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The last time I was in Costa Rica to visit my mother, I took my aunt and
uncle along with me. All three retired with a good measure of health and
wealth.
But now that Mom is
gone and I myself have turned 60, I often think about the other 78
million soon-to-retire Americans, many of whom may not be as fortunate.
If you — or someone
you love — is among them, beware!
Virtually everything
you thought you could count on is now subject to a series of threats
that could tear apart even some of the best-made retirement plans ...
Retirement
Threat #1
Your Pension Fund
Could Be Broke
I hope you’re not
expecting a major company pension plan to see you through retirement.
Because if you are, there’s a good chance that much of your money —
if not most of it — is already gone with the wind.
For decades, U.S.
companies have been skimping on pension fund contributions. Most claimed
their investments would make up the difference by generating truly
outrageous returns. Others just shamelessly cooked the books.
As a result, major U.S.
corporations now owe retirees a record $450 billion more than they can
pay.
Prime examples: The
pension plan at Exxon Mobil is in the red to the tune of $11.2 billion;
Ford, $10.8 billion; Giant Industries, $10.1 billion; Lockheed Martin,
nearly $5 billion.
And that’s small
compared to corporate shortfalls in post-retirement health care and
other non-cash benefits: $60.9 billion at GM, $32.8 billion at Ford, $23
billion at AT&T, and $23.5 billion at Verizon Communications, just
to name some of the biggest.
According
to a recent study by Standard and Poor’s, the deficit for these additional
benefits is nearly 2.3 times greater than pension fund deficits at
America’s 500 largest companies. Assuming the same holds for the
nation’s smaller companies, the total post-employment deficit could
easily be more than $1 trillion.
Bottom line: All
together, US companies owe retirees nearly $1.5 trillion more than they
have set aside for them.
That’s ten times
more than the total cost of the savings and loan catastrophe of the
1980s.
Retirement
Threat #2
Medicare Is $32 Trillion in the Hole
If you think the Social
Security debacle is Washington’s #1 retirement nightmare, I’ve got
news for you: Medicare is so sick, it makes Social Security look healthy
by comparison
According to the annual
trustees’ reports on Social Security and Medicare, Medicare now owes a
staggering $32.1 trillion more than it will be able to pay.
That’s nearly seven
times the Social Security deficit ... three times our
nation’s entire Gross Domestic Product and three times the
national debt (now at $11.3 trillion according to the Fed’s mid-year
numbers).
The truth about
Medicare is so disturbing — and any solution so unreachable — very
few in Washington will even talk about it in public. In this year’s
mid-term election campaigns for Congress, for example, I see no one
making it a pivotal issue. And at the White House — even at the
Medicare administration itself — I see no one raising voices of alarm.
But the facts don’t
lie: The new Medicare prescription drug program is adding an anticipated
$678 billion over the next ten years in new spending. The cost of doctor
visits, medical tests, prescriptions and hospital procedures is
exploding by double digits each year. High-cost, chronic illnesses like
heart disease, stroke, cancer, diabetes and Alzheimer’s are reaching
epidemic levels.
Result: Either Medicare
will ultimately bankrupt the U.S. Government. Or the U.S. Government
will have to slash Medicare benefits to the bone.
Retirement
Threat #3
Washington Is Quietly
Debauching the Dollar
With the Potomac
already flowing red ink — with the national debt already skyrocketing
$1.6 billion every day of the year — no amount of new taxes or benefit
cuts could make a dent in this crisis.
Congress will sniff
around the edges, cutting your payments and delaying your benefits,
hoping against hope you’ll believe they’re really trying to fix
things. But if any politician dared suggest that taxes be raised enough
and benefits be cut enough to truly fix the problem, voters would tar
him, feather him, and ride him out of town on a rail.
That’s why they’re
doing what politicians always do when the government’s obligations
dwarf its ability to pay: They’re taking the coward’s way out —
debasing the value of your money so they can pay you with dollars that
are worth a lot less than what they’re worth today.
The consequences:
-
Your
pension checks will shrink in size ... and each dollar will buy
less.
-
Your
Medicare benefits will dwindle ... and your health care costs will
explode through the roof.
-
Worse,
nearly everything else you pay for each month will soar in
price, raising your cost of living and eroding the quality of your
life.
Yes, I know the US
Treasury, Bureau of Labor Statistics and Federal Reserve have been
claiming that inflation is “under control” for years now. But it’s
a pathetic lie.
Since 1970, for
example, while the federal government has continually claimed success in
taming inflation, a dozen eggs have nearly doubled in price ... a gallon
of milk is 161% more expensive ... butter costs 221% more ... monthly
car payments are up 233% ... the price of a sirloin steak is up 236% ...
a pound of coffee is up 246% ... and a loaf of bread is up 346%.
Worse, first class
stamps are up 550% ... a gallon of gas is up 744% ... the cost of the
average new home is up 992% ... heating oil is up 1,233% ... and college
tuition has skyrocketed as much as a startling 1,353%!
Right now, inflation
has accelerated to more than double its 1990s levels. And that’s based
on the government’s jury-rigged numbers — carefully massaged to make
inflation appear much lower than it really is. Your actual cost of
living — what you pay for real purchases each day — is rising far
faster.
