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Anh ngữ đặc biệt: Retirement Savings Part 2


Chương trình học tiếng Anh của VOA: Special English Economics Report - Retirement Savings Part 2. Xin hãy vào http://www.youtube.com/user/VietSpecialEnglish để xem các bài kế tiếp.

This is the VOA Special English Economics Report.

Last week, we discussed limiting investment risk in retirement planning. So what are financial planners advising people to invest in?

Stocks and bonds are the best known investments and are important to any savings plan. Instruments like savings accounts and certificates of deposit pay a small rate of interest. They carry little risk. Annuities are another savings instrument with low risk.

Financial planner Pete D'Arruda says "Worldwide, people can put their money in annuities, which are basically savings accounts offered by insurance companies." But he says it is important to make a decision about an annuity with a good financial planner. He warns that annuity agreements can be complex, and many bad ones are out there.

Pete D'Arruda says good planning means placing money into financial securities and accounts that have different risk levels, using asset allocation. "So true asset allocation is having some in stocks, some in bonds, some in mutual funds, but then some in other places with guaranteed income and then safety and liquidity kind of accounts for emergencies."

This method of savings follows the old saying you should not "put all your eggs in one basket." But that is not for everyone.

Sande Taylor is with the investment company Charles Schwab in south Florida. She advises investors every day. She says many investors have a personal style. There are conservative investors. "A conservative investor by definition typically has eighty percent of their portfolio within fixed income markets and cash."

Even in retirement, Sande Taylor says, some people have their entire financial portfolio, or set of investments, in stocks. They are the aggressive investors. In saving for retirement, there can be a difference between what people believe and what they actually do. In a recent Charles Schwab study, most Americans said they believe it would be easier to save for retirement if they were single. But the study found that eighty-five percent of married people had started saving, while only two thirds of singles had.

Sande Taylor says younger people may seek short term goals. "The younger individuals look at it and think, 'Well retirement is so far away, I'd rather focus on my shorter term goals.'" But she says there are big gains to be made by starting early and planning for the future.

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