Archive for April, 2010 Page 2 of 6



Who’s afraid of long-term care? Californians

The Los Angeles Times, April 21st, 2010

Two-thirds of registered voters in California, those 40 and older
anyway, say they worry about whether or not they could afford long-term
care for themselves or a family member, finds a new poll from the SCAN
Foundation and the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research.

Here are the poll
results
and the news
release
.

They’re right to worry.

As the L.A. Times’ Michael Hiltzik noted in his recent column, Long-term-care
policies: Pouring money down a hole?
:

“Here’s a lesson baby boomers are just beginning to learn: You pay
for long-term-care insurance for years, even decades, and then your
insurance company changes the rules.”

But Bruce Chernof, president and chief executive of the SCAN
Foundation, seems cautiously optimistic in the wake of the recent
healthcare overhaul. As he noted in his recent opinion article, Healthcare
reform: What’s in it for our seniors?
:

“Lost in the maelstrom of misinformation, however, is the reality
that the newly passed legislation lays the groundwork for greatly
improving the full continuum of healthcare services for seniors, which
includes renovating our nation’s nonexistent long-term care system.”

Read more of this article.

Long Term Care Insurance:  One of the common strategies that seniors use to cope with the enormous potential costs of long term care is Long Term Care Insurance.  Find out if this is a viable option for you at NewRetirement.com.

6 Things Retirement Calculators Get Wrong

CBS News, April 21st, 2010

Google the phrase “retirement
calculator
” and you’ll be deluged with hits. Every major financial
services company has an online tool to estimate how much money you need
to save for retirement. But a recent study by the Society of Actuaries says many popular
calculators have serious flaws. These potential hazards could lead to
serious miscalculations when you’re plotting your financial future.

The report analyzed 12 retirement calculators created by financial
services firms, software companies, nonprofits, and government for
consumers and financial planning pros. All but one of the six consumer
calculators were free: the Fidelity Retirement Income Planner, the AARP retirement planning calculator, MetLife calculator, U.S. Department of Labor and the T.
Rowe Price Retirement Income Calculator
. ESPlanner, created by
Boston University economics professor Larry Kotlikoff, starts at $149
per year. Unlike the freebies, ESPlanner gathers more detailed data,
making its forecasts more reliable.

The free online tools, as a group, had a host of problems. “These
tools take a project that is fairly complex and boil it down to
something simple,” says John Turner, an economist and co-author of the
report. “They don’t ask you to consider a lot of important variables.”
Some free online calculators can, however, provide a decent starting
point for your retirement planning, as a MoneyWatch test found.

To get better results when you run your own numbers, look for the features MoneyWatch blogger Steve Vernon’s
recommends
, and watch out for the following six areas where
retirement calculators may be getting it wrong.

1. Social Security Projections

Most retirees get a third or more of retirement income from Social
Security. Yet many retirement calculators don’t gather the detailed
information needed to project these benefits accurately, Turner says.
“They often project Social Security income using a bare minimum of
information: typically your current earnings, your age, and the year you
expect to retire,” he says. Although the size of your Social Security
payments will vary depending on when you decide to start collecting the
checks, Turner found that many calculators don’t analyze this choice in
enough detail.

So to get the best guess for your Social Security benefits, use the
Social Security Administration’s free online retirement
estimator
, which will give you a personalized projection using your
actual earnings history.

Another problem: Turner found that many of the calculators low-ball
the increases you’ll get from Social Security’s annual cost-of-living
adjustment (COLA), which is pegged to the Consumer Price Index.
“Typically, the inflation assumptions are hidden from the user,” he
says. “But a few do reveal to you that, for unknown reasons, they use a
COLA that is less than the inflation rate.”

Read more of this article.

How does our retirement calculator measure up?  At NewRetirement, we’ve crafted our calculator with these and other factors in mind, so as to provide the best estimates we can concerning your retirement future.  Try it out and see.

Schwarzenegger backs plan to reform state pensions

San Francisco Chronicle, April 21st, 2010

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger on Wednesday announced his support for a
legislative proposal to reform the pensions of state workers, saying the
changes are necessary to avoid a future budget calamity.

Pension reform was among the priorities he targeted in January, the
beginning of his final year in office. The bill mirrors changes he
suggested last summer.

