Is retirement savings worth it this year?

Retirement Savings in Today's Economy: Strategies for Prudent Investing

Retirement Savings in Today's Economy: Strategies for Prudent Investing

This topic was previously covered in one of my weekly newsletters. To get other timely tips, make sure you’re on the list: www.thejilljames.com/newsletter 

How many times can I re-write a newsletter in a week? Come on, man. Nobody wants to think about the federal government this much. 

I’ve written about uncertainty before. But this week, it’s uncertainty and an annual tax deadline, which means we have to make money choices.

Retirement savings, in this economy? The stock market and tariff rollercoaster over the past week may have you thinking twice about whether you want to defer any additional funds right now. Today, let’s take a step back and look at whether compensating yourself via retirement savings is still the right move.

Use this information for educational purposes only. I am not your personal tax or financial advisor. 

First, reconsider your cash needs. As of 12 PM PT on Wednesday, April 9, most “assorted reciprocal tariffs” are on hold. But the base 10% global tariff and an upgraded 125% tariff on China remain, as do steel, aluminum, and auto levies. You may need your reserved cash to stay in business and pay import duties until you can recover them through sales. Entirely fair.

(Aside: China called 47’s bluff because they can. Lest you think this delay is a US win, China will be just fine with not buying American Treasury bonds and sending its diplomats to fill the power vacuum left by the America First strategy. US small business owners facing 10x import duties, not so much.) 

Another consideration is your emergency fund. While you should have a backup bank line of credit, if you’re in your first two years of business or you haven’t shown profits, that may be difficult. While we don’t yet know whether we’re in a recession, since last week, the risk of entering one this year is up from 25% to 75%. If you are concerned about covering payroll or your own bills, you may decide that paying the taxes due for 2024 and keeping the funds available in a high-yield savings account is the right move. Also fair.

If you’re ready to skip out on retirement savings because you’re nervous about putting money into the market right now, please read on. Retirement savings has two aspects:

  1. Depositing money to save on your current or future year taxes
  2. Investing that money for growth


Depositing money into your IRA or 401k is not the same as investing in the stock market.
Making a contribution to a traditional IRA or 401k account by your tax deadline checks the box for receiving the current year tax deduction. If you don’t like the current market conditions, you can leave the money in the cash or money market option. Do you want to pay more taxes into this dumpster fire of an administration or save the money for yourself? I thought so. 

Also, if your investment strategy has been all S&P 500 index or Magnificent 7 stocks, it’s time to broaden your portfolio strategy. You can invest in funds for almost anything at a low cost through your online broker or in your 401k. Besides equities (stocks), you can choose from other asset classes like cash, fixed income (bonds), real estate, and commodities (raw goods). How you mix these for yourself is your personal investing strategy. If there’s a country or industry you think will be a winner over the next few years, buy its ETF. Or you can focus on impact investing. Funds allow you to purchase one share of one thing and get access to dozens or hundreds of publicly-traded companies. 

And yes, the market will continue to go up and down.  If you made an investment in the last seven days, it’s looking pretty good right now. And, I bet you spent much of this week wringing your hands over whether you should have cancelled that deposit. Volatility and uncertainty remain high, and will until at least the midterm elections in November 2026 unless Congress steps up. In the best of times, even professionals struggle to “time the market,” meaning knowing precisely when to buy or sell. The lesson of the last 24 hours is that it’s hard to predict whether any single market day or hour will be amazing or horrible.

The classic solution is dollar-cost averaging (DCA), which means investing some amount of money in the market on a periodic schedule. If the market’s up, your money buys fewer shares. If it’s down, it buys more. My personal strategy is to deposit a small amount into my SEP IRA each month and top it up at tax time, if profitability and cash flow allow. 

For more support on today’s topics, I pulled these newsletters from archive:


If you’re moving forward with your contributions, remember that personal IRAs must be funded by the earlier of April 15 or when you file your 2024 taxes. Business IRAs and existing 401ks can be funded until the earlier of filing your return or your extension deadline. If you’re new to all of this, or want to brush up, check out my
blog post on how to save for retirement when you’re self-employed

Next week, you’re getting the planned newsletter. Because the client deadlines are also real.

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