Question
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ACEP Now: Vol 42 – No 08 – August 2023I am overwhelmed by all things financial. What is the simplest, most reliable way for me to have a secure retirement?
Answer
As much as I enjoy learning, talking, and writing about “all things financial,” I recognize that most doctors are not hobbyists when it comes to personal finance and investing. While this may be the best-paying hobby ever (especially when you consider that even a fairly priced financial advisor may be charging you up to $10,000 per year), it is not required in order to achieve a well-deserved, financially secure, comfortable retirement after a career “in the pit.”
While there may be faster pathways to becoming wealthy, there is a very reliable method that does not require any entrepreneurial skills, excessive borrowing, risk taking, stock picking, cryptocurrency, or a second job in real estate. It does require a little bit of discipline applied over several decades, but so does showing up and taking care of whatever comes through the door 15 shifts a month throughout a career. Let me describe this method to you.
Save Your Money
The first requirement is to save money. You cannot invest money that you do not have and for most full-time physicians, there is no money other than what they earn taking care of patients. Carve out 20 percent of your gross income to invest for retirement. The average emergency physician makes about $375,000 per year. Twenty percent of that is $75,000. This is money that you cannot spend if you want to have a secure retirement. Pay yourself first by carving this money off the top and putting it away for retirement.
Protected Retirement Accounts
Ideally, you will be able to protect most or all of this money from the tax man and any potential creditors using tax- and asset-protected retirement accounts such as 401(k)s, 403(b)s, 457(b)s, profit-sharing plans, cash balance plans, individual 401(k)s, and Roth IRAs (usually funded via the “backdoor” method). Your investments grow faster when you do not have to pay taxes on the earnings each year. If you run out of retirement account space before you get to 20 percent, then contribute the rest to a regular, non-qualified, taxable, brokerage account.
Index Funds
Once you have the money, you need to invest it. Investing is actually the simplest part of personal finance. It turns out that the vast majority of what is happening on Wall Street does not add value to your nest egg. Your goal as a long-term investor is to invest for the long term, so you do not need to pay attention to the “hot money managers,” the latest tech stock, or really any financial news at all. You can simply buy all the stocks and bonds using dirt cheap, broadly diversified, index funds. You will be guaranteed the market return. By accepting average returns, in the long run you will outperform 80 to 90 percent of investors. Any reasonable mix of a handful of index funds will do. One simple combination might be 50 percent of your money in a U.S. stock index fund, 30 percent in an international stock index fund, and 20 percent in a U.S. bond index fund. Maintaining these ratios is done by directing new investments at whichever asset class (type of investment) has underperformed over the previous few months or years. This “rebalancing” helps maintain the same portfolio risk level over time.
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