financial

Time for a Financial Cleanup: Organizing Your Financial Records

An integral part of managing your personal finances involves properly maintaining your financial records. This is especially important in the event of a crisis or emergency so that you can quickly locate something if needed. That’s why you should make a point of dusting off the cobwebs that have built up in your home office […]

Time for a Financial Cleanup: Organizing Your Financial Records Read More »

Dollar Cost Averaging

If you haven’t started investing towards a long-term goal because you’re worried about short-term market volatility, consider using a popular investment strategy called dollar cost averaging. Dollar cost averaging takes some of the guesswork out of investing in the stock market. Instead of waiting to invest a single lump sum until you feel prices are

Dollar Cost Averaging Read More »

Can You Access Your Retirement Plan Money After a Disaster?

If you have been affected by Hurricane Helene, Hurricane Milton, or another recent federally declared major disaster, you may be relieved to hear that over the past few years, it has become easier to access your work-based retirement plan and IRA money. Following is a brief summary of the rules for qualified disaster recovery distributions

Can You Access Your Retirement Plan Money After a Disaster? Read More »

What Does the Future Hold for Social Security and Medicare?

Each year, the Trustees of the Social Security and Medicare trust funds provide detailed reports to Congress that track the programs’ current financial condition and projected financial outlook. These reports have warned for years that the trust funds would be depleted in the not-too-distant future, and the most recent reports, released on May 6, 2024,

What Does the Future Hold for Social Security and Medicare? Read More »

The Fed Finally Cut Interest Rates. What Could It Mean for Your Finances?

On September 18, 2024, the Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) lowered the benchmark federal funds rate one-half percentage point to a range of 4.75% to 5.0%. It was the first rate cut since the Fed raised the funds rate aggressively from March 2022 to July 2023 to help control inflation.1 The long-awaited policy

The Fed Finally Cut Interest Rates. What Could It Mean for Your Finances? Read More »