Sentences with phrase «bite out of your retirement»

Taxes on Social Security benefits take a further bite out of retirement budgets.
In fact, your tax bill can take a big bite out of your retirement income.
These additional fees can take a huge bite out of your retirement savings.
Taxes on Social Security benefits take a further bite out of retirement budgets.
Supporting two households for a decade or two takes a huge bite out of your retirement savings.

Not exact matches

«Most people out here have bits of trickle income in addition to their retirement plan; it's not the conventional «I saved and live off of my savings,»» she said.
The stock market meltdown that accompanied the financial crisis of 2008 - 2009 took a big bite out of Americans» retirement savings, forcing some to delay their retirement dreams.
It's well known that the Great Recession took a big bite out of people's home equity and retirement accounts.
In recent years, money has flooded into low - cost index funds and out of more expensive actively managed funds, thanks in part to a greater focus on the large bite fees take out of already lackluster retirement balances over the long term.
So, I do think that for people who have accumulated most of their retirement savings within the confines of some sort of traditional tax - deferred account, for the sake of just giving yourself a little bit of flexibility in retirement to not have to take required minimum distributions from the account, to have some withdrawals coming out tax - free, I think the Roth contributions can make sense.
There are some non-financial issues with being in equities in late retirement — although there's a case to be made that staying on top of this helps retain intellectual facilities a bit if we look at Warren Buffet and his dreadful diet, looking at the state some people get into as they get older I'm not sure they should be licensed to drive an equity portfolio unless they can sit on their hands and let that nice Mr Vanguard sort out the rebalancing shenanigans...
No, the ex-Aston Villa defender hasn't come out of retirement, this entry is cheating a little bit but the Villains stalwart defender of the mid-2000's has shown himself to be a super managerial talent who could take over at Swansea if Paul Clement was to get the chop or at Stoke City if Mark Hughes's increasingly troubled reign comes to an end.
GOP gubernatorial candidate really got two bites out of the Helen Thomas scandal, first using it to curry favor with Jewish voters and now, in the wake of her retirement announcement, suggesting his Democratic target, AG Andrew Cuomo, was AWOL on the issue.
Asked to come out of a retirement by his friend and former superior Jack Crawford (Dennis Farina, in the role played by Scott Glenn in The Silence of the Lambs), Graham attempts to track down a murderer, known as the «Tooth Fairy» for his propensity to bite his victims, before he strikes again.
Missing out on, say, three years of even moderate returns can take a big bite out of the funds they'll have a few decades later, in retirement.
So yeah, it's just being a little bit smarter on putting these portfolios together, and it's all about, not only your rate of return, but it's mitigating your risk — it's two things in one, and that gets especially important when you're near retirement and you start drawing the dollars out of your portfolio.
However I have done a lot of options - weighing and have determined that with such a relatively low mortgage interest rate (after taxes yours is less than 4.5 % — mine's a bit lower) I am much better off to max out my retirement accounts before paying any extra on my mortgage.
[00:06:57] PA: I was just going to say, that's a big thing, you hear about a lot of people that have lost their entire retirement, a lot of times because it's these people that are nearing retirement, they're 60 years old or something and they haven't actually sat down and thought out, «Maybe I want to start transferring some of this money into something a little bit more stable than stocks.
So, I do think that for people who have accumulated most of their retirement savings within the confines of some sort of traditional tax - deferred account, for the sake of just giving yourself a little bit of flexibility in retirement to not have to take required minimum distributions from the account, to have some withdrawals coming out tax - free, I think the Roth contributions can make sense.
For a bit more context, I also have a healthy amount in emergency funds and I max out my tax - incented retirement savings, so I can dispose of the $ 110K entirely to create passive income.
He lives with me and all of my dogs, which include dogs that were labeled fear biter, human aggressive and dog aggressive, dogs that I would not adopt out but nonetheless have a wonderful life with me in their retirement years.
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