Originally posted by: LegendKiller
Originally posted by: iversonyin
Originally posted by: LegendKiller
Originally posted by: PrinceofWands
Originally posted by: BigJ
So if you don't believe in financial institutions, what are you doing for retirement?
Posting here to find out about alternatives.
And once I get into the new career I'll probably contact a professional planner as well. For now I'm just trying to start learning about my options.
Look, coming from a guy who has his CFA charter, I have to say that your idea of investments is just plain silly. You got yourself into this situation and yes, you had bad experiences, but you put yourself there. Even if you put your money into bullion or stuffed it under your mattress, they can still get to other assets or just directly garnish your wages or foreclose on property. About the only way you can avoid that is to go completely cash and have no actual assets and stash that under the mattress.
Your aversion is misplaced and just not reasonable. Forgoing major returns for a false sense of security really highlights your irrational paranoia. Any CFA charterholder or CFP will tell you that your chances of saving for retirement in a reasonable fashion while adhering to your irrational expectations are not reasonable.
He need a lawyer, not a financial planner/analyst. I don't think his fear is that irrational after hearing his story.
But for now, its good to stash a retirement account with some sort of financial institutions. (% of his asset). Other part, he's better off hiding it in forms where U.S. Govt can't touch it. I don't think CFA can teach you how to do that, so you are better off with a lawyer.
I would certainly agree that a CFA can't. There are accounts which the government can't touch, an example is OJ's NFL retirement. However, being able to set those up to be impervious to government tampering is very very difficult and out of the reach of most people. Just take a look at his royalties or even autograph revenue, it gets garnished and confiscated.
If you owe money and you get paid a paycheck it doesn't matter if you have cash stashed in offshore accounts, if there is .01 sitting here or $2000/wk coming in from your regular job, they'll take it.
That's my main point. No matter where he puts his money there is *ALWAYS* going to be exposure. You can attempt to reduce that exposure, but at what cost? As pointed out above, compounding returns on regular equity will yield a much better return.
In the end is his irrationality actually going to pay off for him?