Retirement Services

"The future is purchased by the present."

- Samuel Johnson

Planning for retirement requires careful preparation and a prudent investment strategy. Whether a client’s desire is to create an income stream that will ensure a comfortable retirement or to preserve assets to pass on to heirs, SWS Financial Group can help clients construct a portfolio that will help meet their needs based on the individual’s risk tolerance available assets.

Retirement Income Analysis

For clients seeking a disciplined investment strategy, SWS Financial Group offers customized investment allocation plans that, if properly implemented, can help them meet their retirement goals. Key considerations in creating our client’s investment allocation plans include the individual’s top financial objectives, investment time horizon, risk tolerance, tax situation and cash needs.

Our rigorous asset allocation process results in broadly diversified—yet highly efficient—portfolios for our clients. Using a transparent, process-oriented approach allows our clients to take part in selecting a viable retirement date and asset accumulation goal.

Retirement Account Consolidation

Account consolidation is often the first step helping our clients to reach their retirement objectives. By consolidating a client's IRAs and other retirement plan assets through SWS Financial Group, clients may benefit from:

- An integrated investment strategy that allows the client to closely monitor asset allocation strategy
- Access to a variety of investment vehicles that may not be available in a company sponsored retirement plan
- Beneficiary consolidation to facilitate estate planning

In many cases, clients are eligible to roll over assets from their employer-sponsored plans (401(k)s) into an IRA, and potentially increase their investment flexibility. In order to determine whether you qualify, please contact a representative of SWS Financial Group.

An IRA participant is allowed only one indirect rollover in any 12-month period across all IRAs that he or she owns. An indirect rollover is a participant-initiated distribution in which the participant receives the proceeds and subsequently rolls those proceeds into another (or the same IRA) within 60 days. Individuals can continue to make unlimited trustee-to-trustee transfers (transfers directly between IRAs) as well as unlimited conversions from tradition IRAs to Roth IRAs. Clients should consult their tax advisor prior to effecting a rollover.

Before rolling over the proceeds of your retirement plan to an Individual Retirement Account (IRA) or annuity, consider whether you would benefit from other possible options such as leaving the funds in your current plan or transferring them into a new employer’s plan. Consult with each employer’s Human Resources Department to learn about important plan features and rules. Be sure to compare the fees and expenses of each plan and investment option to those of any other investments that you are considering. Review plan documents and the IRA agreement, as well as the prospectuses for plan investment options and any other investments that you are considering. Your registered representative can help explain any new product being offered. Neither New York Life nor its representatives or affiliates provide tax or legal advice. Consult with a tax or legal advisor to discuss any questions or concerns that you have, such as the tax consequences of withdrawing funds or removing shares of an employer’s stock from a retirement plan and whether money invested in a retirement plan receives greater protection from creditors and legal judgments in your state than money invested in an IRA or annuity. Also consider that you may be able to take taxable, but penalty-free withdrawals from an employer-sponsored retirement plan between the ages of 55 and 59.5 that you would not be able to take if you invest in an IRA or annuity. Additionally, if you plan to work after you reach age 70.5, you may not be required to take minimum distributions from your current employer’s retirement plan but would be required to do so for funds invested in an IRA or annuity.