Schwarzenegger said the pension system’s unfunded liabilities
represent the single biggest threat to California’s fiscal health.

“I refuse to pass this crisis on to the next governor or the next
Legislature,” Schwarzenegger said. “Because if you don’t act, if you
continue to sweep those problems under the rug, you’re just going to be
piling on more and more debt onto our children and grandchildren.”

As of July 2008, California’s two major pension funds estimated their
unfunded liabilities at $61 billion.

The Republican governor joined the bill’s author, Senate Minority
Leader Dennis Hollingsworth, R-Murrieta, at a news conference in the
Capitol.

The legislation would adjust the pensions of newly hired state
workers but leave benefits intact for current employees. It also would
require most new state employees to work 10 years longer — until age 65 —
before being eligible for retirement benefits and would increase the
amount employees must contribute toward their retirement.

Public safety employees, including firefighters and highway patrol
officers, have a current retirement age of 50 but would have to work
seven years longer to qualify for full retirement benefits under the
bill.

They receive better retirement benefits packages than other
employees, in part because of the risks they face on the job.

Some state workers such as milk inspectors and billboard inspectors
are currently classified as safety workers. The bill would reclassify
them as industrial employees, reducing their benefits.

Read more of this article.

Retirement Calculator:  Are you a retired or retiring public sector employee whose pensions are being affected?  If so, you might want to consider how this will affect your retirement.  You can use our Retirement Calculator to find out where you stand.

Nominee for Medicare-Medicaid agency has reputation for being ‘‘visionary’

Washington Post, April 21st, 2010

For two decades, Donald Berwick has made a career of finding innovative
ways to improve health care and then persuading hospital administrators
and doctors to adopt his recommendations.

That experience could prove useful if the 63-year-old Harvard University
professor is confirmed as administrator of the federal Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services.

The job, which has been filled through temporary appointments since
2006, is central to the success of the new law overhauling health
insurance, the largest rollout of a social program since the 1960s. President
Obama
announced Berwick’s nomination Monday.

Over the next decade, CMS, which is under the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services, will be charged with slashing hundreds of millions
of dollars in spending by Medicare, the federal insurance program for
the elderly. The agency will also need to cover an estimated 16 million
more people through Medicaid, the federal-state insurance program for
the poor.

Then there is the day-to-day task of managing a bureaucracy of 4,500
that serves nearly one in three Americans and has an annual budget of
about $780 billion.

The largest organization that Berwick, a pediatrician, has led is the
Institute for Healthcare Improvement. He co-founded the nonprofit Boston
area consulting and research group, which has a staff of about 110, in
1991.

But Berwick’s admirers in public health describe him as a “visionary”
whose work at the institute has given him a direct role in transforming
the way some of the largest health-care systems in the country do
business.

Among the initiatives the institute has launched was a national campaign
that helped thousands of hospitals implement measures proven to avert
patient deaths.

Read more of this article.

UPDATE 1-BofA exec: Simpler retirement rules needed

Reuters, April 21st, 2010

Bank of America Corp
(BAC.N)
retirement-investments chief Andy Sieg said on Tuesday
that U.S. investors are clamoring for an overhaul of retirement
savings rules to make them simpler.

“Younger investors want to simplify the maze of retirement
programs out there,” said Sieg, hired last fall from Citigroup
Inc (C.N)
to run BofA’s retirement unit.

Speaking to reporters to discuss Merrill Lynch’s latest
quarterly investor survey, Sieg said investors are struggling
with what they view as complex regulations. The current rules
surrounding individual retirement accounts, or IRAs, are
overwhelming to those of us who spend everyday in this market,”
he said.

Changes during the last
year — such as removal of income
restrictions on Roth IRA accounts — helped streamline the
industry. Still investors could be more aggressive in saving,
he said, if the rules were clearer.

“As the regulatory side solidifies, I think you’ll see more
products and services come into the market,” he said.

During the same call, Bank of America’s
global wealth and
investment management chief Sallie Krawcheck said adviser
turnover had stabilized after a year of record churn.

Read more of this article.

Retirement Calculator:  Whatever the final form of the retirement plans are, people will need a means of visualizing how much more they need to retire.  One method is to use the NewRetirement retirement calculator to determine how close you are.

