Okay so you are grown up. Now what? Senior Correspondent Mike Causey asked a ThirtySomething Financial Planner for some tips and she came up with some good ones!
The average age of new hires in government is 31. Depending on how many birthdays you’ve celebrated, that is either very young or pretty much over-the-hill.
Regardless of how old you are, most experts say you should have a plan. And this is especially true for younger feds who, if they invest in the TSP, could have a million dollar account balance when they retire.
Today we asked financial planner Rebecca Schreiber to sound off. She specializes in counseling younger people.
Here’s what she says:
Buy Yourself Time with a Financial Holding Pattern
The effort is finally paying off – you’ve found a comfortable apartment, an entertaining group of friends and a job that may actually last longer than a year. You’ve got regular hangouts, a favorite grocery store and you might even get a pet. Don’t look now but you’ve created a life. Things feel kind of stable and you’ve started thinking year-to-year instead of month-to-month.
What do you do now?
Many people don’t know what they’re going to want one, three, or five years from now but they know they’re going to want something. How do you plan for the future when you can’t visualize it? Prepare for possibilities by creating a simple, manageable group of accounts that can meet any plan you come up with. Developing your own financial holding pattern gives yourself time to circle your choices before landing at a decision. This pattern requires only four accounts and can be managed on one hour per month:
Savings with no place to go tends to disappear. Now you know where to stash your cash. Looking to buy a car in the next few years? Put the money in your Roth IRA. Saved some emergency cash? Send it to your money market account. Received a travel reimbursement you need to pay off your credit card? Deposit it in your checking account. Follow this plan and you’re emergency fund won’t end up invested in stocks or your retirement money in a savings account. Best yet, there are only four accounts to keep track of. Stick to the holding pattern and you’ll have the money to move forward when you finally decide where you want to go. Rebecca Schreiber
Nearly Useless Factoid
Alfred Hitchcock didn’t have a belly button. Sure, he was born with one, but it was reportedly sewn up and over after surgeries.
To reach me: mcausey@federalnewsradio.com
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