For young professionals starting their careers without employer retirement funds, financial experts recommend investing 15% to 20% of gross monthly income in simple, automated vehicles like retirement annuities and tax-free investments.
Young graduates entering the workforce often face the challenge of building retirement savings without employer support. According to financial adviser Kenny Meiring, the key lies in starting early, as 'time matters more than returns. Small amounts invested early beat large amounts invested later. Consistency beats perfection.' For someone beginning their first job, a good target is 15% to 20% of gross monthly income, or at least 10% initially, increasing with salary raises.
Meiring outlines three core investment options. First, allocate 10% to a retirement annuity (RA), which allows deductions of up to 27.5% of taxable income, capped annually, with tax-free growth inside the fund. This structure promotes long-term discipline, as funds are not easily accessible. Second, contribute R1,000 to R3,000 monthly to a tax-free investment, limited to R36,000 annually and R500,000 lifetime, offering no tax on interest, dividends or capital gains, and providing flexibility for access if needed. Third, direct 5% to flexible investments such as ETFs or unit trusts for goals like home deposits or career breaks, though returns are taxable.
Before expanding investments, establish an emergency fund covering one to three months' expenses in a low-risk portfolio to avoid dipping into long-term savings. The foundation of wealth building is automation: 'Increase your contributions annually, use salary increases, not willpower, and avoid lifestyle inflation.' Portfolios should emphasize growth assets like equities in a diversified balanced or growth-oriented setup, ignoring short-term market fluctuations. Simplicity is paramount, avoiding stock picking or chasing trends.
As Meiring emphasizes, 'The most important step isn’t choosing the perfect product. It’s choosing to start – now.' This approach leverages time as the greatest asset for early-career individuals.