If you’re approaching that critical moment of making retirement decisions, I want you to pay close attention…
You’re constantly fed “tips” and “guidelines” by the “experts” who know nothing about retirement. They simply want to turn you into their cash cow… or at least another cash cow for them.
What you should be doing is milking retirement funds with this one tool.
The only retirement move you’ll ever need is incredibly simple, and it’s laid out for you right here.
What scare tactics is your retirement account manager using on you right now?
“You need to open an IRA with me because other managers will lose all your money.”
“You need to keep contributing to your 401(k) or you’ll never retire.”
“I don’t care if the stock is dropping; if you pull out now, you’ll regret it.”
If any of this sounds familiar…
FIRE THAT FUND MANAGER!
I’m telling you right now, the only fund manager you’ll ever need is yourself—and I use “manager” loosely because this retirement strategy involves one simple, hands-free move with massive rewards.
It all revolves around gold.
But I’m not talking about buying physical gold. I’m going to show you how to invest in gold without ever handling the actual metal.
This makes your life much easier when it’s time to sell and enjoy those big profits.
Come tax time, your accountant is going to have plenty of work with all this income, but that’s their job. Your job is to sit back and enjoy retirement.
And don’t worry if you don’t have an accountant yet. You’ll need one (and will be able to afford one) when you start seeing this income.
To buy gold the way I’m talking about, we’re looking at an Exchange Traded Fund (ETF)—specifically, SPDR Gold Shares (GLD).
All you need to do is tell your broker you want to purchase X amount of GLD shares.
In the last 8 years, GLD has risen from $100 per share to $238.68 per share.
That’s a gain of 138%!
That’s an annual return of 17%–i.e. over 5 TIMES what your fund manager is getting you with his lousy 4-5%.
But that gain isn’t a one-off, cherry-picked range…
Between 2005 and 2011, GLD rose from $41.02 per share to $185.85 per share.
That’s a gain of 353%!
Or an annual return of 59%.
Much, much better than that 4-5% return, right?
I should also point out that something very significant happened during those years…
The 2009 financial crisis, which permanently damaged the financial security of hundreds of thousands of people.
GLD took a small hit, but that 353% return clearly shows it turned out just fine.
And the best part?
You won’t face any ridiculous penalty if you decide to cash out before you turn 65.
These gains will keep your accountant busy, while you sit back and enjoy the wealth and freedom that come from milking this retirement tool.