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Pension / Retirement Crisis Is Becoming An Underfunded ‘Tsunami’ According to The SEC
The Daily Coin ^ | 10/22/2018

Posted on 10/22/2018 12:48:55 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

We have detailed this problem over the past 3-4 years warning people about how bad the pensions around the nation have become nothing more than another ponzi scheme. Most, if not all, state, local and federal pension programs are underfunded by 40% or more.

What we stated a mere two months ago, in September 2018!

The steam that is building began in earnest in 2012 and has been picking up speed ever since. Look no further than some of the recent events we have documented time and again – Detroit, CALPers, Jeremy Stein, Teamsters and Dallas Pension Fund. All of these events have taken place in less than five years. What will the next four-plus years bring? How much longer should one sit on their hands and watch as thousands upon thousands of people either have retirement stolen or placed on lock-down as is the case with the Dallas Police Pension fund?

****

We have studied, researched and written about this for well over four years. Harry Markopolous, in 2011, tried to warn us about the ongoing theft, within the pension funds, on a daily basis by the banking cabal – link. CALPers pension program is north of 50% underfunded and losing a little more each and every quarter. – link. These are merely two of the articles that paint a picture of a tsunami of pension bankruptcies in the near future.

That’s a lot of people around the country that are directly impacted by unfunded, underfunded or otherwise completely insolvent pension funds.

It appears either the Forbes writer Elizabeth Bauer or SEC Commissioner Kara Stein read the article we published in September as they are now using the exact same language we used in September – ‘tsunami’ of pension failures.

SEC Commissioner Warns: A Retirement Crisis ‘Tsunami’ Is Approaching

Commissioner Kara M. Stein spoke to the Brookings Institution on Tuesday, giving a talk titled “The New American Dream: Retirement Security.” Here’s what she had to say:

Since World War II, Americans have planned their retirements around the expectation of combining a pension, Social Security benefits, and personal savings to provide sufficient income for their golden years. . . .

Due to a number of factors, the financial health of the Social Security trust fund has been declining. According to the 2018 Trustees Report on Social Security, the fund will be depleted by 2034.That is only 16 years away. At the same time, the availability of employer-provided pension plans has also been declining. Few private sector workers today have access to a pension, and many public sector pension plans are facing severe financial problems. . . .

We’ve moved from a collective retirement system to one in which each person is expected to go it alone. . . .

The retirement crisis is a tsunami that is rapidly approaching. We can already see it and, indeed, we are starting to feel its effects. Americans are having to work past traditional retirement age. And the number of bankruptcies for those over the age of 65 has increased dramatically. The size and speed of the tsunami is likely to increase as it gets closer and closer to us. Our population is aging and the cost of medical care—an important factor for retirees—is increasing. We must address this problem before we are collectively underwater. . . .

As an SEC Commissioner, I’m here to talk about solutions specifically related to the third leg of the stool—investments. Stashing away money in a savings account only gets retirees so far. To have a safe and secure retirement, Americans must invest their savings to allow them to grow. . . . Given the importance of investment to Americans’ ability to retire, what can the SEC do to help?

Stein’s talk continues by addressing the need for improved financial education, and suggests the SEC might create a model curriculum for schools, create spelling bee-like contests, and create an app, for instance. They might also work to improve the readability of disclosures in an investment prospectus, with key information up-front, or require that 401(k) disclosures include information on projected retirement income. She revisits the question of the now-discarded plan of holding investment advisors to a fiduciary standard (that is, prohibiting them from steering clients to investments which pay higher commissions) and suggests that a (less-desirable) alternative might be educating investors to ask whether their advisors have conflicts of interest. In addition, because of the impact that severe market downturns can have on retirement-savers, the Commission should, while recognizing that downturns are a fact of life, look at actions to mitigate the likelihood of the most severe market crashes. Source

I am not a financial advisor so I’m not offering financial advice I just have a simple question – does it really take a “professional advisor” to see the writing on the wall? If you are not at least thinking about this problem, then it may be time. At least look at what is going on within your retirement account, especially if it is with a large corporate or state entity. We made our decision in 2009 and still have zero regrets. As a matter-of-fact I am extremely happy I got out when I did. Sorry I missed out on the gains, but I don’t regret the decision for one second. Got physical; we sure do!


