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Carly Flynn takes a one-week venture into retirement

<p>TV presenter and journalist Carly Flynn might not need to worry about retiring for a decade or two yet, but when it comes to financial security in old age it doesn't hurt to get a heads up on what to expect.</p> <p>The 37-year-old has spent the past week experiencing life on $374 a week – the estimated amount she might earn as a retiree, based on an average New Zealand salary if she works until age 65, and superannuation stays the same.</p> <p>Flynn took the frugality challenge for New Zealand Money Week, an annual campaign to get people to think about their personal finances. The focus this year was to engage people with their KiwiSaver account.</p> <p>Her budget was a paltry $53 a day, which once bills were deducted shrank still further, to a meagre $24.</p> <p>The week was spent in activities typical of the average retiree: gardening and going to the library – "in other words, things I could do for free".</p> <p>Her daily latte was a goner, and a wine night with friends was skipped. Meals consisted of culinary delights such as porridge, tuna, spaghetti and eggs on toast.</p> <p>All in all the North Shore mum of two found the exercise to be "a real eye-opener".</p> <p>Flynn reckons living on $374 is "definitely achievable" and she knows thousands of other Kiwis do it every week. Some manage on even less. But it would be nice to have a little extra at the end of one's working life.</p> <p>"I think I'd like more for when I retire so that I can travel and still shop."</p> <p>Flynn joined KiwiSaver eight years ago but has been categorised as having a "set and forget" approach to her retirement planning. An inspection of her savings gave cause for alarm and she decided to double her contribution and change her fund and investment type.</p> <p>"I did a bit of research before I accepted the challenge and realised my own KiwiSaver savings were pretty abysmal and I'd have bugger all to live on at 65. I thought right, yeah, I actually have to do this health check because no one else is going to look after me.</p> <p>"It's interesting. We all sort of think that someone's going to look after us once we turn 65 or that we'll flog our Auckland properties and go and live in the provinces.</p> <p>"The reality is if I don't start saving now I'm going to have a pretty miserable retirement, or not the kind of retirement I imagine for myself."</p> <p>And that's a reality a few Kiwis might need to face. A recent Westpac-Stuff poll of 700 people found only 15 per cent believed themselves to be in a financially comfortable position to retire, while 43 per cent had done nothing at all to prepare for retirement.</p> <p>According to Westpac's head of wealth products Nigel Jackson "New Zealanders are pretty poorly prepared for retirement".</p> <p>Flynn says she began the week unsure how she would fare. In the end, she was lucky enough to receive a heap of tips and tricks she intends to keep using. She had also been given plenty of feedback from friends and relatives – including one very happy father.</p> <p>"This is a dream for my Dad. He's tried to preach that sort of stuff forever."</p> <p>Written by Josh Fagan. First appeared on <strong><a href="http://www.Stuff.co.nz" target="_blank">Stuff.co.nz</a></strong>.</p> <p><strong>Related links:</strong></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/finance/retirement-income/2016/01/7-common-retirement-myths-debunked/">7 common retirement myths debunked</a></strong></em></span></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/finance/retirement-income/2015/12/balancing-act-for-funding-your-retirement/">Balancing act for funding your retirement is a tricky test</a></strong></em></span></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><strong><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/finance/retirement-income/2015/12/10-quotes-that-sum-up-retirement/">10 quotes that perfectly sum up retirement</a></strong></em></span></p>

Retirement Income

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7 common retirement myths debunked

