Texarkana Gazette

Ten retirement resolution­s for this year

- By Janet Kidd Stewart

New Year financial resolution­s are like investor complaint filings with regulators: they typically wane during positive stock markets. In good times, the thinking must go, why do anything differentl­y?

Take it from these retirement experts—from top advisers to a recent retiree himself—there is still plenty of room to improve your retirement picture in 2018:

PLAY MIND GAMES

With the latest Star Wars episode fresh in mind, author Jan Cullinane (“The Single Woman’s Guide to Retirement,” AARP/Wiley) is channeling her inner Jedi. She’s using tricks from the world of behavioral economics to improve financial habits.

“Trick your mind into being more money savvy by doing simple things,” she says, including paying cash whenever possible because it makes us feel the loss of money more acutely. Another trick: Reframe your thoughts on spending by calculatin­g how many hours or days you need to work to afford whatever you are thinking of buying.

CUT THE CORD

Catherine Collinson, CEO and president of the Transameri­ca Center for Retirement Studies, is cutting the cord on cable television in 2018. It’s part of a personal tradition of setting savings goals each January and tracking the progress.

“The minimum savings rate I strive for now is 20 percent, so as I go through my expenses from the previous year I really look for things I don’t need.”

REDIRECT A PAYMENT

With their youngest child heading into her final semester of college, Marcia Mantell and her husband, Dan, are resolving to save the equivalent of those college tuition payments in their retirement accounts. Mantell, founder of Mantell Retirement Consulting Inc., figures the added contributi­ons will help “purchase” a couple of years of retirement, meaning the couple (now in their mid-50s) will be able to retire a little sooner.

BE MORE STRATEGIC ABOUT CHARITY

Veteran financial adviser Jonathan Guyton is waiving some of his advisory fees on assets pegged for clients’ charitable causes and is helping clients think more strategica­lly about their donor-advised funds given the recently signed federal tax law. The funds allow donors to collect a tax deduction for the gift for the year it is given, but lets them accrue the money over time and designate it to specific charities later.

AVOID BITCOIN

York University finance professor Moshe Milevsky, who has written extensivel­y about annuities, is urging savers to take some stock-market profits from recent years and put them into annuities that pay income for life in 2018. And, “stay away from bitcoin, etherium and other cryptocurr­encies,” he says.

SPEND MORE

Most retirement books and articles boil down to “spend less, save more.” James Bourdeau, 69, a retired physician in Satellite Beach, Fla., resolves to do the opposite now that retirement is here.

Bourdeau and his wife, Teri (who is still working), have taken big foreign trips in recent years and in 2017 he created what he called a personal sabbatical, spending nearly six months in Quebec City, polishing his French. For 2018, he’s working on a novel about the baby boom generation.

“While we are healthy we want to explore the world as much as we can,” he said. “As a physician, I’ve seen people age and it can happen very fast, so we are willing to spend more upfront in retirement and worry a less about the tail end than perhaps others might, knowing that this spending will change as time goes by.”

TAKE SMALLER STEPS

Dana Anspach, a financial planner and founder of Sensible Money LLC, is tired of unkept resolution­s, so she’s urging clients to think about smaller goals.

“If you never work out, it’s unrealisti­c to set a New Year’s resolution to go to the gym every day,” she says. By the same token, she’s urging clients to find $100 a month in their current spending to save instead, or boost their 401k accounts by 1 percent.

SPEAK UP AT WORK

Alicia Munnell, director of the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College, suggests workers communicat­e their desire for a long career path.

“If they let it be known that they want to work well into their 60s, they improve their attractive­ness to their employer,” she said.

GET A HOUSING GAME PLAN

Susan Collins, executive director of The Transition Network, is planning to downsize sooner rather than later.

“Housing is a hot issue for our members and being a single woman, as many of our members are, I need to ensure my own long-term sustainabi­lity by moving my housing plan forward,” she said. “It has two goals: Downsizing and moving closer to my siblings. At some point, either I’m taking care of them or they’re taking care of me and a 20-minute distance between us is better than 45.”

FORGET RETIREMENT

Finally, Michael Kitces, a partner with Pinnacle Advisory Group and publisher of the blog Nerd’s Eye View, is trying to forget the word retirement.

“It’s because retirement implies you’re supposed to literally retire and not be engaged in any kind of work,” he says. “Most people actually enjoy being engaged in some way. Instead, think of your coming transition as ‘financial independen­ce,’ the ability to choose to do whatever you want to do to stay active, regardless of any need for income. If that happens to generate at least a little income, is it possible you could actually be financiall­y independen­t even sooner than you realized?”

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