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Your Money Ratios: 8 Simple Tools for Financial Security

Your Money Ratios: 8 Simple Tools for Financial SecurityAuthor: Charles Farrell J.D. L.L.M.
Publisher: Avery
Category: Book

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Seller: pbnbooks
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 11 reviews
Sales Rank: 316535

Media: Hardcover
Pages: 272
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.9 x 1

ISBN: 1583333630
Dewey Decimal Number: 332.024
EAN: 9781583333631
ASIN: 1583333630

Publication Date: December 24, 2009
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
A troubled economy calls for answers. Forget complicated, abstract philosophy-- people need sound financial advice that's easy to follow and can be implemented immediately. For the first time, a leading financial adviser has developed a remarkable set of guidelines to give individuals the same kind of objective insight into their personal finances that successful businesses have. Your Money Ratios will help readers effectively manage debt, invest prudently, and develop a realistic and effective savings plan to ensure both financial success and security. Readers need only plug their income and age into Farrell's ratios in order to get an instant picture of their savings status and overall financial health, as well as a roadmap for the important choices they must make in the future. Here's what you will find in this book:

IF YOU ARE IN YOUR 20s OR 30s
Your Money Ratios will tell you how to get started and what you need to do over the next 35 years to stay on track. If you are lucky enough to read this book when you are young, you will have a clear vision for where you need to go throughout your working career. By setting yourself on the right path, you won't have to work so hard later in life to meet your goals.

IF YOU ARE IN YOUR 40s
You can benchmark your own financial circumstances against the ratios and see how you are doing with respect to your savings, debt, investments and insurance. You have plenty of time to make adjustments if necessary and plot out your path to retirement.

IF YOU ARE IN YOUR 50s
The formula will provide you with a realistic assessment of your ability to retire. It will help you make the important decisions about how to allocate your financial resources over the next 10 to 15 years, and how to put on the final push for retirement.



Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 11



5 out of 5 stars Clear and Simple   April 13, 2010
Mark Bassett (Washington DC)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Gives 8 simple ratios to guide your entire financial life, with sensible explanation of what they are, why they matter, what they should be as you get older, and common sense suggestions for doing them. It is all the common advice gathered into one integrated, comprehensive table of four investing ratios and four insurance ratios. The explanations and advice help keep turn those standard dictates into meaningful, motivating messages and help to explain how things can go wrong. (Pointing out that real estate cannot go up faster than salaries to pay mortgage should have always been obvious.) With the goal of being financially independant and yet protecting against catastrophe it leads you from how much school loans is enough or too much, thru working years of savings rate and mortgage paydown with disability and life insurance, to your golden years and the kinds of health insurance and long-term care insurance.

Contents:
Introductionn - A Simple, New Perspective
1. The Capital to Income Ratio
2. The Savings Ratio
3. Social Security
4. Where to Save Your Money
5. The Debt Ratios
6. The Investment Ratio
7. Stocks and Bonds
8. Ignoring Wad Street
9. The Disability Insurance Ratio
10. The Life Insurance Ratio
11. The Long-Term Care Insurance Ratio
12. Health Insurance
13. Getting Professional Health
14. Putting It All Together
Appendix - Special Situations




5 out of 5 stars One of the best financial guides out there!   April 11, 2010
lapazana
This book is, first of all, extremely well-written. The writing is clear and direct. Farrell explains complicated financial situations like no one else. And of course, his ideas about ratios and investing and how to make the important financial decisions one is required to make in life are chockful of sheer common sense. I've read numerous books by personal finance gurus, and his is the best in terms providing prudent recommendations and offering very solid reasoning to support them. I really am impressed with this book and would highly recommend it to anyone at any age. Farrell is fabulous!


