Today, half the money I put into that fund is gone. Bravely, I called up my account this morning to see how bad the damage was. From the peak of my retirement investments, which I had built up over 20-some years of sacrificial, consistent saving, I had lost about a third of what I had. Even through the end of last year, knowing that my paychecks were coming to an end, I kept saving, thinking that, with the market down, I'd be buying cheap.
Now, with no more money coming in and no more money going into my 401(k), I'm no longer "buying cheap." I'm just watching my investments dwindle, and with them the financial security I had hoped to gain for retirement. When 401(k)s and IRAs were first marketed in the early 1980s, the television commercials touted the possibility of retiring as a millionaire. Given the double-digit interest rates at the time and 30 or 40 years to invest, such a scenario seemed plausible. More of a realist, I never thought I'd reach those lofty levels, but I did hope that my persistent savings and investing luck might lead to a nest egg of as much as $500,000. After the tech bubble and NASDAQ collapse around 2000 wiped out about a third of my funds, I recalculated my dreams and hoped I might reach $300,000 by the time I reached retirement age, and I seemed on track to achieve that, or come close to it.
But last year's worldwide market collapse and the loss of my job has shattered even that downgraded dream and forced me into a new reality. Today, after looking at all the negative returns from every fund in my account, except cash, I surrendered and transferred a large chunk of what was left in stocks and bonds to a cash fund. The cash fund won't stay ahead of inflation, paying maybe 2 percent, if that, but a tiny increase is better than a big decrease.
My experience is multiplied by the millions as American workers have been led to believe that 401(k)s and IRAs would provide for their retirements, supplementing the Social Security checks that will provide for a subsistence existence, at best. Defined-benefit pensions, which once dominated American corporations, have largely disappeared, replaced by individual investment accounts. Only governments and a few large corporations are still offering pensions; the rest of us are left at the mercy of the stock market.
For people my age, there is little time for the market to recover its losses, and the lost income while the market tanked might never be recovered. The golden age of retirement has passed. I have already conceded that, once I find a job, I'll need to work well past my usual retirement age. Millions of others in my age cohort are reaching the same conclusion.
The 1980s promise of retiring a millionaire has been replaced with the reality that, for many of us, retirement will never happen.
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ReplyDelete...don't listen to glen beck. Then you really will get scared ...and be thankful for the times right now.
...head up dude!
...ok so you sold.
ReplyDeleteYou never loose until you sell. But now that you have, be on the lookout for a great re-entry point. If I were you I would take at least 1/4 of what you sold today, better if you take 1/2, and re-enter, especially when we have a capitulation. Oh and NEVER listen to politicians like Chirs Dodd and smuckey schuemer. They are takers in life.
Watch cnbc and learn what it is all about. Go read the motley fool:
http://www.fool.com/
and read what others are doing. There are bunches of sites to help you learn. The motley fool brings it down to earth. To make money you have to take some risks. Read up on investing and DO NOT be scared of it. There is a WHOLE lot of money to be made in todays environment. You can do it.
....head up! Today is only the 1st day of the rest of the best of our lives!
Thank the Republicans of the last adminstration. They are responsible. They gave all the money to their rich friends in the form of tax breaks, incentives and lucrative war contracts.
ReplyDeleteCan you imagine what would have happened if Bush and the Republicans got their way and handed over Social Security to Wall Street?
ReplyDelete