Is the Housing ATM Reopening?

The Motley Fool, April 21st, 2010

Ever since the mortgage mess began, many have criticized homeowners for
treating their real
estate like an ATM
. For older homeowners, though, trying to turn
their home equity into cash is a real need — and with the current state
of the housing market, it’s been far from easy.

That’s why many seniors will be glad to hear what a number of lending
institutions are saying about reverse mortgages. Under new pricing
schemes that several lenders plan to use, you could save thousands of
dollars if you decide to go forward with a reverse mortgage. But the
question remains: Is it the best way to get at your home
equity
?

Home sweet home

The largest asset that many people ever own is their home. Over
time, as you pay down your mortgage, you’ll end up with an increasing
amount of money tied up as home equity. Eventually, longtime homeowners pay
off their mortgage completely
and own their homes free and clear.

Not having to worry about a big mortgage certainly brings a measure
of security, especially in these troubled times. But there’s a cost to
having a lot of home equity: It can be difficult to get that money out
when you need it. Given the current
state of the housing market
, selling your home for a reasonable
price simply isn’t an option in many areas. And even during better
times, many seniors don’t want to give up their homes.

Traditional mortgage financing doesn’t really meet the needs that
most seniors have. Under a mortgage or home equity loan, you’ll
typically get a lump sum up front, and you’ll then need to make monthly
payments to pay it off. Yet typical retirees don’t have the income to
cover a mortgage payment.

The mechanics of reverse mortgages

That’s where a reverse
mortgage
comes in. Offering a lump sum, regular monthly payments,
or a line of credit that you can draw on at will, reverse mortgages are
flexible enough to tailor to your particular needs. Most of them are
available through a program of the Department of Housing and Urban
Development, with Fannie Mae (NYSE:
FNM)
providing
funding for the HUD program. They don’t require the homeowner to make
monthly payments. Best of all, you can keep and live in your home as
long as like — and the reverse mortgage doesn’t come due until either
you sell your home or move to another home as your primary residence, or
until after your death.

Read more of this article.

About Reverse Mortgages:  Reverse Mortgages have become one of the major recourses for seniors who find that they need money in today’s circumstances.  Consider the options available to you at NewRetirement.com.

Bill Black’s eye-popping statement at House FinServ hearing on Lehman

Editor’s Note:  This is one of the better explanations for just how we got into the mess we’re currently in that we’ve come across.  It illustrates the consequences of pervasive lack of regulation in the financial services industry.

FDL Contributor Bill Black scorched everyone with his testimony on the failure of Lehman Brothers when he testified before the House Financial Services Committee today. His prepared remarks can be found here (PDF).

CHAIRMAN KANJORSKI: And now we’ll hear from Mr. William K. Black, Associate Professor of Economics and Law, the University of Missouri, Kansas City School of Law. Mr. Black.

BILL BLACK: Members of the Committee, thank you.

You asked earlier for a stern regulator, you have one now in front of you. And we need to be blunt. You haven’t heard much bluntness in hours of testimony.

We stopped a nonprime crisis before it became a crisis in 1991 by supervisory actions.

We did it so effectively that people forgot that it even existed, even though it caused several hundred million dollars of losses — but none to the taxpayer. We did it by preemptive litigation, and by supervision. We broke a raging epidemic of accounting control fraud without new legislation in the period of 1984 through 1986.

Legislation would’ve been helpful, we sought legislation, but we didn’t get it. And we were able to stop that because we didn’t simply consider business as usual.

Lehman’s failure is a story in large part of fraud. And it is fraud that begins at the absolute latest in 2001, and that is with their subprime and liars’ loan operations.

Lehman was the leading purveyor of liars’ loans in the world. For most of this decade, studies of liars’ loans show incidence of fraud of 90%. Lehmans sold this to the world, with reps and warranties that there were no such frauds. If you want to know why we have a global crisis, in large part it is before you. But it hasn’t been discussed today, amazingly.

Financial institution leaders are not engaged in risk when they engage in liars’ loans — liars’ loans will cause a failure. They lose money. The only way to make money is to deceive others by selling bad paper, and that will eventually lead to liability and failure as well.

When people cheat you cannot as a regulator continue business as usual. They go into a different category and you must act completely differently as a regulator. What we’ve gotten instead are sad excuses.