5 out of 5 stars A Great Financial Guide   March 9, 2010
tblodge
Your Money Ratio$ has helped me to assess my financial positioning and has been instrumental in helping me determine any necessary adjustments for long term financial success. Mr. Farrell writes in a straight forward, easy to understand style that allows the part-time retirement investor to concentrate on what really matters (long term growth) instead of the get rich quick stories. Mr. Farrell also avoids the all too common technique of scarring the reader into thinking his or her financial sky is falling. Most helpful were the portions of the book dealing with insurance. This book is a must have for the average investor.


4 out of 5 stars Sensible, thoughtful, and filled with common sense approaches   February 19, 2010
F. Gonzalez-Soldevilla (Miami, FL)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Kudos to the writer for making it so clear and within everyone's reach to be successful with finances. As more people read this work, we will slowly resolve the problem of financial dependency so pervasive in society today. This work should be found in the self-help area of bookstores. It is an easy read and a definite entry point for everyone seeking basic financial awareness.

Mr. Farrell offers a very clear explanation of how everyone should address financial issues. If more people had read this book prior to the phenomenal crisis we currently endure, none would have lost their homes, their cars, or their job. Private industry and banks would not have fired anyone, instead they would still be hiring more workers. We would remain the pillar of financial strength that irresponsible behavior destroyed.

The author's argument places the financial responsibility for our future needs squarely on each of us. He provides the reader with a blueprint for the meeting of long-term financial goals. His philosphical position is almost a Libertarian argument--except for the acceptance of Social Security as a pillar of virtue, which most Libertarians would argue against, especially in light of the abuses perpetrated by the ever-increasing waves of pillagers in Congress. Nonetheless, his suggested cures for the ills of the system as we face them today are sensible and should be heeded with immediacy.

The work is well conceived, albeit a tad repetitive at times, yet understandably so; most individuals tend to forget from one minute to the next the importance of thoughtful financial planning and a strict adherence to a plan. It all revolves around the notion of becoming a capitalist who lives by lending money to others instead of remaining a laborer forever who must do some type of work to live from its wages. It addresses the most salient points for financial solvency at any age: education, home ownership, credit card debt, and transportation, all within the money ratios that are the focus of his work.

"Charlie," as he often refers to himself in the book, provides a clear path to the financial success that most careful planners would dream to accomplish as they traverse across the different stages of life. The goal in the end is to target funds for retirement, when most expect to kick back and enjoy a better and more relaxing lifestyle, free of FICA contributions and lower taxation in general. Sacrifices and difficult decisions must be made along the way; but in the end, the work's solutions are fruitful and conducive to a successful outcome. If carefully adhered to individually with rigor and stalwart determination, the book's premises will result in a self-reliant retirement plan that would benefit more than the individual and his family.




5 out of 5 stars A Valuable Source of Information & Guidance   February 6, 2010
RiverRunner
What a valuable source of information and guidance for financial health. "Your Money Ratios" gives crystal clear advice for how to prepare for retirement. I also appreciate the honest and sincere approach to educate people in a straight forward way about their personal finances. This book is especially important for young people just entering the work force to read and carefully, faithfully follow. I will be purchasing copies for my young adult sons and encouraging them to follow the ratios to ensure peace of mind with regard to their financial future.

Showing reviews 1-5 of 11


Worthwhile Reading

Expectations Versus Reality in Retirement
By Marc Cram

As we baby boomers approach retirement many of us have started to take a much closer look at what we will need in the form of assets if we are to live to the age of 80 and beyond. Most of us have been very focused on accumulation of assets up to this point and may not have stopped to consider what the future outcomes might look like.

We all have had expectations of what our accounts might look like and some of us have had those expectations dashed by market corrections or other financial setbacks. I think it is time that we took a close look at what other expectations we have for the future versus what reality might spring upon us. If we are to be successful in our own retirements we should move toward it with our eyes wide open and our plans firmly in place.

What follows is a short examination of five areas that each of us should prepare for and a few ideas that might help you improve your chances of success. Some of this might appear to be doomsday like but I think we will all be better off if we prepare for the worst while expecting the best, so let’s dig in.

