Only the poors rely on their 401K, pension, and IRAs.
oh here it comes. The pity party has started. Wow, I wonder if the people who grew up during the Depression reviled their grandparents for having it easier than they did. Don't recall any Woody Guthrie tunes about the spoiled older generations.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:401ks are a scam and rip off the only people making money on these are the investment fund companies http://money.cnn.com/2012/07/25/retirement/401k-fees.moneymag/index.htm
Well I made my first million through my 401(k). Have you made your first million yet? If so, how did you do it?
are you 50+ years old? The younger generation got screwed by you. You will be able to retire on the backs of your children who will not be able to achieve the golden parachute of government benefits, pensions, artificial stock / housing appreciation (housing before 2005, stocks before .com crash) etc... that are not available to us.
different poster. I'm not sad about this at all. This is common to our region. I don't understand all the house envy that goes on in these threads.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are living beyond your means.
No one is forcing you to own a house that makes you a slave to a $300K/yr job but YOU.
My advice is to downsize to a home you can afford on one salary (or a lower salary) and gain your financial security/job flexibility that way. You can still live in a close-in neighborhood, just in less space.
Signed, someone who lives in a 1200 sq ft house that cost less ($500K) than the total value of our 401Ks, and with a mortgage payment that's less than half of one of our salaries. Very happy with our lifestyle and flexibility/savings.
its sad that we must live in these conditions as the middle class.
Anonymous wrote:bad idea right? we are seriously considering cashing out one of the 401Ks and paying off a second trust on our house, we then plan on saving payment each month to grow our cash reserves and just have some more security in that we won't lose our house if we lost a job or had to take significant paycuts. we will also be able to refinance and take advantage of the low rate. Here's how I see it:
Pros: pay off high interest 2nd trust
Refi 1st and lower payments by almost 2K a month
ability to be more flexible in job market (ie. no needing to make 300k a year)
Cons - obvious - taxes, penalties, losing future returns on investments.
anybody done this even though its against all conventional wisdom?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:well sort of a bad idea. IF you were able to buy a house and pay the MAXIMUM amount of points against the 401k withdraw you could deduct away most of the penalty. Try to minimize the loss by finding a way to deduct against it that tax year.
FYI we are doing this and plan to liquidate current 401k that has remained stagnant for the last 12 years. Our new plan is to continue to buy rental homes and use future income of paid off homes for retirement.[/quote
exteremely smart. This is the real way to build wealth. Only t he poors rely on their 401k, pensions, and IRAs.
Where in the US or the world do they use the world "poors"? It's a little entertaining, like Marie Antoinette being out of touch saying, "Let them eat cake."
Anonymous wrote:Can't you "borrow" from your 401K, pay off the 2nd trust, and then repay the loan from the 401K with the savings from refinincing your mortgage at a lower rate?
Anonymous wrote:I don't feel comfortable with saving money and expecting it to last in the future, I prefer an investment that will generate income. The only ting available as pp pointed out is rental income since pensions are gone.
Anonymous wrote:Only the poors rely on their 401K, pension, and IRAs.