Your 401 (k) is one of the best places you can stash retirement savings, but it comes with a trade-off: You agree not to ...
After 30 years, financial planner William Bengen has revised his widely-used 4% retirement rule to 4.7%, citing more ...
If you have a retirement portfolio that's 70% stocks and 30% bonds, you may be able to sustain a 5% withdrawal rate without ...
New analysis says that number is now too high for today's market valuations and inflation environment.
The 4% popular annual withdrawal rule was first formed during a period when interest rates felt relatively stable, and bonds ...
The No. 1 financial goal for most Americans is to stop working. Once they retire, their primary goal becomes not running out of money.
Recent research reveals retirees withdraw just 2.1% of their savings annually—about half the amount experts recommend. Here's what the data shows.
Donald Trump's housing proposal would let Americans tap 401(k) retirement savings for home down payments, but that easy ...
It's not a given that it's the best withdrawal strategy for your situation.
The difference between planning for 20 versus 30 years of retirement isn’t just an extra decade, it fundamentally reshapes ...
Morningstar’s new analysis suggests retirees can start with one withdrawal rate and adjust for inflation, but taxes, fees, and portfolio mix still matter.
Trump says he's "not a huge fan" of letting homebuyers tap 401(k) retirement accounts for down payments, citing strong account performance amid market's rise.