Expectation #1: The stock market will continue to provide above average returns well into the next decade.

We know that investing in the stock market has produced the best chance of growing our assets at rates that beat inflation and other fixed money instruments over time. If you stay invested you will always get the average market return for the period you are in the market.

One thing we can say for sure about the markets, though, is that they will never go straight up or straight down. We tend to see periods of growth and periods of stagnation. In the short-term no one can predict whether you will make or lose money but we know that over the long term (10 plus years) you will get whatever the markets return.

The danger for us going forward is that when we start taking income from our investments, every negative year will shorten the lifespan of our potential income stream by as much as 5 years or more. If we want to live comfortably to ages of 85 or 90 we will need more predictable returns than those odds will give us. Are you willing to bet that the markets will perform the way you want them to when you get ready to retire? I don’t think any of us is willing to take that bet and that is why more and more of us are looking for instruments that will guarantee us a minimum return and lifetime income streams with the money we already have accumulated. A little research on your part should yield some good choices for those assets you can’t afford to lose.

Expectation #2: I will be in lower tax bracket when I retire.

I am sure you have been told this by every planner or investment professional you have ever talked to. They all encouraged you to fully fund your IRAs and 401ks because of the current tax deductions and the tax deferred growth with the promise that when you retired you will be in a lower tax bracket. I have conducted seminars for over 5 years now where I ask the question of my audience, “do you think future tax rates will be lower, the same or higher”? I can count on one hand the number of people who said lower or the same. When you look at our country’s current level of debt along with the future liabilities for our major entitlement programs (which we will look at next) I think you too will be hard pressed to think your taxes will even stay the same going forward, let alone reduce.

Whatever your current tax bracket is, can you imagine living on less than you are today? If your income stays the same and your deductions disappear because your kids are gone and your home is paid off, what chance do you have to reduce your tax burden? The reality is that during a 20 year retirement, if you have accumulated all of your retirement assets in tax-deferred accounts, you will pay 10 times more in taxes than you saved in taxes over your lifetime, assuming no tax increase. Every increase in taxes going forward will mean you will need to take more money out of your savings to maintain the same lifestyle.

One way to solve this dilemma is to start funding a private tax-free retirement plan using an insurance product that is linked to a market index and designed to provide maximum cash accumulation with a minimum death benefit. This product is known as equity indexed universal life. Here again, a little research on your part will reveal multiple, high quality companies that currently offer these products.

Expectation # 3: I can count on Medicare and Social Security to be there for me like it was for my parents.

The reality is that both of these programs are in trouble and will only get worse as the 80 million baby boomers enter retirement. Ask anyone under the age of 40 if they think Social Security will be there for them and you will soon see that this reality is already well entrenched in our culture. The facts are that 60% of current retirees say that 50% of their income currently comes from Social Security, 34% say that it is 90% of their income and 22% say that it is 100% of their income.

By one account, it is predicted that by 2019 Medicare will consume 24% of all tax receipts and by 2042 it will consume 51% of all taxes collected.1 If you think universal health care will solve this problem, you must realize that Medicare is a form of universal health care and anything that will replace it will be burdened by the same reality of baby boomers living much longer in retirement than their parents ever did.

As for Social Security, it is predicted that the Social Security trust fund will begin be tapped into in 2018 and be completely depleted by 2044.2 If we had made changes to this program years ago we might have been able to extend it but I don’t see any congress willing to touch this problem until it is too late.

The bottom line is that benefits will need to go down, we will need to wait longer to be eligible and taxes will need to go up to pay for the massive increases in cost that will result from the higher usage figures projected. We are going to have to become responsible for our own retirement planning and should these promised benefits materialize for us we should feel lucky if we can plan an extra night on the town every month.

Expectation #4: I will live to my normal life expectancy.