<p>When you are working hard to bring up a family it's hard to imagine being retired. Retirement is like another world with a completely different set of issues, opportunities and constraints.</p> <p>On the plus side (if you are lucky), you will have no mortgage, no dependent children and plenty of spare time.</p> <p>On the other hand, you will have a low income, the risk of health issues and eventually the end of life.</p> <p>Because it's so different to working life, it's easy to make assumptions about how it will be, and often those assumptions are off the mark. Let's look at some of the most common myths around retirement.</p> <p><strong>If I join KiwiSaver I'll be saving enough for my retirement.</strong></p> <p>Everybody's expectations for retirement are different. Whether your KiwiSaver fund will be enough will depend on the kind of retirement you envisage.</p> <p>If you hope to see the world you will need significantly more than someone who is content to stay at home and spend time with friends and family. It's best to set some clear goals for your retirement and then work out how much you will need.</p> <p><strong>As I get older I will need less income because I won't be so active.</strong></p> <p>Retirement has different stages.</p> <p>Early retirement is a great time to be active; to travel, play sport and take up hobbies. These things all cost money.</p> <p>As you become less active, your needs will change, but may require the same or even more money.</p> <p>You may need to pay for healthcare, replacement of your car or redecoration of your house.</p> <p>Towards the end of life, you may need to pay someone to do your housework, mow your lawns or cook your meals.</p> <p>Alternatively, you may need funds to move to a retirement village or rest home.</p> <p><strong>I won't need health insurance because New Zealand has a great public health system.</strong></p> <p>For people over 50, hip and knee replacements, colonoscopies, cataract extractions and skin lesion removals are the basis for the bulk of claims paid by health insurers.</p> <p>While these can all be done within the public health system, there are long waiting lists. Without insurance, your choices are to pay for private healthcare yourself or wait for treatment.</p> <p>When I retire I will move to a cheaper house to free up money for my retirement.</p> <p>While many people move to a smaller house when they retire, they tend to buy a newer house requiring less maintenance, paying the same or even more than the value of the house that was sold.</p> <p>When it comes to the crunch, most people feel uncomfortable moving to a house of a lesser standard or value than what they have become used to.</p> <p><strong>I will aim to live off the income I earn from my investments and leave the capital untouched.</strong></p> <p>This aim is both unrealistic and undesirable.</p> <p>To produce additional income of around $10,000 after tax per annum and keep ahead of inflation, you would need retirement capital of $500,000 assuming a rate of return of 2 per cent after inflation and tax.</p> <p>If you are prepared to run your capital down over 25 years, you will need retirement capital of just under $200,000.</p> <p>By not using your capital you are depriving yourself of income for the sake of your beneficiaries, who, let's face it, are probably going to spend it.</p> <p>It is hard to see the value of your retirement nest egg slowly disappear when you have spent a lifetime building it up, but the purpose of it is to make your life comfortable in your final years.</p> <p><strong>I'll invest in a rental property to provide an income when I retire.</strong></p> <p>Investing in property can be a great way to build wealth while you are working, but it's not such a great way to provide for your retirement.</p> <p>You can't easily access your capital, which means your income is less than it could otherwise be, you have all the hassles of being a landlord, and from time to time you may have large bills for repairs and maintenance which will be a struggle to pay.</p> <p>I should invest all my money conservatively in retirement because I can't afford to lose it</p> <p>Your retirement will hopefully be a long one and there is nothing worse than running out of money before your life ends.</p> <p>The most conservative choice you can make is to plan to live for up to 30 years in retirement.</p> <p>Thirty years is a long time to have money invested in conservative investments with a low return.</p> <p>Given that you won't be spending all your money at once, put a chunk of it into a long term portfolio with exposure to growth assets such as shares.</p> <p>Otherwise, inflation and tax will erode the purchasing power of your money.</p> <p>Written by Liz Koh. First appeared on <span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong><a href="http://www.Stuff.co.nz" target="_blank">Stuff.co.nz</a></strong></span>. </p> <p><strong>Related links:</strong></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/finance/retirement-income/2016/01/10-exciting-retirement-adventures/"><strong>10 exciting retirement adventure ideas</strong></a></em></span></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/finance/retirement-income/2015/12/balancing-act-for-funding-your-retirement/"><strong>Balancing act for funding your retirement is a tricky test</strong></a></em></span></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><em><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/finance/retirement-income/2015/12/10-quotes-that-sum-up-retirement/"><strong>10 quotes that perfectly sum up retirement</strong></a></em></span></p>

