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For a lot of physicians, reaching the point where practicing medicine is no longer a positive experience can be frightening. There’s the loss of identity and the feeling you’ve invested far too much in your career to quit now. As more physicians work in salary-based practices, fewer have natural opportunities to own medical office buildings and side businesses — traditional areas where physicians built retirement wealth. Toss in a decade of a no-growth stock market, the demands of caring financially for children and elderly parents, and declining reimbursements, and it can amount to a pressure cooker.
6 Retirement Killing Mistakes for Healthcare Professionals
For a lot of physicians, reaching the point where practicing medicine is no longer a positive experience can be frightening. There’s the loss of identity and the feeling you’ve invested far too much in your career to quit now.
As more physicians work in salary-based practices, fewer have natural opportunities to own medical office buildings and side businesses — traditional areas where physicians built retirement wealth. Toss in a decade of a no-growth stock market, the demands of caring financially for children and elderly parents, and declining reimbursements, and it can amount to a pressure cooker.

Mistake #1: Investing in short-term investments

There is no debating the fact that as we age, we tend to invest in shorter term investments. It’s only human nature to be more cautious with our money as we age. We tend to hold the money close to the vest. The mistake is that, when we invest in shorter term investments the returns are much lower in exchange for safety of principal. If you returns are smaller than your expenditures, then you will risk out-living your money. The objective is to invest to invest long-term so the money out-lives you. Investing longer term in long-term investment is subject to short term risks, but have larger propensity for higher returns. Let your money out-live you.

Mistake #2: Healthcare Professionals tend to retire too soon

Let’s say for example Bob is 68, he desires a career change, not retirement. So he goes back to school, earned a master’s degree in medical management, and started consulting with medical practices on critical care management procedures.
A few years later he and his wife moved to Hilton Head, S.C., where he now works as the salaried executive director for Volunteers in Medicine, a national network of free clinics run by volunteer physicians.
With about 110 volunteer doctors (many of them retired) in his chapter of the organization, Bob says he constantly talks with retirees who came to the same realization: that they needed more in their lives than golf. Some volunteers are also working part-time in practices as they wind down and plan their retirement income.

“Some [newly retired doctors] haven’t really planned and find themselves in financial straits,” 
he says.
“Once you stop practicing, nobody pays you anymore and it sounds strange but not all of them realize that.”
Despite relatively high salaries compared with national averages, longer life expectancies mean more years of income to cover. And with later career starts because of the long training periods required of physicians, the retirement math just doesn’t add up.
Take just one leg of the traditional three-legged retirement stool: Social Security. The government program calculates benefits using your highest 35 years of earnings. If you have years of zeros or very low earnings in that equation, your lifetime benefits will be dinged, even if you paid in the maximum during your highest-earning years.
The upshot is if you feel yourself burning out, consider new or even part-time work options that will sustain you financially and emotionally, easing the drain on your portfolio and the number of years it needs to finance your life.

Mistake #3: Taking Social Security Too Early

This one often accompanies retiring too soon, and relies on the notion that it’s better to claim benefits early because the government program is clogged with baby boomers and the funds could run out.
However, particularly if you’re nearing retirement, do the math on how waiting until your full retirement age, or even age 70, will affect your monthly benefits. If the rest of your retirement nest egg is a liquid lump sum of stocks and bonds, Social Security could be the one asset you’ll have that will automatically rise with inflation. So don’t discount its value

Mistake #4: Managing Your Portfolio Like You Have In The Past

Most market prognosticators are forecasting years of more modest stock and bond-market returns, so be leery of financial advisors who show you retirement scenarios banking on annualized returns greater than eight percent.
In my opinion, healthcare professionals are results oriented. If something’s not working they’re tempted to try something else, but in investments that’s called chasing returns
Have your portfolio professionally managed. Insist on working closely with the financial professional. Make sure you have an Investment Policy Statement and you will avoid this mistake.

Mistake #5 MisjudgingTax implications

We are now facing Obama Care, possibly higher taxes and less investment returns. During your highest income-generating years, it can be natural to reach for every tax-deferral idea.
Yet with enormous government debt building, we believe higher tax rates are on the horizon and are urging clients to think about building assets outside of traditional tax-deferred accounts. One way to do that is with a Roth 401(k) at work, if you have such a plan available. And as of this year, IRA rollovers to Roth accounts can be done without income restrictions.
Be careful if you pursue a rollover, however, because it will boost your taxable income in the year you convert the accounts and pay income taxes on the money. That could have implications for the alternative minimum tax, as well as college financial aid calculations.
Meanwhile, pay attention to which investments are located in each type of long-term savings account to minimize your tax bite.

Mistake #6: Not paying attention to expenses

Many healthcare professionals get a late start on saving for retirement, but when they do finally start making a good income, often fall short of putting enough away to make up for it because of pent-up spending desires.
The portfolios I see for physicians in their 40s and 50s are really not as significant as they should be, compared with other professionals. Just putting the traditional 15 percent into retirement accounts isn’t going to do it — you’ll probably need to save another 10 percent to 15 percent in a taxable account,” he says.
Remember that overspending isn’t just about a few luxury trips or a car. Major hits to wealth, such as a divorce in middle age, have to be factored into your plan.
Retirement planning can be emotional business, whether you’re already getting older or are young and deciding how much you can sacrifice today for the future. If you steer clear of these big pitfalls, however, you’ll be ahead of the pack.
David S. Rodgers is a Managing Director at Rodgers Capital Management. For more than 3 decades we’ve helped countless individuals and businesses create retirement plans that work FOR them.
iTech Dunya

iTech Dunya

iTech Dunya is a technology blog that specializes in guides, reviews, how-to's, and tips about a broad range of tech-related topics..

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