Suzanne Woolley
Writer and editorSuzanne Woolley is a personal finance writer and editor for Bloomberg News.
Suzanne Woolley is a personal finance writer and editor for Bloomberg News.
People often sit down to figure out how much they will need in retirement and assume they'll spend 40 years in the workforce. That's an outmoded assumption, TIAA's Diane Garnic says.
It doesn’t seem like much to ask for—a 5% return. But the odds of making even that on traditional investments in the next 10 years are slim, according to a new report from investment advisory firm Research Affiliates.
The bank’s scandal is a useful, and urgent, reminder: Employee shouldn't sink retirement money into their company’s stock.
If you had to choose between the retirement or salaries, and you're between 18 and 34, odds are you'd trade some of your pay today for greater retirement security in the future.
At 9 p.m. ET, in the first presidential debate of the season, Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump will be pressed, to a degree, for details of their various proposals. Jobs, wages, taxes, student debt, child care, Social Security ... any or all of these could come up.
Retailers use Labor Day to sell us "elegant" fire pits and pom-poms for handbags (yes, an accessory for an accessory). That isn't quite what the holiday is about.
Many American couples don’t share even basic financial details of their retirement savings account, beyond the fact that they have one, new survey finds.
Employer anxiety about offering you a 401(k) plan is rising rapidly, and for potentially good and expensive reasons. Class-action lawyers are targeting a wider variety of alleged breaches of fiduciary duty in retirement offerings and suing a broader range of entities, including college and university 403(b) plans.
Given millennials’ rep for job hopping and stock shunning, here’s a striking statistic.
A number of savings apps for the Apple Watch are rolling out to help workers more easily manage retirement plans.