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Thread: self funded retirees
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27th May 2010, 01:07 AM #46
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27th May 2010, 06:28 AM #47
A grey haired friend of mine has a saying "Unfortunately some experience has to be bought" Ouch Greg, I have a few war stories as well.
"We must never become callous. When we experience the conflicts ever more deeply we are living in truth. The quiet conscience is an invention of the devil." - Albert Schweizer
My blog. http://theupanddownblog.blogspot.com
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27th May 2010, 08:04 AM #48
The trouble with that plan is that the so called fixed interest sector got hammered pretty hard during the GFC as well. The prospect of Eurpoean soveriegn debt defaults means the banks that lent them money might fold as well. It was only hard money at bank interest that didn't disappear during the last GFC and the bank interest dropped to something very low. If you had fixed interest in some of the corporates it disappeared. If the banks had folded that money would have disappeared as well.
The stack of cards is pretty large. The debt position of California for instance is at least as bad as Greece. California occasionally has not been able to pay its public servants. The worst debt held by a country looks to be Japan, its debt ratio to GDP is double what Greece owes.
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27th May 2010, 08:44 AM #49
I said fixed interest _etc_...ie all sectors that exhibit less volatility than the stock market. I also indicated at least some investments should be moved into such sectors..not all.
The choice is basically between market sectors with a potentially high return but high risk or sectors with a lower risk but lower returns. The time frame also needs to be considered...ie how long until retirement and how long do you expect to have to depend on your super to fund your retirement.
Just as a matter of interest my SMSF (60% shares, 20% property, 20% FI etc) took a drop during the GFC but fully recovered and is very much in the black.
Cheers MartinWhatever note you blow youre never more than a semitone away from the correct one....(Miles Davis)
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27th May 2010, 02:33 PM #50SENIOR MEMBER
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This is true in general re the SMSF approach. But many who are still employed in some industry/ normal managed fund have much just stuck in shares and hence suffer worse.
Unless one can have or run a SMSF or SM Retirement Fund you are at the mercy of the fund managers. The split you have is not that easy with the normal funds.
I moved to a self managed fund simply as all i ever got for the FA was 'sit and wait' and watched the value slowly vanish. After moving to a SM system it improved and like you it was spread over a range with a level of stability.
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27th May 2010, 02:49 PM #51
Most super funds allow you to nominate the risk you want to invest in. You can usually change that by making a phone call.
Some of my friends changed to cash (fixed interest) in their super funds about Mar 2008 and changed back to higher risk (shares) in June 2009 - their super funds when forward all the time - they never lost anything.
Why did they do it - because i told them that it was going to get worse and any interest is better than a loss.
I am not thinking now is a good time to be shoving all your super into shares either - i think 6 months of Term Deposits (cash investment) wont cost you anything.
You should only invest at the risk you are comfortable with - if you are only comfortable with Govt guaranteed bank interest then don't stick it all in Shares - even if your Financial Advisor says so.
Cheers
Davidregards
David
"Tell him he's dreamin.""How's the serenity" (from "The Castle")
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27th May 2010, 03:02 PM #52
I have been following this out of interest being a receiver of the disability pension but having once been a subscriber to a self funded pension scheme.
I have watched all these schemes grow with not one iota of Government regulation as to those people who spruke and conjole people into being in them the government included.
Economists and financial advisers make squillions even if the market fails the companies still make their profits corp execs their bonuses. They constantly announce the good things well into the future of what they can do.
Not one has ever stood up and said we are about to loose big time and therefore are misleading the public and withholding information if they can see ahead for benefits then with all their years of experience why not the times of hardship ahead.
They should be held accountable.
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27th May 2010, 03:40 PM #53
One place of my employment (almost the last one) was convinced by Macquarie bank to move $1.1 Million from term deposit into a managed fund (Macquarie bank being the fund manager)
This was in August 2007 - by Feb 2008 they had turned the 1.1 Mill into $840,000 - not a batter of the eyelid, apology or anything they just said you have to ride out the lows.
I told them in Aug 2007, during their spiel on investment, that this was not a good time to move but was assured by the Macquarie people that shares were a solid investment then.
They should have been hung and quartered for their advice but as usual nothing happened.
What did the Auditor General say - what could he it was his advice in the first place that investments couldn't just be term deposits they had to be "as a prudent person" would invest.
extra - the "funny" bit was that another $800,000 would not be released early by the investor (was 12 months into a 24 month term) to add to the Macquarie account so it was still earning 8% during this time. - i left before it finished but think it was added to the Macquarie amount.
cheersLast edited by Calm; 27th May 2010 at 03:43 PM. Reason: extra
regards
David
"Tell him he's dreamin.""How's the serenity" (from "The Castle")
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27th May 2010, 03:50 PM #54Jim
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27th May 2010, 04:36 PM #55
A while ago even the Queen asked "If all the Uni trained persons can spend so much time learning when we are to invest and tell us why can't they know when to withdraw our monies before the crashes"?
