sixdogs
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2007
- Messages
- 13,862
- Location
- Ohio
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- Kubota M7040, Kubota MX5100, Deere 790 TLB, Farmall Super C
Over the years I have seen many illustrations of when to take the money and I recall the point that one exceeded the other was if you lived until age 82. In other words, you had to make it to 82 to gain an edge over drawing at 62 as opposed to 70. I'm not taking that bet.
You can fool with these numbers all sorts of ways and one that works really well is to take the money at 62 and rather than spending it, invest it until age 70. That blows the socks off of the other options.
The only way to do this for yourself is to get a Hewlett Packard financial calculator, learn how to use the present value and future value illustrations and plug in your assumed rates of return. Heck, i'll bet there are present and future value charts on line now.
For me, just give me every penny that I and my employer contributed over the years along with some standard interest rate such as the return on the 10 year Treasury bond and kick me out of the system. I'd be light years ahead of the rest. Now, why won't anyone let me have that as a choice?
You can fool with these numbers all sorts of ways and one that works really well is to take the money at 62 and rather than spending it, invest it until age 70. That blows the socks off of the other options.
The only way to do this for yourself is to get a Hewlett Packard financial calculator, learn how to use the present value and future value illustrations and plug in your assumed rates of return. Heck, i'll bet there are present and future value charts on line now.
For me, just give me every penny that I and my employer contributed over the years along with some standard interest rate such as the return on the 10 year Treasury bond and kick me out of the system. I'd be light years ahead of the rest. Now, why won't anyone let me have that as a choice?