Sunday November 22, 2009 4:41 AM ET
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Retirement

The SmartMoney 401(k) Planner

WILL YOUR 401(k) send you to the Bahamas or the poorhouse? Use our graphical calculator to see how your savings will grow — and how long they'll last after you retire. Want to know if you could retire early? Curious what would happen if inflation takes off again? Play with the numbers to find out the answers to your questions.

401(k) Worksheet

SmartMoney.com would like to invite you to visit our Variable Annuities Custom Resource Center.
Click here to find out more about this financial product and how it may apply to you.


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User Comments
Posted by: KReneSoto
yay! I'm safe! I just turned 20 and am putting in 30% pretax working as a Computer Engineer, company matches 4%, however my husband doesn't have a career yet >.<

The markets SUCK though. Don't know what to put down as my investment elections!!! My dad says I'm young, so I should go 'aggressive', my grandpa says to put everything in T-bills... I don't know what to do.

Any suggestions?
Posted by: sanserve
Most often, true, but not this time. I don't sell any products at all. I create and manage income programs. The costs inside a managed Closed End Fund (taxable or tax free)don't concern me... if I'm getting 5.5% or 7.8% respectively, with monthly payments, I'm happy.

Steve Selengut
sanserve (at) aol.com
800-245-0494
http://www.sancoservices.com
http://www.kiawahgolfinvestmentseminars.com/
http://www.valuestockindex.com/

Professional Portfolio Management since 1979
Author of: 'The Brainwashing of the American Investor: The Book that Wall Street Does Not Want YOU to Read', and 'A Millionaire's Secret Investment Strategy'
Posted by: jimtdr
Whenever I read a comment like that posted by sanserve I question if the person writing the post is selling fixed income products. It is amazing to me the number of people who try to justify this type of product without ever addressing the fees incurred when you purchase it.
Posted by: sanserve
The key thing to remember is that the 401(k) is not a retirement plan. Here's an article:

Why 401(k) Retirement Plans Really Don't Work

The good news about the Internet is the information we can get our cursors on instantly; the bad news is the information we can get our heads around instantly, but without any way of gauging accuracy, relevance, or completeness. This is particularly evident in the financial-investment-retirement world, where thousands of websites tell us how to do things and why, and why things work the way they do and how. Few gurus explain why and how certain concepts and plans of action just may not work the way they are supposed to.

You don't need to read very far before the fingernail-screeching 401(k) chalkboard becomes deafening. For example, do they provide: 1) free money from employers, 2) lower taxable income, 3) retirement without any worries about money, or are they, 4) one of the most popular retirement plans.

The in...(Read more of this comment)
Posted by: pchenard
If you want to take your defined benefits into account - just lower your income requirement by the defined benefit amount.
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