The SEC: we’re told they’re only 24 people in their comprehensive program. Who decided how many people there would be in their comprehensive program? Who decided the staffing? The SEC did. To say that we only had 24 people is not to create an excuse — it’s to give an admission of criminal negligence. Except it’s not criminal, because you’re a federal employee.

In the context of the FDIC, Secretary Geithner testified today that this pushed the financial system to the brink of collapse But Chariman Bernanke testified we sent two people to be on site at Lehman. We sent fifty credit people to the largest savings and loan in America. It had 30 billion in assets. We had a whole lot less staff than the Fed does.

We forced out the CEO. We replaced the CEO. We did that not through regulation but because of our leverage as creditors. Now I ask you, who had more leverage as creditors in 2008? The Fed, as compared to the Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco, 19 years earlier? Incomprehensible greater leverage in the Fed, and it simply was not used.

Let’s start with the repos. We have known since the Enron in 2001 that this is a common scam, in which every major bank that was approached by Enron agreed to help them deceive creditors and investors by doing these kind of transactions.

And so what happened? There was a proposal in 2004 to stop it. And the regulatory heads — there was an interagency effort — killed it. They came out with something pathetic in 2006, and stalled its implication until 2007, but it ’s meaningless.

We have known for decades that these are frauds. We have known for a decade how to stop them. All of the major regulatory agencies were complicit in that statement, in destroying it. We have a self-fulfilling policy of regulatory failure
because of the leadership in this era.

We have the Fed, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, finding that this is three card monty. Well what would you do, as a regulator, if you knew that one of the largest enterprises in the world, when the nation is on the brink of economic collapse, is engaged in fraud, three card monty? Would you continue business as usual?

That’s what was done. Oh they met a lot — they say “we only had a nuclear stick.” Sounds like a pretty good stick to use, if you’re on the brink of collapse of the system. But that’s not what the Fed has to do. The Fed is a central bank. Central banks for centuries have gotten rid of the heads of financial institutions. The Bank of England does it with a luncheon. The board of directors are invited. They don’t say “no.” They are sat down.

The head of the Bank of England says “we have lost confidence in the head of your enterprise. We believe Mr. Jones would be an effective replacement. And by 4 o’clock that day, Mr. Jones is running the place. And he has a mandate to clean up all the problems.

Instead, every day that Lehman remained under its leadership, the exposure of the American people to loss grew by hundreds of millions of dollars on average. Auroroa was pumping out up to 300 billion dollars a month in liars’ loans. Losses on those are running roughly 50% to 85 cents on the dollar. It is critical not to do business as usual, to change.

We’ve also heard from Secretary Geithner and Chairman Bernanke — we couldn’t deal with these lenders because we had no authority over them. The Fed had unique authority since 1994 under HOEPA to regulate all mortgage lenders. It finally used it in 2008.

They could’ve stopped Aurora. They could’ve stopped the subprime unit of Lehman that was really a liar’s loan place as well as time went by.

Health Care Reform Provides Some Good News for Early Retirees

CBS Moneywatch, April 19th, 2010

In my previous post, Health
Care Reform: Don’t Count on Retiring Early
, I showed that people
retiring before age 65 (the eligibility age for Medicare) may still face
high costs for medical insurance, even after passage of health care
reform. However, health care reform does provide some good news for
early retirees who don’t have affordable retiree medical insurance
through their employer. Let’s take a look.

Starting in 2011, the following provisions take effect for
individually purchased or group insurance plans:

  • Bans on lifetime dollar limits on essential health benefits
  • Restrictions on annual dollar limits for essential health
    benefits
  • Bans on rescinding coverage, except in cases of fraud
  • No preexisting exclusions for children under age 19
  • Dependent coverage that can be extended up to age 26 for
    children ineligible for other employer coverage.

For this purpose, “essential health benefits” cover most services for
doctors, hospitals, labs, prescription drugs, emergencies and chronic
disease management. The first three features described above solve
problems that have caused a lot of trouble for some people who purchased
individual insurance, so it’s indeed good news.

Keep in mind, however, that banning the above restrictions will most
likely increase premiums. By how much is unclear, since until now,
insurance companies have used these provisions to manage the claims they
pay and keep premiums as low as possible.