Retirement Income

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7 common mistakes about KiwiSaver

<p>If you're in KiwiSaver, there's a good chance you and your scheme have had a few misunderstandings.</p> <p>Most of us are not used to investing in managed funds, so it is not surprising that we sometimes get mixed up.</p> <p>From angry people demanding to know what happened to their "missing" money to the hopeful folk who think it might help pay off their credit card, the helplines of Kiwisaver providers are clogged with confusion.</p> <p>Here we clear up seven common misunderstandings by callers to big providers ASB and ANZ.</p> <p><strong>1. KiwiSaver savings can be used to pay the initial deposit on a home.</strong></p> <p>Nearly everyone knows that KiwiSaver can be used towards a first home deposit. But many people mistakenly think that means they can use KiwiSaver to pay the initial deposit, the one you typically pay before settlement to seal the deal after you win an auction or a sale goes unconditional.</p> <p>Sadly this is not the case. Home buyers must have their own money available for this initial downpayment.</p> <p>As ASB explains to callers, the money from your KiwiSaver account goes straight to your lawyer on settlement day and reduces the mortgage you would otherwise pay on your new abode. You never actually touch the money.</p> <p>"A KiwiSaver first home withdrawal will be part of the equity you put into your first home and must be used for settlement," says ASB. "Withdrawals are paid to your solicitor, to be paid to the vendor on settlement day."</p> <p><strong>2. KiwiSaver can be used to pay off a credit card.</strong></p> <p>You can see your KiwiSaver balance displaying proudly next to your bank account, and it just so happens to be about the same amount as the outstanding balance on your credit card. Surely you can transfer the money across? These days even non-bank KiwiSaver schemes offer online portals that look just like internet bank accounts, giving their savings a misleading air of accessibility.</p> <p>Roger Clayton, ASB's head of wealth products, says electronic portals help people feel connected to their savings, but the downside is confusion about whether people can access them.</p> <p>"It is quite understandable. People are looking for ways to pay off that bill and they can see a balance sitting there in their Kiwisaver account," he says.</p> <p>ANZ, the other biggest provider along with ASB, says most calls to its KiwiSaver help desk are from people wanting to make early withdrawals, whether to buy a house or for other reasons such as hardship or illness.</p> <p>But the bar to get your money is set deliberately high, says Ana-Marie Lockyer, general manager of products and marketing at ANZ. "KiwiSaver is a long-term savings vehicle."</p> <p>If you want to break in, Clayton says unmet demands for electricity or mortgage payments may qualify, or modifying your house to fit a newly disabled family member.</p> <p>A giddy pre-Christmas splurge on the credit card will not. "Leading up to Christmas we tend to get quite a few applications for serious financial hardship," says Clayton. "But Kiwisaver is for retirement purposes not for paying off short term credit card debt."</p> <p><strong>3. You must close your KiwiSaver account when your turn 65.</strong></p> <p>You can tap into your KiwiSaver money as soon as you hit 65 and have been in the scheme for five years. But you don't have to close your account, says ASB. Many providers let you make regular withdrawals if you don't need all the money right away.</p> <p>In the early days, when balances were tiny, only about a third of people immediately closed their accounts, but these days roughly half do, says Clayton.</p> <p>He says it is worth thinking carefully before closing your account. If you stay in the scheme you will no longer be entitled to government contributions and your employer may also stop contributing (or if you are employed they may keep going). But KiwiSaver gives you access to a diversified investment that is cheaper than most of its rivals, says Clayton. "The management fees are typically materially lower than an equivalent non-KiwiSaver fund. And remember once you are eligible ... the lock-in falls away," he says. Once you empty and close your account, you won't be able to open another one.</p> <p><strong>4. It takes a few days for contributions to reach your KiwiSaver account.</strong></p> <p>Waiting for your nest egg to grow can feel about as satisfying as watching paint dry. Not helping matters is the three-month delay between seeing contributions disappear from your pay packet and having them appear in your KiwiSaver account. ASB's support desk receives many queries along the lines of "where the *% ! is my money?".