This
is gut-check time for retirement saving. If you've already
got a good-sized piggy bank, this is the time to tweak your
investments with an eye on your goals. If you've saved little
to nothing, it's time to get in gear -- you still have time
left to watch your money grow.
Making
adjustments
Clearing
debt
Adjust
portfolio
Hire
a planner
College
or retirement
Making adjustments
From a life-goal
perspective, mid-career is a good time to take stock of what you've achieved and
what you still hope to accomplish in your life. If you live paycheck to paycheck,
run up credit card balances, and can't seem to use today to work toward tomorrow,
then it's time to rethink your financial life plan and create or update your spending
plan.
Reflect a moment
Take
stock.
What
have you done?
What
do you want out of life?
How
can you get it?
I
don't like to call a spending plan a budget because, like dieting, no one likes
to budget. Adopt the mindset that you're allocating income between current spending
and investing for future goals. That makes the process a lot more palatable.
One
thing the budgeters have right is the need to pay yourself first. Fund the retirement
account, college savings plan, vacation fund, etc., off the top. That presumes
that you can stay current on your bills and manage current consumption, too.
You
don't have to "lose the latte" to reach your financial life goals, but you do
have to strike a balance between current and future consumption. With the possible
exception of the time spent getting an education, financing current spending with
future income is a losing proposition.
Benjamin Franklin
once said, "Beware of little expenses. A small leak will sink a great ship." You
get to decide where the leak is in your financial ship of state.
Ask
yourself once more with feeling, "What do I want out of life and how can managing
my finances help me achieve it?"
Clearing debt
In
a perfect world, at mid-career you should be at a point where you are current
on your credit cards, student loans have been paid off for awhile, and your only
outstanding debts are your mortgage and maybe a car loan. You have an emergency
fund or enough flexibility in your investment portfolio to have ready access to
cash, or you have a home equity line of credit that you can tap in a financial
crisis.
Too
many consumers use debt as a crutch to finance current consumption at the expense
of investing for future life goals.
Spending less than you earn makes it possible
to work toward your future. Taking all of this year to pay off last year's holiday
spending puts you in the position to do the same thing again for the upcoming
holiday season.
A common financial question mid-career
is whether investment balances should be used to pay down or pay
off the mortgage. Conceptually, this makes sense if the effective rate on
the mortgage is less than the expected after-tax return on your investments. Conservative
investors will find paying down the mortgage more attractive than less conservative
investors, because it's hard to invest in CDs that outperform, on an after-tax
basis, the effective interest rate on the mortgage.
Paying
down the mortgage instead of contributing to retirement accounts concentrates
your investment in one real estate investment: your home. It's an especially bad
idea if you're forgoing a company match in your 401(k) or 403(b)
account to make those additional principal payments.
If
you are paid weekly, or biweekly, you have at least two months a year when you
get an "extra" paycheck. That money can be used to make additional principal payments
on the house, invest for a future life goal or create an emergency fund.
Adjust portfolio
Periodically
rebalancing your portfolio to bring it back in line with your target
asset allocation is a smart thing to do on a regular basis.
Rebalancing
your portfolio gives you the chance to buy low and sell high.
Choose a target asset
allocation based on your investment goals, your planning horizon and your
risk tolerance. If you aren't comfortable investing long term in the stock or
bond market and put all your money in insured bank deposits, it's likely that
you'll have to save a higher percentage of your income to reach your financial
goals for retirement.
Let's say your target asset
allocation is 70 percent stocks, 25 percent bonds and 5 percent cash. A run-up
in the bond market puts you at 60 percent stocks, 35 percent bonds and 5 percent
cash. Rebalancing takes you back to your target asset allocation. With a taxable
account, in the interest of being tax efficient often it can make sense to steer
new contributions into an asset class rather then sell holdings to rebalance.
Being disciplined about rebalancing can keep you from staying over invested too
long in a particular category. As a rule of thumb, an annual portfolio review
makes sense even if you choose to rebalance less frequently.
The
current fashion in asset allocation is to let the money manager do it for you.
Asset allocation for target-date
and lifecycle funds is managed professionally. With these funds, the targeted
asset allocation is managed to a planning horizon, say 2020, so that the portfolio's
risk profile becomes more conservative as that date approaches. Lifestyle funds
take a different approach, investing in a risk/reward profile that stays constant
over time and rebalances to stay in line with that profile. Neither type of fund
should be regarded as a one decision, buy-and-hold investment. It's important
to review performance occasionally to determine if the investment serves your
needs over time.
Hire a planner
By
mid-career you may already have a professional relationship with an accountant,
an insurance agent, an investment professional and possibly even an attorney.
The question becomes, why add a financial planner to the mix?
A
financial planner can give you a comprehensive financial life plan versus a hodgepodge
of financial products and services that may or may not be working in tandem to
help you achieve your financial goals.
A
financial planner can help you achieve your financial goals. Choose one who puts
your interests first.
Since it's also likely that some or all of the
professionals you're currently working with offer financial planning services,
you need to make a decision about whether you're comfortable letting one of those
professionals take the lead or if you want to bring in a planner to oversee the
process.
You need to be confident that the professional
you hire to do your financial planning is acting as a fiduciary in managing your
plan and assets rather than being self-serving in what they recommend you to do
with your income and investments.
Interview professionals
for this spot on your financial team. If they don't have the time, then keep recruiting.
The Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards has an online guide, "Checklist
for interviewing a financial planner" and a listing of financial
services credentials that will help you decipher the alphabet soup of credentials
in the planning profession.
College or retirement
If
you are raising children, then the cost of educating your children becomes a variable
in your financial life plan. Parents typically are willing to sacrifice quite
a bit when it comes to meeting their children's needs and that's especially true
when it comes to education. Whether it's private schooling K-12 or funding one
or more college degrees, parents can see a high percentage of their income go
toward their children's education.
Consider your resources
Will
your kids help you through retirement? Don't count on it.
Will
the bank help? Nope.
Make
funding retirement your top priority.
But
choosing between funding the children's college or your retirement should be an
easy decision. Choose to fund your retirement. You can't count on your children
to support you in retirement, no matter how broadly you hint that that's the deal
they've struck when you sign the tuition check.
The
higher income stream earned by a college graduate can finance the loan payments
needed to fund that education. The reduced income stream you experience in retirement,
either from raiding your retirement portfolio to pay tuition or from not investing
for retirement, can't be funded by loans in retirement.
The
ideal situation would be to start early enough in investing for both goals so
you don't have to decide between one or the other. Tax-advantaged college savings
approaches abound between Section 529 college savings plans, Coverdell education
savings accounts, and the U. S. Treasury's savings bonds for education program
(although the latter is limited by the parent's modified adjusted gross income).
Financial aid, scholarships and tax credits also play a role in funding Junior's
education.