Less Risky Alternative to Early Retirement
Taking the opportunity to do what you want in a less compensated way is better than working like a dog until you can quit work altogether. First off, you'll never know for sure that quitting is the right time and thing to do unless you have injuries or disabilities that keep you from work.
Find your way out of work and into a vocation that you would continue even if you won the lottery and could retire without worry of ever needing to work for money again. That is an early retirement.
Thursday, March 29, 2018
Tuesday, March 6, 2018
Sunday, March 4, 2018
Retirement Security: Exception Times - Exceptional Measures, Retirement Ready, Forced to Retire Early
Exceptional Measures - Seeking Alpha
This tried and true approach to dividend paying stocks seems to be the most prudent way to back up your retirement plans.
Do you know what retirement ready means?
If you're forced to retire early.
Budgeting Saving, Investing, and Retirement planning
This tried and true approach to dividend paying stocks seems to be the most prudent way to back up your retirement plans.
Do you know what retirement ready means?
If you're forced to retire early.
Budgeting Saving, Investing, and Retirement planning
Saturday, March 3, 2018
Thursday, March 1, 2018
Harvard Investors Write Down 1 Billion
Experts not so expert
This is why it pays to keep your investments simple and the majority of them in reliable and proven categories. Sugar plantations and other high flyers cost Harvard a great amount of money lost to their endowment. For your retirement you want to see no hits like this but rather a steady upward trend if possible. ETF funds that focus on dividends are what I use for this. THe Harvard return 4.4% over the past decade is no better than a whole life plan that you could have gotten twenty years ago. Many mutual funds that stayed in the high cap zone with dividend paying U.S. based stocks come in near 10%.
This is why it pays to keep your investments simple and the majority of them in reliable and proven categories. Sugar plantations and other high flyers cost Harvard a great amount of money lost to their endowment. For your retirement you want to see no hits like this but rather a steady upward trend if possible. ETF funds that focus on dividends are what I use for this. THe Harvard return 4.4% over the past decade is no better than a whole life plan that you could have gotten twenty years ago. Many mutual funds that stayed in the high cap zone with dividend paying U.S. based stocks come in near 10%.
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