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Your Investments May Not Be Growing as Much as You Think
Provided by Russell Investment Group
Inflationthe increase in the price of goods and servicescan wreak havoc on a long-term investor's money. Unless your returns keep pace with inflation, your money's value erodes. An investment, then, should be evaluated not only for its return before inflation (nominal return) but also for its return after inflation (real return).
Nominal vs. Real Returns
Consider the nominal and real returns of three major asset classes found in most retirement savings plans: cash-type investments, bonds, and U.S. stocks.
Your Personal Bottom Line
Most discussions of investment performance focus on nominal returns. Yet your personal "bottom line" is how your investments perform after inflation is backed out. How would you react if you were told your $1-million nest egg will only buy what $200,000 does today?
The lesson to be learned is stocks, based on their history, can potentially produce better returns above inflation compared to fixed-income investments. So how concerned should you be about real returns? That depends in part on your retirement investment goal.
Real returns take on greater meaning if you're a long-term investor. The longer you have to invest, the more time inflation has to impact the return on your investment. Higher real returns put more money in your account to counteract inflation.
Real returns may be less of an issue if you've accumulated most of your nest egg and will soon start spending it. In this case, inflation has less time to erode your money's value. Still, it's probably a good idea to keep some of your money invested with the goal to achieve above-inflation growth. Retirement can last 20 years or more, and you don't want your savings to run short. Consider investments with real returns that keep pace with or are slightly ahead of inflation.
Past performance is not indicative of future results.
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