Starting in 2014, the ban on pre-existing exclusions is extended to
everyone. In addition, employers with 50 employees or more will be
required to offer adequate and affordable medical insurance to workers
or face substantial penalties. This provision will help individuals who Do
the Downshift
– retire from their main career but continue working
during their retirement years — at jobs that otherwise might not offer
health insurance.

Read more of this article.

Supplemental Medicare Insurance:  Medicare won’t cover everything, especially for those who have retired early.  For those things it doesn’t, consider if Supplemental Medicare Insurance is right for you.

8 money missteps that can really hurt you financially

USA Today, April 19th, 2010

The road to financial hell is paved with
alluring options: credit cards, payday loans, reverse mortgages, 401(k)
raids and more.

And even though parts of the economy are starting
to look stronger, the unemployment rate remains at 9.7%, many families
are absorbing weeks of unpaid furloughs and others are simply trying to
rebuild what they have lost.

Don’t compound your problems by making these
eight major money missteps:

1. Raiding your 401(k)

Don’t think of retirement savings as “now” money.
It’s money you’ve really got to save for later, says Mackey McNeill, a
CPA who serves on the American
Institute of Certified Public Accountants
‘ Financial Literacy
Commission.

“Our parents’ generation generally worked for
someone who gave them a pension check for the rest of their lives,” she
says. “Today, we actually control our pensions. People think, ‘I can see
those dollars there. They have my name on the account. I’m going to use
that money.’ “

It’s particularly foolhardy to dip into your
401(k) if you’re in danger of bankruptcy, McNeill says, because
retirement accounts are protected under bankruptcy laws in most states.
You don’t have to surrender your retirement to get a fresh start.

“Some people use their IRAs, and then they wind
up in bankruptcy, anyway,” she says. “So now, they’re bankrupt and they
don’t have any retirement.”

2. Walking out on a mortgage

If you owe more than your house is worth, walking
away is not your only option, providing that you still have some income
to pay a mortgage. McNeill says the first step is to look honestly at
your finances and determine whether you face a short-term issue or a
long-term one.

Short-term means you just got laid off and have
no savings or small savings, but the job market in your town is such
that you can probably get some part-time or full-time work to keep money
coming in. Long-term means you’ve been unemployed, you’ve depleted your
savings, and you don’t see a way back into the job market.

“If it’s long term, then you can’t afford your
home anymore,” McNeill says. “The faster you recognize it and make plans
to let it go, the better it will be. Put your best foot forward to sell
your home. Move into a smaller, less-expensive place and preserve your
capital for when times are better for you.

“If it is a short-term situation, talk with your
mortgage lenders and see if they will suspend or lower your payments
over the next three to six months,” McNeill says.

For information about modifying your mortgage, go
to MakingHomeAffordable.gov, a website sponsored by the federal
government with the goal of helping the 12 million American families
whose homes are now worth less than they owe. The site lists
HUD-approved counselors who will work with you for free. If you do not
use the Internet, you can contact the program toll-free at
 



 888-995-4673 

      


.

Read more of this article.

Reverse Mortgages Still Costly, but Less So

The New York Times, April 16th, 2010

The adage that you can’t take out a loan to
pay for retirement
is not entirely true.

Reverse mortgages, which allow
older homeowners to pull cash out of their homes without making
payments, have been around for decades. They are often used by people
who want to stay in their homes, but need extra money to pay medical
bills, for instance, or to retire other debt.

Reverse mortgages
also have a reputation for being expensive, and they are. But if you’ve
been thinking about one, it’s worth taking a closer look now because
several lenders have cut prices in recent weeks. As with most complex
financial products, however, you need to know exactly what you’re
getting into.

Wells Fargo, Federal Housing Administration’s Home Equity
Conversion program. There’s a reason for the lower prices: Lenders are
making profits by packaging the loans as securities and selling them to
Wall Street investors. Demand for the securities is high, experts said,
because not only are the underlying mortgages backed by the Census
Bureau
’s American Housing Survey conducted in
2007, the most recent data available.

Read more of this article.

About Reverse Mortgages:  The reduced fee structures on reverse mortgages are permitting more people with borderline shortfall situations.  Find out more about the program at NewRetirement.com



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