Tutorial 1 Case Study - Solution
Tutorial 1 Case Study - Solution
SEMESTER I, 2009/2010
Tutorial 1: Case Study
Table
Number of
Investing
Years
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
9% After Taxes
$1,000,000
478,469
305,055
218,669
167,092
132,920
108,691
90,674
76,799
65,820
56,947
49,651
43,567
38,433
34,059
19,546
11,806
7,336
4,636
2,960
1,902
1,227
The reality is that $1 million isnt what it used to be. Due to inflation, it wont be nearly as
valuable in 40 years. Over extended periods of time, taxes and inflation inhibit the building of
real wealth.
A.
Most investors do not contribute the same amount every year. Indeed, young investors
usually earn less money and therefore have less to contribute. As a person ages, income
rises because of job promotions and because of wage inflation. Using the Table,
determine how much money the following investor will have at retirement age. At age
25, the investor has 40 years until retirement. She opens a taxable stock brokerage
account and contributes $1,480 per year for 40 years (note that this contribution is
exactly half of the $2,960 shown in the table). At age 35, the investor gets a job with a
defined contribution plan and invests $4,144 per year in stocks for 30 years. At age 50,
the investor has only 15 years left until retirement. Taking a more conservative
approach, the investor starts investing an additional $20,677 every year into a taxable
bond account. How much money will this investor have at retirement?
B.
SOLUTION
A.
A $1,480 contribution to a taxable stock account should build to $500,000 after 40 years.
The $4,144 annual contribution in the retirement plan will build to $1,000,000 if invested in
the stock market and contributions are made for 30 years. Lastly, the annual $20,677
investment in a taxable bond account should build to $500,000 in 15 years. Using this plan,
the investor can expect to retire with $2 million (=$500,000 + $1,000,000 + $500,000) of
investment assets.
B.