standards developed for the money management industry—the Global Investment Performance Standards—enhances their integrity and transparency. Pension stakeholders should not be fooled. In 2018, California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS), the largest
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As you transition into retirement, it’s a good idea to adopt strategies that help protect you from significant financial losses in your later years due to mistakes, financial exploitation from unethical friends and relatives, and fraud.  The recently released “Thinking Ahead Roadmap” helps you select a financial advocate who can assist you in managing your money
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Nice problem to have: a fat retirement account along with potentially taxable gains. This calculator tells you which asset to liquidate. You’re retired, and living off two piles of assets—a taxable brokerage account and a tax-deferred IRA. Which should be cashed in first? For a lot of people, the answer is simple: Use up the
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Perfection in financial planning is impossible and its pursuit may actually be counterproductive. It may be better said that financial planning is fundamentally an exercise in mistake management and minimization. Much like major league batters in baseball, three-point shooters in basketball, and football quarterbacks in pursuit of completing passes, you may well fall short more
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By Richard Eisenberg, Next Avenue Editor When most of us (and retirement experts) think about how prepared we’ll be for a financially comfortable retirement, it’s typically about how much money has been saved for it. But University of Massachusetts Boston professor Jan Mutchler says there’s another way to look at it: Will you have enough income
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By Richard Eisenberg, Next Avenue Editor As we’ve all noticed, inflation has been on the rise lately — the Consumer Price Index rose from 1.6% at the end of the first quarter of 2021 to about 3.4% for the second quarter. And that has major implications for how you should be managing your money: your savings,
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