Anonymous wrote:The great thing about a solid government pension is that you don’t need any conservative bond exposure in the rest of your investments. You can pretty much go fully into equities for the next 20 years and reap larger returns than the Average Joe without a pension.
Anonymous wrote:To get a rough idea, you can use this annuity calculator.
https://www.calculatorsoup.com/calculators/financial/present-value-annuity-calculator.php
I ran the annuity at 30 years, 0% interest, $100,000 payment increasing at 3% a year (for the COLA inflation protection), and it calculated a present value of $3,000,000.
Anonymous wrote:Is there some specific reason? Generally, you just discount the annual cash flows by the risk-free rate (ie treasury rates) over some time period. 10 year treasury rate is probably good.
Is this to determine if you should take something lump sum vs annual pension?
Anonymous wrote:I’m a 51 yo who just retired from the Navy as an O-6 naval aviator after 29 years of service. Does anyone know how to value a military pension with COLA into a Net Worth calculation? Various websites out there with suggestions on how to do this (lump sum, TIPs model, annuity comparison) and obviously you have to make assumptions about your longevity but was wondering if any of the military retirees on DCUM had a formula that “worked” for them. TIA
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a 51 yo who just retired from the Navy as an O-6 naval aviator after 29 years of service. Does anyone know how to value a military pension with COLA into a Net Worth calculation? Various websites out there with suggestions on how to do this (lump sum, TIPs model, annuity comparison) and obviously you have to make assumptions about your longevity but was wondering if any of the military retirees on DCUM had a formula that “worked” for them. TIA
On another note, you missed the hiring wave.
You be a senior wide body FO or mid-range narrow body CA if you separated at 20.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a 51 yo who just retired from the Navy as an O-6 naval aviator after 29 years of service. Does anyone know how to value a military pension with COLA into a Net Worth calculation? Various websites out there with suggestions on how to do this (lump sum, TIPs model, annuity comparison) and obviously you have to make assumptions about your longevity but was wondering if any of the military retirees on DCUM had a formula that “worked” for them. TIA
On another note, you missed the hiring wave.
You be a senior wide body FO or mid-range narrow body CA if you separated at 20.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a 51 yo who just retired from the Navy as an O-6 naval aviator after 29 years of service. Does anyone know how to value a military pension with COLA into a Net Worth calculation? Various websites out there with suggestions on how to do this (lump sum, TIPs model, annuity comparison) and obviously you have to make assumptions about your longevity but was wondering if any of the military retirees on DCUM had a formula that “worked” for them. TIA
Anonymous wrote:Is there some specific reason? Generally, you just discount the annual cash flows by the risk-free rate (ie treasury rates) over some time period. 10 year treasury rate is probably good.
Is this to determine if you should take something lump sum vs annual pension?