As the global pension crisis worsens, millennials, are looking at novel retirement strategies, to protect their retirement security. Will bitcoin serve the purpose?
Millennials’ Financial Situation Is ‘Relatively Dire’
Baby boomers, and then Generation X, popularized inflation-ridden investments and various retirement schemes that now are in crisis.
Generation X had less money than baby boomers. And, in turn, millennials have even less. Thus, compared with their parents, their retirement prospects are becoming increasingly alarming. According to the Washington Post,
“Millennials haven’t hit the 35 mark yet — that won’t happen until about 2023 — but their financial situation is relatively dire. They own just 3.2 percent of the nation’s wealth. To catch up to Gen Xers, they’d need to triple their wealth in just four years. To reach boomers, their net worth would need a sevenfold jump.”
In fact, millennials are already concerned about their retirement prospects. According to the National Institute on Retirement Security (NIRS), half of the millennials doubt they will be able to retire when they want to. And, as they will live longer than their parents, they worry about outliving their retirement savings. And the NIRS adds,
“More than ninety percent agree that the nation’s retirement system is under stress and needs reform. Given that this generation has witnessed their parents struggle to make ends meet during retirement, their concerns about achieving retirement security—even though decades away — are warranted.”
Indeed, Raoul Pal, CEO, and co-founder of Real Vision, in his video The Coming Retirement Crises, warns that millennials will not be able to fulfill the American Dream of retirement.
Tim Draper: Millennials Should Invest in Bitcoin
Consequently, many are advising millennials to look at retirement schemes that differ from those of their parents’ generation.
For example, billionaire Tim Draper recommends to the younger generation that Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are keys to a successful retirement. While accusing the banking industry of putting millennials in hundreds of thousands of dollars of debt, Draper told Fox Business, “Cryptocurrency is the key to a successful retirement savings plan.”
In effect, many young people are already doing so. As Rachel Wolfson writing on Bloomberg put it,
“Interestingly enough, though, one of the main reasons millennials are investing in cryptocurrencies is to save for retirement funds.”
Most notably, millennials can already invest their Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies in an IRA. Bitcoin IRA allows the transfer of an IRA or 401K fund to a Bitcoin IRA.
These Bitcoin-based instruments seem to be gaining traction. In January 2020, Bitcoin IRA announced,
“[Bitcoin IRA] exceeded $400 million in cryptocurrency transactions after launching their 24/7 self-trading crypto IRA platform one year ago.”
Do you think Bitcoin will soon become a mainstream retirement investment opportunity? Let us know what you think in the comments below.
Images via Shutterstock, The Washington Post origin »
Millennials are turning their attention to Bitcoin as part of their retirement portfolios, according to research from Charles Schwab. In the bank and brokerage firm’s industry-leading benchmark on retirement plan participant investment activity within self-directed brokerage accounts (SDBAs), a breakdown of individual equity holdings among American Baby Boomers, Gen Xers, and Millennials were compared.
Bitcoin-based investment has made its way into the portfolios of the youngest investors, as millennials allocate a part of their retirement to Bitcoin-based stock. Millennials Allocate Funds to Different Asset Mix Analysis of self-directed brokerage accounts show a generational divide in selecting assets.
One of the largest banks and brokerage firms in the United States, Charles Schwab released the findings of its latest SDBA Indicators Report that covers data from about 142,000 retirement plan participants who have balanced between $5,000 and $10 million in their Schwab Personal Choice Retirement Account.
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Nearly 90% of cryptocurrency investors worry about what will happen to their assets after they die, but few plan appropriately. Younger investors are particularly culpable, barely thinking beyond their own lives.