Retirement
Threat #4
The Final Insult
So let’s assess this
situation objectively and sum it all up:
Your pension benefits: Obliterated.
Your Medicare benefits:
Cut or cancelled.
Your cost of living: Through
the roof!
And now, the final
insult: Even the equity in your home — the big cushion most Americans
hoped to fall back on when all else failed — is also on the chopping
block.
The housing bust has
barely begun, and already it’s a monster. Everywhere you look, you can
see the path of destruction it’s leaving in its wake.
Walk around your
neighborhood. Talk to your friends and relatives. Turn on the TV. Pick
up any newspaper: You’ll see it with your own eyes, hear it with your
own ears.
From sea to shining
sea, home sales are plummeting.
Millions of homes are
begging for buyers, unsold.
Asking prices are
falling.
Offer prices are
falling even more.
I repeat: This is not
merely a prediction of a future event. The U.S. housing market — and
the precious equity that millions are counting on to put kids through
college ... to care for aging parents ... and to secure a comfortable
retirement for themselves — is already falling.
Suddenly, demand for
new and existing single-family homes has gone from red-hot ... to cool
... to ice cold. Homes now stay on the market for two, three, even four
times longer.
Suddenly, investors and
speculators who were big buyers have become big sellers, dumping their
properties on the market by the hundreds of thousands.
That’s why, since
last year, existing home sales have fallen a staggering 11.2% ... it’s
why sales of new homes are down 22% ... and it’s why condominium
developers are complaining that sales are down by as much as 89%!
Home values have
already slipped 2.6% in Portland ... 3.6% in Green Bay ... 5.4% in
Cleveland ... 6.7% in Buffalo ... 9.5% in Detroit ... 11.6% in
Bloomington, IL ... and a stinging 12.7% in Youngstown, Ohio.
In Bethesda, Maryland,
prices tumbled 16% from December to January. And in Fresno, California,
the median sale price for homes was $439,000 last year. But in just 60
days, those homes have plummeted $51,000, to $388,000 — a 11.6%
collapse.
But as bad as things
are for private sellers, developers are in even worse shape — and
they’re giving away the farm just to get a sale.
According to David
Seiders, chief economist for the National Association of Home Builders,
a staggering 75 percent of the nation’s builders and developers are
offering incentives to attract buyers.
“Developers will
upgrade appliances, put in a Garland range or a Sub-Zero
refrigerator,” says Diane Saatchi, a vice president with the Corcoran
Group. “Other popular options include fancy kitchen cabinets, granite
countertops and marble baths — all free!”
A San Diego condo
development, Atria, is giving away plasma TVs and $5,000 home renovation
gift certificates ...
Centex, another leading
homebuilder, recently offered “$30,000 off” coupons in one region
and promised savings of up to $100,000 in another ...
Pulte Homes, one of the
nation’s biggest builders, slashed prices 10 percent on all its homes,
then pays your mortgage principal and interest, hazard and property
insurance, and property taxes — for six full months!
Bottom
line: Just one year ago, median U.S. home prices were surging at the
rapid clip of 12.5% per year, even after adjusting for inflation.
Now, with the latest
data just released a couple of weeks ago, they’ve fallen by a
whopping 5.5%.
And that’s not a
single region. It’s a nationwide figure encompassing millions of homes
from coast to coast.
But it’s just the
beginning. To reverse the massive speculative boom in the home markets
... to reduce the 4.4 million unsold homes now on the market
... to clear out the hundreds of billions in mortgage debts that cannot
be repaid ... a far deeper decline is unavoidable.
Your Urgent
Self-Defense
First,
don’t count on Corporate America or Wall Street to be there for you
— now or in the future. More so than ever, you must build your own
savings that you control, sheltered from the retirement
dangers.
Second,
unload vulnerable assets — especially investment real estate — and
raise as much cash as possible.
Third,
protect yourself from inflation. Despite temporary ups and downs, that
should include investments tied to gold, energy and other natural
resources.
Fourth,
recognize that one single nest egg may not be the answer for
all your needs. You may actually need two:
-
One
nest egg that virtually guarantees a minimum income to cover your
necessities. My favorite vehicles: Funds that invest exclusively in
U.S. Treasury bills or equivalent. (Using Google, search for
Treasury Only Money Market Funds.)
-
Another
nest egg, although not guaranteed, with the goal of throwing off a
lot of cash to cover your favorite extras. Use this money to aim for
reliably high yields year after year.
For example, consider
Enerplus (ERF), one of our favorite Canadian royalty trusts, currently
yielding 9.17% at today’s prices. Over the past five years, the stock
has risen steadily from under $15 per share to $59 in August. In
September it fell to $46. But investors who used that decline as a
buying opportunity are already enjoying what could be the beginning of a
nice comeback, with the stock closing at $49.50 on Friday.
Or, for some portion of
your funds, you aim even higher — for average returns of over 21% per
year, enough to double your nest egg in less than four years,
potentially making a huge difference in your retirement lifestyle. (See
my latest report for details).
But no matter what
high-yield approaches you use, never forget: The return of your
money is more important than the return on your money.
Good luck and God
bless!
Martin
Martin
Weiss,
Ph.D.
Editor, Safe Money Report
support@martinweiss.com

© 2006 Martin D. Weiss,
Ph.D.
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