Building a savings habit

It’s easy to procrastinate when you first start your career. Common reasons for procrastination are, time, lack of disposable income, awaiting inheritance, etc. Although these feel like good reasons to wait I can ensure you they’re not. You’re in control of when and how you retire. Building a strong savings habit early is very important to building wealth. Starting a savings plan is often the hardest part, once established it becomes an addiction. Understanding money is tight when you first start your career, here are few tips to give you a kick start.

  • Create a budget and include an amount for savings, whatever you can afford, it all adds up!
  • Take advantage of your employer’s 401k plan. Most of these plans offer a competitive match, which is free money! Start with a small percentage and increase every year by 1%.
  • Try the 52 week challenge. Start week one by saving $1, the following week save $2, increasing your savings $1 every week for 52 weeks. At the end of the year you’ll have saved $1,378!

Time is Money

Have you ever heard of compounding? Compounding is the ability of an asset to generate earnings, which are then reinvested in order to generate their own earnings. In other words, compounding refers to generating earnings from previous earnings. Hypothetically speaking say you contribute $5000 to an IRA. In the first year your account balance grows by 10%. Your investment is now worth $5,500. In year 2, your account balance grows by another 10%. In this case your $5,500 account balance grows to $6,050. Rather than your investment growing $500 in the previous year, it grows $550. The additional $50 in growth is a direct effect of compounding. Each year growth takes place, compounding has a more dramatic effect than the year prior. Those that begins saving for retirement in their early 20’s have ten more years of compounding growth as compared to those starting in their early 30’s. In this case, time really is money!

Retire when you want, not when you can

The great thing about retirement planning is that you’re in the driver’s seat and in control. You control how much you contribute, the investment type, etc. Although fluctuations should be expected when investing, having the right plan will send you on the way to achieving your goals. At some point you may have been asked when you want to retire. Were you confidently able to answer this question? Most are not, nor should they be able to say definitively. However, having a plan in place with specific goals set will put you in the best position to answer this question.

Mark Malone

SVP, Retail Banking 

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