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In reply to the discussion: I am retired and 73 years old, where can you park [View all]PoindexterOglethorpe
(27,040 posts)39. I want to strongly second what bucolic_frolic said.
You could look at mutual funds that invest in dividend paying stocks, or directly by some of those yourself.
Depending on how much money you actually have, putting some of it, no more than half, into an annuity that starts paying immediately could be a good choice. I'm 72, and my wonderful financial advisor got me into two of those nearly a decade ago, and I started collecting from them about two years ago. I still have other investments and other sources of income, but what I am now collecting from those annuities is far above either your bank or even the best of bonds or bond funds.
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I posted before I was finished, please read it again, I made a serious reply.
marble falls
May 2021
#23
It appears you have a misunderstanding of what TIAA does and what an Annuity is.
A HERETIC I AM
May 2021
#37
I put a group named Blooom in control of my 401(k), which is with another company.
NBachers
May 2021
#4
Remember the old days when they'd roll them over if you didn't cash them in?
marble falls
May 2021
#25
Odd the EE savings bonds suck so much (these are the ones without the inflation adjust)
progree
May 2021
#27
Some may compare annuity yields to those of bonds and CD's without understanding the differences
progree
Jun 2021
#40
My annuities will not die with me, if there is still any value left.
PoindexterOglethorpe
Jun 2021
#41
I'm guessing interest rates and annuity yields were considerably higher when you bought
progree
Jun 2021
#42
I haven't seen anything like 4% - 5% anywhere for a long long time, and municipal bonds are not a
progree
May 2021
#28
Can new investors buy these, e.g. the EVM Eaton Vance California Municipal Bond Fund
progree
May 2021
#31