Category: Debt

  • Estate Planning and Investing for Retiring Baby Boomers

    Some baby boomers are skeptical about the stock market after being burned during the downturn 2008/2009. Now that the stock market has been booming for several years, it may be time to consider a financial planner who understands estate planning and investing as you close in on retirement. Having a will set up and assigning a…

  • 5 Money Saving Strategies to Avoid

    We’ve all done it. Spent more than we wanted to all in an effort to get a great deal. With all the offers floating around promising to help you save money, here are 5 to avoid: 1. Buying in bulk. While buying in bulk can be a cost-effective budgeting strategy, often consumers end up buying…

  • Guide to a Baby Boomers Retirement

    The ripe age of 65 is no longer a valid number for those planning their retirement. As more and more baby boomers reach this age, demographers and researchers are skeptical as to just how long they will live. Not only does this uncertainty have effects on a national level, as to the cost of Medicare…

  • Retirement Planning Microscope Moves to the 20’s

    As time moves onward, a lot of the retirement conversation has shifted. Many discussions no longer revolve around you Baby Boomers. Now, the eyes are on the younger investors, your children. They say hindsight is 20/20, and it seems that many of the twentysomethings have seen the retirement struggles of their parents’ generation all too…

  • Retirement & Your Budget: Debits and Credits

    Just like any major life event, retirement will bring about a lot of unexpected changes. Many of these changes will be in lifestyle, hobbies, or location, but the most worrisome for retirees are the unexpected changes with their financial situation. If you are like most of our clients, you have planned well for your retirement,…

  • The Student Loan Bubble

    Call it a bubble, call it a catastrophe, call it whatever you’d like, but student loan debt has become an increasingly large burden and more and more people are starting to notice. The issue was most recently highlighted by our largely stagnant Congress who allowed the subsidized loan rates for undergraduates to double to 6.8%…