</p> <p>So where exactly is your money before it shows up in your KiwiSaver account? "During month one, if you are employed, each payday your employer deducts KiwiSaver contributions from your salary or wages," says ASB. "During month two, your employer sends your KiwiSaver contributions to Inland Revenue and they check that the information (from your employer) is correct."</p> <p>"During month three, Inland Revenue transfers your contributions plus interest to your KiwiSaver provider."</p> <p>It may seem a long time to wait for a transfer but Clayton says the tax department has a surprising amount of work to do. "You can imagine how many employers are making these deductions so it can take a while to make those checks. And a lot of employers don't get it right. People don't appreciate that Inland Revenue finds quite a few errors and often has to clean up the payroll deduction."</p> <p>The good news is that Inland Revenue pays interest for the days it holds your money.</p> <p>And if you just can't wait, it offers an online service called "My KiwiSaver" allowing you to track your contributions before the money hits your account (see kiwisaver.govt.nz).</p> <p><strong>5. It is best to remain in the default fund.</strong></p> <p>If your employer does not have a preferred KiwiSaver scheme and you do not pick your own, you will be put in a default scheme by Inland Revenue. Many people don't realise they can still choose another fund to invest in at any time, says Lockyer. Default funds are designed to be lower-risk with higher levels of cash and fixed interest investments (for example bonds and term deposits) than most funds. They are also required to have relatively low fees.</p> <p>If you want to see whether the default option is best for you, which will depend on your age, plans and personality, ASB says: "Most KiwiSaver providers have a short questionnaire that you can use to help you to select an appropriate fund to suit your goals, investment timeframe, investment experience, and how you feel about investment risk (the possibility of getting back less than you invested or a return less than you expected)."</p> <p>"It's important to select a fund that suits your own goals, because your fund option will have an impact on your investment outcomes over the long term."</p> <p><strong>6. A KiwiSaver account is like a bank savings account.</strong></p> <p>A KiwiSaver fund is usually a managed fund that invests in several different kinds of assets such as shares, bonds, term deposits and commercial property in different proportions, depending which one you choose. Its value may go up and down, and you hope that in the long run the value will grow significantly.</p> <p>The amount that ends up in your KiwiSaver account depends on the provider's fees, market movements and the investment decisions of the people who run your fund. This explains why the dollar value of your nest egg will not exactly match the number of dollars you, your employer and the Government have contributed to your account.</p> <p>ASB explains: "Contributions to your KiwiSaver account buy units in your chosen fund or funds. Your contributions plus any government and employer contributions are invested in your fund, where they are combined with the savings of other KiwiSaver scheme members. The funds hold assets. As the assets rise and fall in value, so too does the value of each unit."</p> <p><strong>7. KiwiSaver is guaranteed by the Government.</strong></p> <p>The government invests a lot of money in making KiwiSaver attractive, for example by chipping into your fund every year if you make the minimum payments. But it does not guarantee the absolute safety of your savings.</p> <p>"No KiwiSaver scheme is guaranteed by the government," says ASB.</p> <p>However: "Each KiwiSaver scheme must appoint a supervisor (currently called a Trustee), must meet reporting obligations and is subject to the regulatory supervision of the government regulator (the Financial Markets Authority).</p> <p><em>Written by Eloise Gibson. First appeared on <a href="http://www.stuff.co.nz/" target="_blank"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Stuff.co.nz.</span></a></em></p> <p><strong>Related links: </strong></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/finance/money-banking/2015/11/using-frequent-flyer-miles/"><em>5 ways to get more out of your frequent flyer miles</em></a></strong></span></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/finance/money-banking/2015/11/make-money-online-in-retirement/"><em>6 ways to make money online in retirement</em></a></strong></span></p> <p><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong><em><a href="http://www.oversixty.co.nz/finance/money-banking/2015/11/avoid-hidden-banking-fees/">How to avoid hidden bank fees</a></em></strong></span></p>

Retirement Income

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Will you be sitting pretty when you retire?

