Five Surprising Retirement Truths Including How Sex Increases Longevity

Sex In Retirement?
Want A Longer And Happier Retirement?
Included in Robert Laura’s new book, Naked Retirement, are five retirement truths that may just surprise and inspire you. Pass it along to your family, friends, and colleagues.
Sex in Retirement:
According to the Mayo Clinic, sex can prolong life for ten or even twenty years. Having at least a hundred orgasms a year can prolong your life up to eight years and reduce your mortality rate by half.
Retirement Age:
Despite the number of significant tax and legal changes that have impacted retirement planning over the last 25 years, the age at which you are expected to retire (65) was established over 127 years ago by a German Chalcellor.
Friends:
According to a study at Flinders University in Australia, people with an extensive network of good friends and confidantes outlived those with the fewest friends by 22 percent.
Volunteer:
According to a University of Michigan study, adults over 65 who volunteered at least 40 hours each year to a single cause were 40 percent more likely than non-volunteers to be alive at the end of study.
Retiring Single?
You’re not alone. Single people are now 96 million strong and make up 43 percent of the adult population. Three of every four people age 65 or older are women.
Forget traditional retirement planning! Get Naked! NakedRetirement.com
Naked Retirement strips down the old traditional models of retirement planning and replaces them with a more creative and intuitive approach that helps people take control of their retirement planning, saving, and investing.
The magazine style guide provides an intimate look at the evolution of retirement, reveals ten trends dramatically changing the retirement landscape, and includes a series of exercises that includes mental, social, and health planning awareness instead of just financial aspects.
Discover The Best of What’s Next for only $4.99
Robert Laura
Author, Naked Retirement
888-267-1138
Challenge Traditional Retirement Planning By Going Naked

Get Naked
Naked Retirement: A Stimulating Guide To A Secure And Meaningful Retirement strips down the old traditional models of retirement planning and replaces them with a more creative and intuitive approach that helps people take control of their retirement planning, saving, and investing.
The magazine style guide provides an intimate look at the evolution of retirement, reveals ten trends dramatically changing the retirement landscape, and includes a series of exercises and information that includes mental, social, and health planning awareness instead of just financial aspects.
“Retirement planning can no longer be one-dimensional, focused merely on providing information such as how pensions or 401(k)s work. It needs to be expanded so that issues like replacing your work identity, level of social involvement, and relationship needs are addressed,” according to author, Robert Laura.
Billed as the ultimate defense against the scary, anxious, and stressful feelings people get on their first day of retirement when they have only a financial plan full of numbers and charts to guide them, Laura targets the psychological aspects of retirement with concrete exercises like the development of a “Curious List” to add direction and purpose to retirement.
The guidebook culminates into a one-page Naked Retirement plan that can help current and future retirees, as well as planners, estimate preparedness and the likelihood of a successful transition from the workplace to retirement.
Naked Retirement is available at NakedRetirement.com for $4.99 and is emailed in pdf format directly to purchasers.
The Dad Report
With Father’s Day approaching fast, we decided to honor all the great dads out there with a tribute called The Dad Report.
Impress Dad with:
A brief history of Father’s Day
A list of the highest paid TV Dad’s
The five most popular Father’s Day quotes
Ultimate Father’s Day gifts
And how much people plan to spend on good old Dad this year
FREE one-page report shares it all. Click here for the report.
Make sure to pass it along to every great Dad in the world. He deserves it!
Sponsored by Naked Retirement, a new book that strips traditional retirement planning down to the core. Learn how the history of retirement reveals why people are behind in savings and what you can do about it NakedRetirement.com
Smart and Simple 401k Fixes
By my estimate if you stayed in the market through the recent turmoil the value of your 401(k) account is probably getting close to where it was a year or so ago. But remember, you’re only back to where you used to be, not necessarily where you need to be. So don’t pat yourself on the back just yet. Here are three simple things you can do to fix your 401(k)
1 Make sure your asset allocation lets you sleep at night. The percentage of your money that you put into different investment types either increases or reduces your account’s market risk. If you were 70% stocks and 30% bonds before the market drop, and you didn’t like the rollercoaster ride, adjust your percentages so that you don’t have to relive that experience. Research shows that many investors owned more stock mutual funds, i.e., had more risk than they realized when the market began its precipitous fall in 2007. Interestingly enough, research also suggests that almost 80% of people haven’t made any changes to their investment choices during this up-and-down period. That means if you were overweighed in stock mutual funds then, you’re probably overweighed now.
