Albert Einstein once described compound interest as the
greatest invention of mankind. Smart investors put Einstein's insight to work
for them.
These days, many unsophisticated investors seem to thumb
their noses at Einstein as they engage in a mad quest for safety above all
else. Ironically, they may wind up later with less security instead of more.
Yes, you can choose safe, "guaranteed" investments
for your 401(k). But you'll most likely be stuck with returns of only 3% to 4%
— just enough to keep you ahead of the long-term historical rate of inflation.
To have a comfortable retirement at that rate, you'll have to save much more
money while you're working.
Einstein's work revolved around numbers, and I'm going to
throw out a few. Over a lifetime, an increase of just two percentage points of
return is stunningly dramatic.
Here's a sample.
Many young investors can save $5,000 a year, the current
maximum for funding an IRA. To illustrate Einstein's genius, I calculated the
hypothetical results of doing that for 40 years, for instance from age 25 to
64, at various rates of return.
An investor who gets a low-risk return of 4% could wind up
with $475,128 after 40 years. But if his long-term return were 6% instead, he
could have $773,810.
Think about the difference between those two numbers:
$298,682. Over the years, this investor made 40 investments of $5,000, for a
total of $200,000. Boosting his return by two percentage points — which should
not be particularly difficult or risky — adds nearly 1.5 times the investor's
entire lifetime contributions to his retirement nest egg.
As Einstein would instantly notice, one small change has a
huge cumulative effect. And that's only the start.
Financial planners teach that it's possible to safely
withdraw 4% of a portfolio's value annually in retirement. Applying this rule of
thumb, the investor who achieved 4% could take out $19,005 in his first year of
retirement. The one who earned 6% could take out $30,952. That makes a huge
change in the investor's retirement lifestyle.
There's more: If you assume the same investment return
continues for 30 years of retirement, the portfolio can grow even while it's
paying out retirement income. With a 4% return every year for 30 years, you can
take out a total of $557,121; at 6%, your lifetime withdrawals become
$1,209,551.
It's even better than that. After 40 years of savings and 30
years of retirement, the investor who got a 4% return would have $452,843 to
leave to his heirs. The investor who got 6% would have more than three times
that much: $1,306,012.
To recap: At 4%, your $200,000 of lifetime savings gives you
$557,121 in retirement plus $452,843 after 30 years. At 6%, the same $200,000
contributions give you $1,209,551 in retirement plus $1,306,012 after 30 years.
The totals: At 4%, $200,000 of savings produces a little
more than $1 million in total benefits. At 6%, the total benefits are about
$2.5 million. It doesn't take an Einstein to see why this is worth thinking
about.
An obvious question is how to obtain the higher return.
While nothing - and I really mean nothing - is guaranteed, the long-term
history of investment returns shows that you don't have to take much additional
risk to boost your expected returns from 4% to 6%. Going from all-fixed-income
to a 20% or 30% equity position is likely to do the job - with very little
extra risk.
You can increase your returns in other ways as well. Keep
your expenses low, ideally by using index funds or exchange-traded funds.
Diversify beyond the Standard & Poor's 500 Index SPX by including funds
that invest in small-cap stocks, value stocks, small-cap value stocks,
international stocks, emerging markets stocks and real estate investment
trusts.
All these investments are readily available in funds like
Vanguard and Fidelity.
Finally, if you're interested in notching up the returns
even more, consider the results of achieving a long-term return of 8%. At that
rate, the same $5,000 a year of savings would grow to $1,295,282 after 40
years, producing a first-year retirement income of $51,811, total retirement
distributions of $2,755,274 and leaving $3,830,134 after 30 years.
If you can achieve that, your family and your heirs might
think you were as smart as Einstein.
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Posted By BUBUIOC INC. to
BUBUIOC INC. at 12/01/2012 08:00:00 AM