Disturbed by recent ups and down in the stock market?
If you’re an older investor, that may mean it’s time to re-think just how much risk you’re carrying in your retirement portfolio.
Otherwise, your tranquil golden years could devolve into a time of overwhelming financial stress.
“If you’re not unsettled after the stock market action of early October, then you weren’t paying attention,” says Craig Kirsner, MBA (www.StuartPlanning.com), a retirement planner and author of Retire with Confidence: Preserve and Protect Your Wealth and Leave a Legacy. “The Dow industrials were gaining and losing several hundred points, not daily but hourly.”
Investors in their 20s and 30s perhaps can afford to be blasé about such market turmoil, he says. They have years – even decades – to recover if the market takes a major tumble and their portfolios sustain a significant hit.
1. Those who are in or near retirement don’t have that luxury.
“It’s imperative for a retiree to practice money management if their goal is to preserve and protect their retirement,” Kirsner says.
He offers a few observations about why it might be time to consider reducing your risk:
Don’t let long periods of market calm fool you. It’s now been a decade since the market crash of 2008, and the long period with a strong market has lured some investors into becoming careless and aggressive. They may put all their money in the market, Kirsner says, because they are focused on high yields a company is paying out without calculating whether those yields are sustainable. “Regrettably and predictably you see people taking on more risk than they should,” he says. “For example, they may have come to believe that dividend-paying stocks are ‘safe’ investments. That’s not so. Stocks are designed for growth, not for protecting your principal.”
2. Understand what rising interest rates might do.
Interest rates in the U.S. have doubled over the past year. Why is that important to know? “Rising interest rates are historically the pin that bursts a debt-fueled bubble,” Kirsner says.
3. Be aware that the aging population could cool the economy.
Overall, the U.S. is getting older, largely because of the 77 million baby boomers who are retiring at a rate of 10,000 people every day. Because many of them have little saved for retirement, they will be cutting down on their spending, which could cause problems for the economy, Kirsner says. “Consumer spending makes up 68 percent of our economy,” he says. “So what do you think will happen to the economy with 77 million baby boomers aging into retirement and cutting back their spending dramatically?”
3. Retirees, and those who expect to retire soon, should review how much risk they have in their portfolios and determine how much of that risk they want to keep, Kirsner says.
“Ask yourself whether you really have the stomach at this point for potentially big losses,” he says. “Especially when you need to live on that money for the rest of your life.”
About Craig Kirsner, MBA
Craig Kirsner, MBA, (www.StuartPlanning.com) is a nationally recognized author, speaker and retirement planner, whom you may have seen on Kiplinger, Fidelity.com, Nasdaq.com, U.S. News & World Report, AT&T, Yahoo Finance, MSN Money, Bankrate.com, CBS, ABC, NBC, FOX, and many others. Craig is the author of Retire With Confidence: Preserve and Protect Your Wealth And Leave A Legacy and creator of the Preserve and Protect Retirement System. He has an MBA in finance from Florida International University. He is an Investment Adviser Representative who has passed the Series 63 and 65 securities exams and has been a licensed insurance agent for 25 years.
Content created by NewsandExperts.com.
Sources:
1. https://www.kiplinger.com/article/investing/T052-C032-S014-are-blue-chip-dividend-paying-stocks-really-safe.html
2. https://www.kiplinger.com/article/investing/T047-C032-S014-what-is-central-bankers-bubble-and-will-it-burst.html
3. https://www.cnbc.com/2017/04/07/how-much-the-average-family-has-saved-for-retirement-at-every-age.html
4. https://www.thebalance.com/consumer-spending-trends-and-current-statistics-3305916