Is your retirement plan safe?
by Chemain
Evans
Once upon a time there was a man
named Joe who decided he wanted to be a fisherman. He went out looking
for work and found a job on a fishing boat. Joe was very dedicated and
hardworking. He planned on working on the
boat the entire day. After all, the
boss had promised extra incentive for those who would. During the
middle of the day his boss came to him and said, "Joe, you're a
terrific employee. I can provide you food and shelter while you're on
the boat, but I'm not going to be able to pay you that extra incentive
at the end of the day. However, here's a net. Throw it out there and
hope for the best."
So Joe found a good spot to the side
of the fishing boat and threw out his net. Lucky for him, he put out
his net in a place full of all kinds of fish. Periodically he would
look over the edge at the net and was pleased that the amount of fish
was growing.
Finally it was time for the boat to
return to shore. Joe started to draw in his net when he noticed
something-all of the fish were slipping out into the water! How could
this have happened? Everything seemed to be going so well. But upon
closer inspection, Joe realized his net had a very large hole in it.
Joe had not thought to check it before he threw it out, because Joe
really didn't know that much about fishing. Now Joe had to go home,
empty-handed and hungry. As far-fetched as this little parable may
sound, it's not too far from the truth when it comes to retirement, at
least according to several key people in the finance industry. You
see, we are no longer in the age of pensions. We don't receive a
monthly paycheck at the end of our working years (that extra incentive
that was promised Joe). We live in the age of Employee-Funded
Retirement Plans, also known as 401ks, IRAs, and Roth IRAs. We are
expected to provide for our own retirement (here's a net; hope for the
best), which would be fine if we had some idea of what we're doing.
But, alas, we don't, and most of us failed to check our net before we
threw it into the stock market.
Yes, the stock market. Investing in
401ks and IRAs is investing in the stock market. Most people don't
really know how to invest in the stock market, but they think they're
doing a pretty good job of "fishing", as Robert T. Kiyosaki,
author of the Rich Dad, Poor Dad series of books, explains in his book
Prophecy: Why the Biggest Stock Market Crash in History Is Still
Coming…and How You Can Prepare Yourself and Profit from It!. The
problem, as he and other financial leaders see it, is that the stock
market growth is being propelled by the numerous, albeit
investment-ignorant, Baby Boomers, all desperately investing in order
to "save something for retirement." The law that allows
this, the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), is, at
least for now, fatally flawed-and here is where the hole in the net
comes into play. ERISA forces people to start withdrawing money when
they reach 70 ½ years of age. The first of the baby boomers reach
this point in the not-too-distant year 2016.
That's a pretty big hole in the net,
because we all know that there are more baby boomers working than
there are workers to replace them. So what happens when there are more
people who are being forced to sell their stocks and convert it into
cash to live on than there are people to buy that stock? The price of
stocks declines (the old economic law of supply vs. demand). People
start noticing that their portfolios are dropping in value, rather
rapidly. People get nervous. People sell. Stock values decline
further. The cycle continues until you have a full-blown stock market
crash. Sorry-despite what you've heard, diversifying will not save
you. No sector will be safe. Everything you've worked so hard to
"save" in the stock market could easily be wiped out in a
very short period of time, as many people learned in the stock market
crash of 2000.
There are other factors that Mr.
Kiyosaki discusses in his book that could hasten this crash, but they
will not be discussed here. The simple fact is, most of us have no
idea what we're doing when it comes to "investing" in the
stock market. In fact, it's pretty safe to say that we're not
"investing"; we're trying to use the stock market as a
savings vehicle, something it was not designed to do. At the first
sign of major trouble, most of us will turn tail and run, trying to
"get out "while we can.
However, all is not lost, but you
must take the power back into your own hands. If you are truly
interested in protecting yourself from this coming crash, you need to
get educated about investing, not saving. You need a way to have
residual income, regardless of what the stock market does. Check out
some of the Resources links on this website to find books and other
resources to help you become informed. After all, your future is at
stake, and you don't want to go home at the end of the day hungry and
empty-handed.