This might well be true but then you must ask yourself, what is my life expectancy? When Social Security was instituted the average time spent in retirement was 3 years. Many of us today will spend 20 to 30 years in retirement. Statistically speaking, if you are a single male age 65 you have a 50% chance you will live to age 85 and a 25% chance to live to 92. If you are a single female age 65 you have a 50% chance you will live to 88 and 25% you will live to 94. If you are a married couple age 65 one of you has a 50% chance to live to 92 and a 25% to live to 97.

If these numbers don’t get you thinking about how long you will need for your money to last consider this. One of the fastest growing age groups in the United States are those people over the age of 100. There are currently over 27,000 people over 100 and that number is sure to grow as the baby boomers begin to age.

Expectation # 5: I will stay healthy well into my final years.

There is no doubt about it; we are much more conscious of our health and taking care of our bodies and minds than any generation in the history of the world. We are finding new ways to combat disease and to stave off illness as well as to treat conditions that would have killed us only a generation ago. However, all of this has come at a price and that price needs to be calculated into our future income needs.

According to a study by Fidelity Investments, a retired couple without employer-sponsored health insurance can expect to pay $215,000 for out-of-pocket health care costs like premiums and co-pays. Moreover, this number does not include significant costs like long-term care, which isn't fully covered by Medicare. These numbers also assume you live to your life expectancy and not beyond. Last year these costs rose by 7.5% and we do not know what kind of increases we may see in the years ahead. As we have outlined above, Medicare costs could easily rise by double digits in the next 20 years.

If we add in home health care and long-term care into this equation we can easily double the numbers above and put a further strain on our already over taxed retirement funds. One thing you can do about potential long-term care needs is to purchase a long-term care policy from one of the many experts in this field. What you can do to prepare

The numbers aren’t pretty but there is no need to despair. Whether you have years to prepare for retirement or you are already there you can create a plan to succeed and prosper in your own retirement. To summarize let’s go over the realities again:

• Investment directly into stock market investments can leave you at the mercy of the markets and geopolitical events. You will need to be in investments that can give you predictable returns without the threat of market downturns.

• Taxes will probably be going up over the next few years and into your retirement. It would be best to use your tax-deferred retirement plans early in your retirement and it may be prudent to move them to tax-free instruments at your earliest opportunity.

• Government entitlement programs will take a larger and larger share of the tax revenue in the future and future benefits may well be reduced or eliminated. Start taking responsibility of your future income needs by using instruments that can give you market based growth in a tax-free environment.

• Plan to outlive your own life expectancy. Create plans that will provide income streams you cannot outlive. There are many instruments on the market today that provide living income benefits you cannot outlive and that can be funded with both taxable and tax-deferred assets you now own.

• Expect to stay healthy but plan for the probability that you will need to spend more on heath care in the future. Purchase a long-term care policy that will pay for future needs at home and in care facilities.

One thing you can do right now is to get educated and speak with a professional advisor, preferably one who carries the CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER® designation. The sooner you take action the greater your success will be. Remember, by planning for the worst while expecting the best, you will be the ultimate winner and your retirement years will be all you have dreamed they would be.

1 According to Medicare Trustee Thomas R. Saving, a professor of economics at Texas A&M University and senior fellow at the National Center for Policy Analysis. 2 Trustees of the Social Security Trust Fund

Marc Cram is a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER® in Durham, North Carolina. He works with families to protect and increase their assets using safe liquid investments. Marc holds a free online seminar every Monday evening at 9:00 pm Eastern time and can be contacted through his website at www.cramgroup.com. You can download a free 12 page article on how to safely and conservatively build wealth at www.wealthyyou.us

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Retirement Facts
Whether a worker is offered and participates in a retirement plan at work depends greatly on what type of worker the person is: • Public-sector workers have the highest level of participation in a retirement plan (75.8% in 2004), while parttime workers typically are not offered a retirement plan or rarely participate when they are. • Among all workers, less than half (41.9% in 2004) participate in a retirement plan. • Among full-time, full-year wage and salary workers, more than half (56.6% in 2004) participate in a retirement plan.
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