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You are trying to decide how much to save for retirement. Assume you plan to save $5,000 per year with the first investment made one year from now. ou think you can earn 11.0​% per year on your investments and you plan to retire in 41 ​years, immediately after making your last $5,000 investment.

a. How much will you have in your retirement account on the day you​ retire?
b.​ If, instead of investing $5,000 per​ year, you wanted to make one​ lump-sum investment today for your retirement that will result in the same retirement​ saving, how much would that lump sum need to​ be?
c. If you hope to live for 28 years in​ retirement, how much can you withdraw every year in retirement​ (starting one year after​ retirement) so that you will just exhaust your savings with the 28th withdrawal​ (assume your savings will continue to earn 11.0​% in​ retirement)?
d.​ If, instead, you decide to withdraw $647,000 per year in retirement​ (again with the first withdrawal one year after​ retiring), how many years will it take until you exhaust your​ savings?
e. Assuming the most you can afford to save is $ 1 comma 000$1,000 per​ year, but you want to retire with
$1,000,000 in your investment​ account, how high of a return do you need to earn on your​ investments?​

User SergeyB
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Answer:

a. How much will you have in your retirement account on the day you​ retire?

  • future value of the annuity = annual payment x (FV annuity factor, 11%, 40 periods) = $5,000 x 581.826 = $2,909,130

b.​ If, instead of investing $5,000 per​ year, you wanted to make one​ lump-sum investment today for your retirement that will result in the same retirement​ saving, how much would that lump sum need to​ be?

  • present value = future value / (1 + interest rate)ⁿ = $2,909,130 / 1.11⁴¹ = $40,320.04

c. If you hope to live for 28 years in​ retirement, how much can you withdraw every year in retirement​ (starting one year after​ retirement) so that you will just exhaust your savings with the 28th withdrawal​ (assume your savings will continue to earn 11.0​% in​ retirement)?

  • payment = present value / annuity factor (PV annuity factor, 11%, 28 years) = $2,909,130 / 8.60162 = $338,207.22

d.​ If, instead, you decide to withdraw $647,000 per year in retirement​ (again with the first withdrawal one year after​ retiring), how many years will it take until you exhaust your​ savings?

  • We can first try to get an approximate answer. The annuity factor = $2,909,130 / $647,000 = 4.49633694. Now looking at an annuity table we can look at the closest amount for 11%. The answer is between 6 years (annuity factor 4.2305) and 7 years (annuity factor 4.7122). This means that in less than 7 years you will have no more money left.

e. Assuming the most you can afford to save is $ 1 comma 000$1,000 per​ year, but you want to retire with $1,000,000 in your investment​ account, how high of a return do you need to earn on your​ investments?​

  • Again we must use the future value to determine the annuity factor. Annuity factor = $1,000,000 / $1,000 = 1,000. Using an annuity calculator to determine the closest rate (for 40 periods) = 12.9515% ≈ 12.95%

User Nkhuyu
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