A wise woman that one.
Macquarie Bank its symbol stolen from the history of a Governor who wanted the best for people. Macquarie Bank's Moto is the name of that Logo's remains "The dump" which was tht which was punched out of the centre creating the hole which the economy falls through.
Sadly its Macbank's small investors who must be hurting most as usual.
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27th May 2010, 04:44 PM #56
Interest rates are going up and the tip is we will have somewhere between 4-7 over the next 18 months. Unless Europe crashes and burns. That said there are a lot of oversold shares on the ASX at the moment. In the last big dip we picked up Comm Bank at $26.88 18 months later we doubled our money. There will be value buys as the market dips.
I completely agree. Just be aware that in your SMSF you will need to document your strategy. There is a lot of research available on different investments. It is not a black art.
Economists and financial advisers make squillions even if the market fails the companies still make their profits corp execs their bonuses. They constantly announce the good things well into the future of what they can do.
Not one has ever stood up and said we are about to loose big time and therefore are misleading the public and withholding information if they can see ahead for benefits then with all their years of experience why not the times of hardship ahead.
They should be held accountable"We must never become callous. When we experience the conflicts ever more deeply we are living in truth. The quiet conscience is an invention of the devil." - Albert Schweizer
My blog. http://theupanddownblog.blogspot.com
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27th May 2010, 05:31 PM #57Quote:
Not one has ever stood up and said we are about to loose big time and therefore are misleading the public and withholding information if they can see ahead for benefits then with all their years of experience why not the times of hardship ahead.
In fact they do. They just dont talk about it on the TV news. You need to get into other areas of the financial press and study economics. eg we are in an increasing interest rate phase. This offers opportunities in certain kinds of stocks, and hence some buying opportunities. The commodity boom is levelling as capacity worldwide is increased, this will affect other stocks. When you know what the next part of the cycle will be you will be able to look for the opportunities it presents.
Quote:
They should be held accountable
If they have ripped you off. Otherwise the risk is yours. Its tough, I agree but that is the way it is. As the saying goes "If you cant run with the big dogs stay on the porch" Education is really the key.
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27th May 2010, 07:13 PM #58GOLD MEMBER
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Has anybody considered the solution of a national superannuation scheme? It might be a bit too new an idea for Australia though, they were introduced in Europe only about 120 years ago. Pity that it would cost a lot, paying the dole for all those thousands of then unemployed middlemen. They would have to be re-employed as public servants.
Something I really do not understand: why are politicians fair game but one can not say here that some bureaucrats did not do their job properly?
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28th May 2010, 07:18 AM #59
"Every money investment can go crap at some stage", repeat, "EVERY MONEY INVESTMENT CAN GO CRAP AT SOME STAGE", etc, etc, etc ad nauseum. That is why you always sign a waiver, whether you know it or not you always sign a waiver. Look for words such as "past performance does not indicate future returns" or "independent advice is recommended for all investments" or suchlike. The cant be an iron clad "you will not lose your money" guarantee without a zero or negative rate of return. Investment involves risk. You bank account will make minimal interest because it is guaranteed by the Govt, but apart from that... stuff happens, thats life. Banks go broke too... thats life.
Advisors make mistakes. When you turn wood you know there is a risk of slipping and ruining the wood, your equipment or your flesh. Its a risk you take and you wouldnt dream of trying risky stuff without checking it out with someone who you knew to be a competent turner. The difference with money is that people do take on risks without understanding them. And the investment world is more like a shark pool than a woodturners club. Thats just how it is. So "Every money investment can go crap at some stage". "If you cant run with the big dogs, stay on the porch""We must never become callous. When we experience the conflicts ever more deeply we are living in truth. The quiet conscience is an invention of the devil." - Albert Schweizer
My blog. http://theupanddownblog.blogspot.com
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28th May 2010, 07:46 AM #60
Other points to consider as to how all this has happened and why we can't go back to the good old days when everything was made at home are to do with life expectancy and world population.
In fact when were the good old days when everything was self contained? If you go back to the 1850's and the start of the industrial age the male life expectancy was something like 38 years of age, world population about 1300 million. By the 1950's the world population was starting to rocket up from 2500 million and life expectancy was 66. Today the population is around 6500 million and life expectancy around 75.
File:World-Population-1800-2100.png - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Life Expectancy by Age, 1850–2004 — Infoplease.com
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