Here is all the saving, investing, and retirement advice I wish someone had told me at the very beginning of my career
Advertisement
REUTERS/Darrin Zammit Lupi
A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away, I enrolled in my employer's retirement savings plan. Five percent of each paycheck went into a bunch of mutual funds. For the first few months, I didn't pay much attention to my money. There wasn't very much of it, anyway. But then the stock market kept appearing on the news because the Dow Jones kept hitting new record highs.
Wait a minute, I thought. I wonder how that's affecting my savings?
So I looked at a quarterly statement and saw that my little nest-egg had gained £250 (about $330) all on its own. Whoa, I thought. That's free money for doing nothing! I wish someone had told me about this before!
Here is all the saving and investment advice I wish someone had told me at the very beginning of my career.
It's a guide to saving for retirement if you're just a normal person, especially if you're in your 20s and this stuff sounds too complicated.
I cannot urge you strongly enough to sign up and get started, now. Especially if you are in your 20s. Failing to save in your 20s could cost you hundreds of thousands by the time you hit your 60s. (There's a good theoretical example of why that is here.)
When you're at the beginning of your career it feels like you just don't get paid enough to save, and maybe you can wait until you're in your 30s. Wrong. Successful people turn their savings into assets. Do it now.
Retirement plans shield your money from tax. (In the US they're called 401(k) plans, in the UK they're private pension plans. They are basically the same.) Every £1 you save in a retirement plan is £1 you keep without paying tax. Every £1 you take as cash in your paycheck is taxed, and you lose that tax. Therefore if you are not saving in a retirement plan, you're actively choosing to lose money.
The act of saving gets you into the habit of saving, and that's important because you're going to need to do this for the rest of your life. Plus, doing it early in your career will give you an early demonstration of compounding ...
Once you start saving, you will notice how quickly gains start compounding, and that is where even more free money comes from. (Again, learn to say yes to free money!) If you put £1,000 into an investment fund and did nothing else, it would double in value in 12 years, assuming you got a 6% average return (that's the rough historic average of the S&P 500).
This is double your money for doing nothing:
Jim Edwards
Jim Edwards
This next chart shows someone who saves £1,000 every year in monthly instalments for 12 years. That's £83 every month. This person gets a 6% return. In total, they will have saved £12,000 of their own cash. But the gains have compounded that into £17,413 - for doing nothing! The gain alone is £5,413 in free money.
If you're saving less than 10% ... eh, good luck with that.
If the market crashed and your retirement savings lost 15% - which literally just happened in December 2018 - your tax-free savings would still be "ahead" of the money you took in your paycheck, if your paycheck is taxed at 20% or more.
The market goes up and down. Some years you will lose money. When - and it is when, not if - your retirement savings go through a market crash like 2000 or 2008, it will be the scariest financial experience of your life. Do not bail out.
As markets go down, the price of assets gets cheaper, and your paycheck is thus buying more of them. When markets go up again, you will be the proud owner of a lot of bonds and stocks that you bought at the bottom of the market, and they will gain in value at high speed. This is called "dollar cost averaging," and it means that on average you end up paying less than everyone else for stock/bonds over time. When the market rises again, you will be surprised at the compounding/rebound effect, and you will feel like a rich genius for not chickening out.
It is healthy to experience personally how markets and investing actually work, and what makes assets and savings go up or down.
Most fund managers fail to beat the market. The market as a whole does well most years. If all you do is dump 15% of your salary into the S&P for 20 years and literally do nothing else, you'll probably be ahead of the game. The S&P is a basket of 500 stocks of US companies, and they have international businesses - so you're fully diversified regionally and in terms of big, safe companies. All S&P 500 index ETFs are basically the same (they are on autopilot), so the key is to choose the one with lowest fees.
Take another look at that chart (below). The blue investor got a 6% annual return. But the red investor decided to go with a similar fund, except it had a bigger annual fee. (In other words, blue got a 6% return and red got 5%, after fees). Look at the difference over time:
Jim Edwards
Jim Edwards
And that's just on a deliberately simple one-time investment of £1,000, with interest paid annually. If red and blue had been investing every month, and the interest was paid monthly (it usually is), then blue's gains would be much greater and red's losses even worse.
In the late 1980s companies stopped offering traditional "defined benefit" pension plans that offer a guaranteed salary for life. That was to the detriment of everyone coming into the workforce after that time, in both the US and the UK. To give you an idea of how big a ripoff this was - how much money we all lost - read this. What replaced them is "defined contribution" plans, like the ones I am discussing here. They aren't as good but they're probably all you've got.
Copyright © 2024. Times Internet Limited. All rights reserved.For reprint rights. Times Syndication Service.