<p>Debates around raising the age of eligibility for NZ Super and changes to KiwiSaver are shifting the focus from the fact many people are not saving enough for their retirement, the ANZ Bank says.</p> <p>There has been a barrage of suggestions for pensions policy change in recent weeks but John Body, ANZ head of wealth, said: "We don't want the focus of the debate to be hijacked by discussions about the age of eligibility."</p> <p>Even if the age of eligibility did move out to 67 or was linked to increasing longevity as suggested by the Commission for Retirement Income and Financial Literacy, Body said if people did not save enough, they still faced a difficult retirement.</p> <p>And for many of those who are relying on KiwiSaver to generate a nestegg to fund the lifestyle they want in their old age, saving at the rate of 3 per cent of their salary, with the employer chipping in a matching contribution, just won't get them there.</p> <p>ANZ research shows about half of people who are regular KiwiSaver contributors are confident of achieving their retirement goals but the scheme's effectiveness is undermined by those who have put their contributions on hold and the numbers saving into cash-heavy conservative funds.</p> <p><strong>So how much is enough?</strong></p> <p>There are competing claims around how much people will need to live comfortably and once they have settled on an amount they want to supplement NZ Super, they then have to work out the route that will give them the best chance of getting there.</p> <p>ANZ's research shows what individuals think they will need in addition to NZ Super and their responses are banded by age.</p> <p>Those nearing retirement appear to have the most realistic view on that.</p> <p>In the 55-64 age band, the largest group (41 per cent) indicated $150 to $299 would be needed above national super while 39 per cent thought they would need more than $300.</p> <p>Whatever the amount, the question then is how much of your income do you need to save to get there? ANZ has crunched the figures on a fictional person and it indicates the kind of saving patterns an ordinary Kiwi would need to adopt to allow them to enjoy their retirement.</p> <p>Starting young is a clear priority, because while weekly saving contributions remain manageable for many, it starts getting more onerous once a saver gets much past the age of 35. All future projections require assumptions to be made and if something happens, such as losing your job for a period, your plans would need to be altered.</p> <p>In the fictional case, ANZ assumed 2.5 per cent annual salary increases and 2 per cent inflation.</p> <p>It also assumed people would not place all their KiwiSaver contributions into a conservative default fund, which many are currently doing, but instead save into a "lifestages" fund.</p> <p>This starts off heavily invested in growth assets such as shares, but progressively shifts into safer investments such as bonds as people age.</p> <p>It also assumes that when people hit retirement, they leave their money invested in KiwiSaver in a conservative fund and progressively draw down on the capital at the future equivalent of $150 or $300 a week for 20 years.</p> <p>That "deaccumulation" of funds is what KiwiSaver managers would like to become popular as they could charge fees for longer.</p> <p>Such drawdown options, which are already offered by some schemes, mean that people are taking "longevity" risk - the risk they will outlive their money by living for more than the 20 years in retirement they planned for.</p> <p>As yet New Zealand does not have an annuity market to provide an alternative income that would last for all of retirement, however long you live.</p> <p>The figures in the table are based on individuals, yet at retirement many are coupled with a partner.</p> <p>As NZ Super rates reflect, a couple can get by on 160 per cent of what a single person can through sharing basic costs.</p> <p>That can mean for some that $150 or $300 a week a single person might believe is needed, could perhaps be seen to equate to $240 or $480 when shared between two.</p> <p><strong>How much do you need?</strong></p> <p>Everyone has to decide for themselves what they will need on top of NZ Super, which is $357.42 after-tax weekly for a single person living alone.</p> <p>There is plenty of advice and columns freely available online on how to start thinking about it.</p> <p>Written by Rob Stock. First appeared on <a href="/Stuff.co.nz" target="_blank"><span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Stuff.co.nz</strong></span></a>.</p>

Retirement Income