2 Be aware of overlap. Simply put, people who invest in two or three of the same kind of mutual funds and, contrary to what they believe, may actually be reducing the amount of diversification they’re getting. Look at popular retirement plan funds such as Fidelity’s Contra Fund and American Fund’s Growth Fund of America for example. Two out of their top five holding are the same and their sector weightings are nearly identical. So why would you want to be in both? You don’t, not to mention the fact that one costs more than the other. The good old days of simply picking a bunch of funds based on their rate of return doesn’t pay in today’s environment
3 Your retirement plan costs money! Most people think investing inside their company retirement plan is free. But it’s usually not the case. Every investment has a cost (referred to its expense ratio). In most plans those costs are passed along to you. So it’s important to start asking questions and determining if you have a high cost or low cost provider. Don’t be surprised if your boss or HR person doesn’t know how much the plan and funds cost. People need to wake up to this industry secret. If you are tightening your budget at home and work, you should expect the same from your plan provider.
One More INSIDER SECRET: Most retirement plans offer fewer investment choices than are available to that plan. The reason? Research shows that the fewer options available, the more likely people will participate in the program. The problem? You may not be offered low cost options like index funds or the ability to participate in some asset classes essential to accumulating true wealth and diversification like technology, gold, precious metals, or real estate.
Now what? You’ve inevitably read articles like this before and now you’re faced with the tough question: What do I do with this information? Here’s the answer! Go online to your account or grab your last statement. Take a look for the things I mentioned in the article and if you find yourself feeling frustrated or with additional questions than pick up the phone and call 517-219-3241 – it’s my direct line. Whether you’re an employee or executive who needs help figuring out your retirement investments, or if you’re a boss or HR director who wants a third party to help you understand your plan, just dial 517-219-3241… or simply reply to this email with the subject HELP!.
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Robert Laura, AAMS, CMFC, CRPC: Robert Laura is co-founder and partner at SYNERGOS Financial Group. He is the author of Financial Karma and The Five Most Important Financial Things They Don’t Teach You In School. He is frequently highlighted in local media and has been quoted in Smart Money Magazine, Forbes, The Street.com, Journal of Financial Planning, Bank Investment Advisor and a host of other media sources
Five Financial Trends To Watch in 2010
Each New Year’s brings predictions about the stock market’s performance and with it the opportunity to look like a fool or genius. Instead of walking that prediction tightrope, I have decided to highlight five financial trends for 2010.
Clicks & Mortar Beat Bricks & Mortar
The proliferation of Internet Banks will continue to cause problems for traditional banks as investors seek income instead of excuses. Internet based banks don’t have branches on every corner with salaried tellers waiting for people to come in, so their savings in overhead translate into higher rates of return and more flexible terms. Rates offered by online saving account alone can often exceed those available from local institutions’ three, six, and nine month CDs.
Cash Continues It’s Decline
2010 will continue to see cash vanish as banks incentivize customers to use debit cards instead of cash. And with technological advances like mobile banking via cell phone, the days of George, Abe, and those lovely Benjamins are slowly suffering the same fate as pay phones, beepers, and home phones.
Good Defense Beats Good Offense
Investors who select low-cost mutual funds like ETFs and individual stock portfolios can save in the range of 1% – 2% on average. In 2010, GDP growth is likely to be below 3%, unemployment will remain at double digits, and the housing market will be dominated by foreclosures. The impact of these factors on consumer spending (which accounts for approximately two-thirds of GDP) will make it more important to make up for lackluster market returns by minimizing investment costs.
Non-Savvy Conservative Investors Get Burned
With short-term yields at an all time low, more and more conservative investors will seek income through high-yield bond funds and dividend paying stocks. Unfortunately, not all bond funds and dividend stocks are structured in the same way. Many investors will be lulled by high yields alone and, to their regret, will learn that good cash flow, profitability, and quality credit cannot be ignored when it comes to the selection of dividend stocks and bond funds.
Fiduciary v. Broker Fight Takes Center Stage
The Fiduciary versus the Broker fight that has been taking place within the financial services community will take center stage as investors become more aware that not all financial professionals operate under the same rules and guidelines. Fiduciaries provide actual investment advice and are legally obliged to do what’s in the best interest of their client. Commissioned agents at firms such as Merrill Lynch, Edward Jones, Ameriprise, and at a host of insurance companies, refuse to accept such legal obligations. Educated investors armed with the right questions and information will see firsthand the potentially abusive and expensive tactics inherent among non-fiduciaries.

