As you get older and greyer, you’ll plan for your pre-croaking days by accumulating assets. That just means you'll get more and more of them. You’ll do this by buying stocks and bonds that will grow over time.
You’ll then decumulate your assets when you retire. The goal: to accumulate enough assets such that their "throw" or dividend or interest payment more than covers your retirement needs (like are you really going to bet that Social Security will be around for anyone other than the very poorest in society?)
Specifically…if you think you’ll need 50k a year, net after taxes to live nicely in central Arizona, you’ll need to have accumulated say, $200k in bonds throwing off 5% a year pretax, 4% after or 8 grand; and stock worth $1 million throwing off 4% yields gross to net 3% after tax or about $30k a year and $10k a year comes in from that apartment rental investment you did in your 40s.
All told, you juuuussst make the lifestyle you want. And if you don’t, well, Uber is still hiring drivers until the robots take those jobs too.
Related or Semi-related Video
Finance: What is Capital Appreciation (M...10411 Views
Finance a la shmoop what is capital appreciation as in the sense of an
investment fund or a mutual fund you know that is like what does it mean to
have a mutual fund with a focus on capital appreciation all right people
think more, more assets all right you have capital and yes you [Woman with a vault full of money]
appreciate having that capital but you'd appreciate it more if there was more of
it like it appreciated so a capital appreciation fund is one which focuses
on just growing the assets bigger and bigger don't really care how the capital
gets grown don't necessarily need dividends don't necessarily need minimum
p/e ratios don't necessarily need balance sheet covenants on the
investments you make don't care if it's exposed to the Venezuelan oil companies [Venezuela city landscape]
or the Australian dollar in a cap app fund well you just want the dough to [Money falls into flower pot]
grow and this ethos is in contrast to other flavors of funds which for example
need to throw off cash in the form of dividends like in a growth and income
fund or interest like in a bond fund like you know it's cash people need to
live on right so those have to do a capital appreciation does not so what's
a typical investment in a capital appreciation fund well usually be
something like a mega trend tech stock that just grows or appreciates with time [Man typing on laptop]
and really doesn't throw off much if any of a dividend like Amazon, Netflix
Facebook, Google those guys so think of a capital appreciation fund is the body [Man wearing underpants in a locker room]
builder of the mutual fund world it just wants to grow everywhere
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