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Get Access NowThis checklist will help you determine if an annuity is a good fit for your financial plan. It includes considerations such as your risk tolerance, your current and future cash flow needs, and tax implications. It also takes into account your existing investments, financial goals, and other important factors. With this checklist, you can make an informed decision about whether or not investing in an annuity is right for you.
Should you Contribute to your Roth 401(k)? Download this checklist to find out
What Issues Should You Consider During Your Divorce? Download this comprehensive checklist on what issues important divorce questions.
10 Step Layoff Survival Guide, GOING THROUGH A LAYOFF CAN BE A STRESSFUL AND EMOTIONAL TIME. ADD THE STRESS OF A GLOBAL PANDEMIC, AND IT CAN FEEL DOWNRIGHT OVERWHELMING.
Retirees can be affected by a variety of taxes — state income taxes, estate taxes and Social Security taxes, to name a few. But the most common tax — the one that all retirees will deal with — is the federal income tax. For this reason, we’ll focus primarily on the federal income tax and its effect on individuals planning for retirement, but be aware that all potential taxes need to be understood and planned for by those who hope to have a financially comfortable retirement.
Paying taxes is painful — but not nearly as bad as not having the funds to enjoy retirement. It takes money to travel, indulge in hobbies and check off other items on your bucket list. But paying taxes in retirement can also be costly. The more you spend on taxes, the less you have for enjoyment.
We’ve experienced many tumultuous events in the past 40 years, including 1987’s Black Monday stock market crash, the terrorist attacks of 9/11 and the 2008-09 global financial crisis. Historians will certainly add the COVID-19 pandemic of 2020 to the list of remarkable events that have caused severe market volatility and prolonged periods of uncertainty. All of these events had varying effects on our economy as well as our daily lives. What they share in common, however, is that we’ve always come through them. They hurt while they were happening, and it took longer to recover from some than others, but our market— and our economy — has always come back stronger and better than ever before. Markets, like people, do not like uncertainty. We cannot predict when market volatility will occur or exactly how long it will last. What we can do is look at history to remind us that we’ve always come through it before, and we will come through it again.
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