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Society
KEYWORDS: duhaward; pension; retirement
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To: hanamizu

About 98% of my “pension” will be funded by my personal savings. No half by public funds. No public funds have paid for my health, dental, or vision insurance over 40-some years, either.

Have never gotten any “cost of living” raises or raises based on “time in service”, “market adjustments” or additional degree hours.

I have never worked anywhere that didn’t expect me to show up for work for about 240 days per year, after holidays and “vacation”.

I hope and pray that I am not asked to pay more propping up the “underfunded public employee pension plans”, or I will be living in a refrigerator box under a bridge.


21 posted on 10/22/2018 2:09:40 PM PDT by NEMDF
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To: humbleexpert

“But if any of them were intelligent enough to understand this, they’d be Republicans by now.”

I hope that was a typo, and you meant “Conservatives by now”.


22 posted on 10/22/2018 2:22:01 PM PDT by NYAmerican
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To: SeekAndFind

To be honest, this entire thread and every single other thread on the topic belongs in chat.
No exceptions.

In the nineteen sixties and nineteen seventies the topic of unfunded pensions was debated ad nauseam in the Tulsa World (democrat morning paper) and in the Tulsa Tribune (republican evening paper) and people either fell into the camp of “this will eventually crash and burn” or “by the time this is a problem a new source of money will magically appear”. The folks who took the latter position really meant that they would be long dead or at least out of office when the crash came.

Here we are.
Water is wet.
The sun rises in the east.
Things not paid for collapse.
All of which are proper topics for chat, and not one of which is in any way, shape, or form news.


23 posted on 10/22/2018 2:38:09 PM PDT by MrEdd (Caveat Emptor)
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To: NEMDF

No public funds have paid for my health, dental, or vision insurance over 40-some years, either.


My school district’s taxpayers did pay for health & dental insurance (but not vision) for most of my career. They did not however pay for my wife’s. That came out of my pocket. I was only paid for the 180 days that I was at work. When I was first employed, I was allowed the option of receiving 9 paychecks for 9 months, but because teachers aren’t necessarily great budgeters, an option was offered that the same sum could be distributed over 12 checks. This option became mandatory when districts realized that they could pocket the interest that spreading out the payments earned them.

I did (but not always) get a bump up in salary for time served, but finally reached the top of the salary schedule and got no more raises. I could have made more had I pursued a master’s degree, but I saw no improvement the teaching abilities of those did.

I too, hope you aren’t “asked” (they won’t ask, they’ll demand) to pay more to prop up failing pensions plans. My hope is both selfish and altruistic. Some states are in big messes. Illinois, about 5 miles from me is one.


24 posted on 10/22/2018 2:40:28 PM PDT by hanamizu
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To: SeekAndFind

Very glad my pension and health insurance are covered by the federal government, not a state or local government.


25 posted on 10/22/2018 3:06:05 PM PDT by Poundstone (A Federal retiree and proud of it!)
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To: SeekAndFind

If the Fed raises interest rates, a big chunk of the pension crisis will go away. Low yields are a major component.


26 posted on 10/22/2018 3:33:34 PM PDT by PAR35
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To: Steely Tom

The govt workers....all of them...know it’s a RIP off of tax payers and UNDESERVED on their part but what do they care..they can retire late 40’s or early 50’s.


27 posted on 10/22/2018 3:35:39 PM PDT by cherry (official troll)
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To: MrEdd

RE: To be honest, this entire thread
And every single other thread on this topic belongs in chat.

It IS in the chat forum.


28 posted on 10/22/2018 5:41:16 PM PDT by SeekAndFind (look at Michigan, it will)
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To: Steely Tom
He was correct - DOD Civilians aren't all left wing....after 24 years in uniform and another 15 as a DOD civilian, I had lots of opportunities to observe.....I'd guess maybe 30% qualify as being fairly conservative...quite disappointing but even the Active Duty is probably under 60% these days...
29 posted on 10/23/2018 2:24:20 AM PDT by trebb (Those who don't donate anything tend to be empty gasbags...no-value-added types)
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