bunker
Lifer
- Apr 23, 2001
- 10,572
- 0
- 71
aren't 401K's also sort of exwife proof?
Nope, fair game in a divorce.
aren't 401K's also sort of exwife proof?
Once you get everything in place, you shouldn't need to micromanage it, just sit back and let it build.
I just read on the site that it is "self directed" 401k... I don't know if it is because that is cheaper or what... or more flexibility for the investor... I don't know... this is fairly new for me...
Nope, fair game in a divorce.
What's the most in dollar amount one can put into a 401K per year? Is there a hard limit or is it a percentage of income?
How does someone who is self-employed set up a 401K?
No, it's a huge scam.
Hopefully that mattress can help with inflation...:whiste:Especially if there's no matching.
Stick that cash in a mattress or something.
Hopefully that mattress can help with inflation...:whiste:
It's free money. For every dollar I put in up to 5% of my salary, my employer puts in $2. Even if I got a 0% return it would still be worth it because I am essentially tripling my money just from the employer contribution.
Wow that's really sweet for your employer to contribute double.
Yeah but as he said only up to 5 percent.
In the Navy it started at 20 and after a couple years it was 100 percent (which is actually doable for a month at a time while underway).
I was thinking about all those people that lost a significant chunk of their 401k in the financial collapse and you're natural gut tells you they aren't worth it, as some people lost up the 50% of their 401k worth
However then I started to thinking about it more and realized that that 50% that was lost was likely all from gains in the stock market and/or from employee matching. I'd like to know the percentage of 401k worth that actually came from cash contribution, vs interest accrual and employee matching. ...
Matching and tax savings could be more than half of it, but the gains shouldn't be ignored -- if you hadn't put the money into the 401k you could have invested it elsewhere.
BUT: if you didn't panic during the collapse, you didn't lose 50%.
The people who lost 50% did things like panic-selling all of their stock fund shares in the 401k then moved the money to money funds. That then earned 0% when the market recovered.
The S&P 500 is back where it was before the collapse. If you had an S&P or large cap or Target fund and left it alone you would be fine. And if you kept putting money into stock funds during late 2008 through 2010 you would have some very nice gains on that money.
The stock funds I bought in 2009 are up ~55% since then, plus the money from dividends.
You cannot invest in it soon enough. If you save in your 20s, you can almost double your retirement funds simply by compounding interest. The worst part is that if you don't earn enough to keep up with the inflation rates, your wasting money.
So....save in a 401k and/or get a traditional or Roth IRA (around $5k limit per year). The more you do now, the better off you'll be later. The best part about a 401k is that it will pay you an annuity and you can move its balance to bonds so you'll continue to earn, even while you draw from it.
:hmm:Sure it can, it's an air mattress. I just let a bit of air out every year to give the money room to grow.
I've recently been reading various Bogle-oriented materials. My thinking a year ago, in response to the "financial downturns can be a good thing, because then you're buying shares cheap!" line that the 401k rep would say. All I could think was "Yeah, but you have to shed a lot of value to get there."People who lose money on 401ks are idiots who sell when they should be buying. Smart people had huge gains in their 401k from the financial collapse.
A relative did this too, though I think he lucked out a bit on the timing and had a slight gain, at least at face value. So he says, anyway.Sad to say I know some people that did this, even after I advised them not to. They cashed out of the market during the crisis, then when the market recovered, bought into it again, then complained about how much money they lost. Personally I actually increased my 401k contribution during the crash, because basically during that time you're buying into it at bargain basement prices.
/facepalm