Dec 22 2011
Guidant Response: Financial Resolutions for 2012
News Brief Provided By: Allen G. Yee
An absolute must read for everyone heading into 2012. Planning and saving/investing are top priorities but right up there should be investment strategies that reduce volatility and significant draw downs. Buy and Hold strategies should be reviewed and addressed along with one’s risk tolerance and ability to cope with large swings in market values.
*PLEASE NOTE: The information above being provided is strictly as a courtesy. When you link to any of the sites provided here, you are leaving this site. We make no representation as to the completeness or accuracy of information provided at these web sites. Nor is the company liable for any direct or indirect technical or system issues or any consequences arising out of your access to or your use of third-party technologies, web sites, information and programs made available through this web site. When you access one of these web sites, you are leaving our web site and assume total responsibility and risk for your use of the web sites you are linking to. Registered Representatives Offering securities Offered Through First Allied Securities, Inc. Registered Broker-Dealer Member FINRA, SIPC. Allen Yee, CEA, RFC, CA Insurance License #0747874
ING U.S. Encourages More Consumers to Make Retirement Planning and Saving a Priority in the New Year
WINDSOR, Conn., Dec. 21, 2011 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ — As Americans begin to make their resolutions for the New Year; new findings from the ING Retirement Research Institute suggest that better retirement planning and saving should be high on the list. According to recent findings, 71 percent of Americans do not have a formal investment plan to help them reach their retirement goals.
The ING U.S. study(1) — Retirement Revealed — also showed that while 75 percent of respondents aged 25 to 69 who are employed full-time with an annual income of $40,000 or more are contributing to their workplace retirement plan, nearly half (48 percent) do not feel prepared for retirement.
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