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I’m a 61-year-old flight attendant who wants to retire at 70. I’ll have a $900 per month pension and will get Social Security, but only have $150K in my 401(k). Should I get professional help?


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2022 Nov 9, 8:00am   917 views  16 comments

by Al_Sharpton_for_President   ➕follow (5)   💰tip   ignore  

Answer: We commend you on hoping to boost your bottom line, and it’s not too late to find a financial planner to help you, if you decide to go that route. “You’re in what I call the mad dash to retirement, during which people who might not have been paying sufficient attention to savings and investments start to turn on the savings afterburners,” says Jim Kinney, certified financial planner at Financial Pathways.

"While working as a Walmart greeter or Kroger's bagger are attractive options, consider opportunities in GRILF porn," says Dilling Deau, professional Uber driver and financial planner at Anditsgone, LLC.

https://www.marketwatch.com/picks/im-a-61-year-old-flight-attendant-who-wants-to-retire-at-70-ill-have-a-900-per-month-pension-and-will-get-social-security-but-only-have-150k-in-my-401-k-should-i-get-professional-help-



Comments 1 - 16 of 16        Search these comments

1   Ceffer   2022 Nov 9, 8:03am  

Get vaccinated and boosted and all of your retirement worries will melt away.
2   zzyzzx   2022 Nov 9, 8:27am  

Article appears to have been deleted...
3   WookieMan   2022 Nov 9, 8:32am  

How in the flying fuck do you only have $150k at 61 in a 401k??? Jesus Christ some people are dumb. On track depending on this inflation for $5-6M by 61. That's not including other business or monies we could obtain over 20 years. Not counting on it at all, but potential for $1-4M from family as well. To truly retire and enjoy it I'm guessing $10M is going to be needed for someone my age. $150k pfffft. You're fucked.
4   zzyzzx   2022 Nov 9, 8:46am  

WookieMan says

To truly retire and enjoy it I'm guessing $10M is going to be needed for someone my age.


I agree.
5   GNL   2022 Nov 9, 8:53am  

zzyzzx says

WookieMan says


To truly retire and enjoy it I'm guessing $10M is going to be needed for someone my age.


I agree.

So, maybe 1% of retirees?
6   clambo   2022 Nov 9, 8:56am  

Does she/he/it own a house or condo?
In 10 years the 401K can be $300k.
She can get about 6.5+ % from an immediate annuity at age 70, if she wants to turn the 401K over. This would be about $20,000/year. ($300,000 x .065)
Social security will be $2000+ per month or more.
Pension $900/month isn't too bad.
The fly in the ointment will be: 1. rent if she doesn't own a place. 2. Taxes
She's okay assuming she doesn't develop a health problem which interrupts her work and saving.
If she owns a place she can get a roommate or reverse mortgage.
7   Ceffer   2022 Nov 9, 8:57am  

Welcome to the race, where wealth and devolving aging decreptitude compete with each other. Will I have enough money to fall apart in style? Caligulan Splendor is wasted on the young.

The Great Socialist Paradise will make this question moot, as it murders you out of your SS and Medicare creditor status. KILL THE CREDITORS! KILL THEM ALL!
8   Tenpoundbass   2022 Nov 9, 2:26pm  

You guys are all pretending her 401K will still be worth $150K by the end of this year.
What ever you have saved up for Retirement, the 401K is the worst way to have it tied up.
The idiots should have paid the taxes on that income while they were young and could absorb it better.
By time many people retire they believe that they have $150K in their 401K but soon find out, it's more like $100K in your 401K because you're taxed the full 30% on every cent you pull out of it.

$150K in a savings account, is all yours, you don't have to give Uncle Fucker 1/3 of every withdraw.
10   KgK one   2022 Nov 9, 3:52pm  

WookieMan says

other

Damn wookieman. How did you get that much in 401 k

20 k x 30 years about 600 k plus growth. so what n how are you investing 401 k to grow to be 5 million
11   casandra   2022 Nov 9, 4:27pm  

Yes you are going to need professional help; and I am not talking financial. You are going to be in a mess since you are locked into todays fixed income prices. Buckle up....
12   Rin   2022 Nov 9, 4:30pm  

Tenpoundbass says


for Retirement, the 401K is the worst way to have it tied up


Yes, that money should have been in either a Roth IRA a/o Roth 401K.

And then, she can take whatever dividend income she earns and pay it out as non-taxable cash.

So in that situation, even an amount like $150K isn't so bad. If you average out the dividends from BHP, Annaly(NLY), Lumen(LUMN), Rio Tinto (RIO), Altria (MO), British-American Tobacco (BTI), National Grid (NGG), Verizon (VZ), ATT (T), and Manulife Financial (MFC), it's some 9%, closer to 10%+ during bearish lows.

Using a simple dividend reinvestment calculator, with additional $7K (Roth IRA limit) per year (I'm assuming she knows nothing about Roth 401Ks w/ higher limits), keeping cap gains down to -1% per annum and then an 8% basket dividend yield. The results aren't so bad in 9 years if cap gains are minuscule for the decade ahead.

Year Balance Additions Growth Dividends Reinvested End Balance
1 150,000 7,000 -1,500 12,000 12,000 167,496
2 167,496 7,000 -1,674 13,399 13,399 186,216
3 186,216 7,000 -1,862 14,897 14,897 206,247
4 206,247 7,000 -2,062 16,499 16,499 227,681
5 227,681 7,000 -2,276 18,214 18,214 250,614
6 250,614 7,000 -2,506 20,049 20,049 275,153
7 275,153 7,000 -2,751 22,012 22,012 301,410
8 301,410 7,000 -3,014 24,112 24,112 329,505
9 329,505 7,000 -3,295 26,360 26,360 359,566

So by her retirement age, she's getting $2K/month from the above, $900 from her pension, and some $1.6K from SS.

That's $4.5K per month of tax free income, which for an ordinary person is $54K/yr or $70K/yr+ (when taxable)
13   Booger   2022 Nov 9, 5:10pm  

GNL says

zzyzzx says


WookieMan says



To truly retire and enjoy it I'm guessing $10M is going to be needed for someone my age.


I agree.


So, maybe 1% of retirees?


What's the point in retiring unless I can do it in Caligulan splendor?
14   SunnyvaleCA   2022 Nov 9, 5:40pm  

I thought the idea is to take the job for a few years and meet a pilot or businessman, get married, and live happily ever after (or at least have a very lucrative divorce). Same concept as NFL Cheerleader. Either that, or you buckle down and live frugally; then retire pretty well, actually.

I'm not knocking the profession, but this just seems to be a case of failure to have long-term goals and a realistic outlook. At least this "profession" has large upside in the early years. Fast-food workers and 1/2 the college graduates are in far worse shape in short term and no better shape after.
15   zzyzzx   2022 Nov 10, 5:52am  

Article is useless without knowing how attractive she might be, even at her age. And article is back.

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