Search Results | Showing 21 - 30 of 273 results for "Baby boomers" |
| | ... three and a half trillion dollars, more than the GDP of Australia and New Zealand combined, are set to move from the Baby Boomers to the next generation in the coming years." Therefore, Fischer said, these trends are really driving some of the shifts ... |
| | | ... past six months - 17% chose a more conservative option, while 9% switched to a more aggressive product. Just 7% of Baby Boomers made a change to their risk profile. Overall, 81% of respondents have not touched their super investments in the past six ... |
| | | ... to the report, 59% of millennials have a professional financial adviser. This compares to Generation X on 56% and baby boomers on 48%. Their main reason for engaging one is to reach their financial goals, including retiring at 60, 82% of respondents ... |
| | | ... Australians do not have enough funds in their superannuation accounts when they retire. "The simple fact is that baby boomers, who are in the process of retiring, have not captured a full working life of superannuation contributions," Funder said. "It's ... |
| | | ... the generations, finding just 34% of Millennials had bought their first home by the age of 30, compared to 62% of Baby Boomers and 42% of Gen X. It also found that while 92% of Baby Boomers were no longer living with parents by their 30 th birthday ... |
| | | ... mean more access to their home equity retirement funding." Household Capital chair Nick Sherry added: "The wealth of baby boomers is mostly tied up in their home. Australian seniors need ubiquitous, responsible, long-term, and efficient access to home ... |
| | | ... of single parent families surveyed could not meet a $300 a month rise, along with 71% in remote areas and 70% of Baby Boomers. "Where do these people go if they have to walk away from their home? Public housing, the street?" White said. "The options ... |
| | | Combine economic stagnation and rising inflation and what do we get? We get stagflation -- the financial markets' fear du'jour. It had been nearly half a century ago when the global economy have had its last encounter with stagflation. he first ... |
| | | According to analysis from Openmarkets Group, on average Baby Boomers and Generation X are making money on meme stocks, while Millennials are losing money. The analysis covered 11 "meme stocks" (stocks whose share prices skyrocketed due to social media ... |
| | | ... Association of Financial Advisers (AFA) Conference, CoreData global chief executive Andrew Inwood said the youngest of the baby boomers are turning 57 years old this year and a massive amount of money is about to be spent. "It's going to force all ... |
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