Larry Caldwell
Elite Member
If something can happen it doesn't mean it will. The petrodollar is already history. The Saudis are accepting a market basket of currencies. Pricing oil in dollars is a convenience, not a requirement. Yes, civilization may end in the next 15 years, but barring that I would bet that the money people will end up with money. If you are really worried, put your 401k in a contra fund and keep paying your bills.I wouldn't be so certain that if the market crashes that it will recover. NOTHING lasts forever. That 401k money can evaporate in an instant: Petro-dollar collapse might do it [kick the legs out from under the USD as world's reserve currency and all of a sudden the endless money printing stops, and inflation shoots sky high]. Absolutes have a way of turning around and biting one. Not that it's "one sided." Case in point, a guy in Utah(?) took out all kinds of loans expecting for everything to crash (no one left to collect, right?) and, well, crickets (no crashing sounds came)... they rounded him up.
Hedge your bets! Name of our "farm" is "Scattered Eggs Farm," not because of the obvious (anyone familiar with chickens and other free-ranging fowl understand this), but more along the lines of "NOT all eggs in one basket." I had an extreme wake up at one point in which I had my entire "future" charted out, how I was going to use money for retirement and use the sale of my house for late-in-life needs. Major economic upheaval upended my plans. I got a bit wiser from that and am now a bit more resilient. I decided that I would never "retire," and that my 401k, social security and whatnot wouldn't be there, and this mentality allows for me to adjust should I have to- I figure that as long as I am able I will be working, whether that work will provide sufficient "revenue" is the question. No matter, it's about controlling one's expenses.
If one refinances one should "invest" the "savings." Back when I was playing with banks and doing refinancing (I now have no mortgage) I would be looking more to reduce the term than having a lower payment (though I always got a lower payment rate). I see a lot of volatility ahead, and most everything is a total crapshoot; what is certain, however, is that the future won't be what it used to be!
If he has to pay a 10% penalty for withdrawing from a 401k, he's still in his 50s, or maybe even younger. This is not the time to be giving away 50% of his retirement savings to the gummint. I'm a big fan of retiring the mortgage before you retire, but not at the expense of retirement savings.