Boost Your Retirement Savings, No Matter Your Age, With This ETF

 | Sep 17, 2020 12:09

In many countries, individuals are increasingly taking on responsibility for securing their own financial well-being in their retirement years. Saving and investing wisely while working makes it possible to fully enjoy the golden years.

Today, we will look at exchange-traded funds (ETFs) that can help readers at different life stages to invest for retirement.

h2 Making A Plan/h2

Many wonder how they’ll be able to afford retirement, leading the type of lifestyle they have become accustomed to. Suggestions for what percentage of one's salary is needed for retirement vary from country to country. In the US half and two-thirds .

While cost of living and spending habits may differ significantly based on geographic location and personal inclination, we will offer scenarios which can be adjusted to readers' specific circumstances.

For example, someone with a salary of $50,000 per year may determine they need around $25,000-$33,000 annually, assuming that they do not have any mortgage or rental payments to make in retirement.

One way to calculate how much savings would be needed, leaving potential Social Security or other private pensions aside, is to multiply the amount needed by the years expected to live in retirement.

Assuming that starting at age 65 an individual will need $30,000 per year and expects to live for another 25 years after retirement, they would need $750,000—a calculation that further assumes that the $750,000 will earn no interest income.

The important takeaway: be realistic about how much money you will actually require.

h2 Saving $750,000 By Age 65/h2

To take maximum advantage of the powerful effect of compound interest, it's important to start saving and investing early.

Examining the S&P 500 index's returns over decades, it's clear the number of positive years far outweighs negative years, with different sources suggesting that annualized returns over longer periods of time stand at around 8%-10% for the benchmark.