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Invest On The Cheap
by Alan Lavine and Gail Liberman
Stick
with low-cost mutual funds. In the long run, you’ll have more money in your
pocket. The average common stock fund sports an expense ratio of 1.4 percent.
Say your fund earns 10 percent this year: Your net return is 8.6 percent.
No-load index funds
are the cheapest way to go. Vanguard and TIAA-CREF have index funds that cost
about .2 percent annually. Plus, the funds are commission-free.
Index funds typically
outperform the majority of actively managed stock funds over the long term,
according to Morningstar Inc., Chicago. So this is a low-cost way to get
above-average performance.
Overpaying for mutual
funds is costly. Assume you invest $10,000. An extra 1 percent in annual
expenses for 10 years means you’ll pay an extra $1,046 in expenses.
If you want a tax-deferred
variable annuity, it also pays to stick with no-load investments. A variable
annuity is a contract with a life insurance company. You invest tax-deferred in
mutual funds. When you retire, you can get periodic income for life. Annuities
also have death benefit guarantees. When you die, your heirs get the market
value or the principal value, whichever is higher.
Vanguard, TIAA-CREF,
T. Rowe Price, Fidelity and Schwab have low-cost variable annuities.
No-load variable annuities
typically charge over 1 percent less annually than broker-sold annuities.
What if you truly need
help with your investments and financial planning? Consider sticking with
fee-only financial planners. They charge about the same hourly rate as Certified
Public Accountants.
Avoid financial planners
that get paid commissions for selling you investments and insurance. It’s not a
good idea to get financial advice from a salesperson. Regulators have been
cracking down on brokerage firms for allegedly getting kickbacks from insurance
companies and mutual funds to sell their products.
Alan Lavine and Gail Liberman are
husband-wife personal finance columnists, journalists and authors.
They are the authors of "Rags To Retirement," published by Alpha Books. Their
columns appear in newspapers throughout New England and the
Southeast, as well as online. Their commentary on mutual funds and
personal finance is carried by 200 radio stations nationwide every
Sunday over Business News Network's Charles DeRose Financial Advisor
Show. Al and Gail’s new book is "Rags
To Retirement: Stories from people who retired well on much less than you
think," published by Alpha Books.
More articles by Al and Gail can be
found here.
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