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Monday, September 4, 2023
My Chances Are Best If I Just Stay The Course In Retirement
Sunday, October 16, 2022
Fixed In exed Annuities Won't Improve My Retirement
As we've proven thousands of times in our initial, and comprehensive, retirement financial plans, this is a solid myth for almost everyone. But don't take my word for it. Here is an accessible but detailed body of evidence gathered by financial behemoth BlackRock. See page 7 especially.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1tNO0xoEGRa1w9i3eSyoBpnjzX5FPKBek/view?usp=sharing
Your Constructive Comments are Welcome!
Sunday, April 10, 2022
Ten Questions Retirees Must Be Able to Answer
The specific and complete answers depend on your particular situation, goals, plans, income and financial assets. I didn't make these up out of thin air; these are the questions that are actually on the minds of retirees and the worries they reflect. My mission with a financial plan is to reduce worry and increase confidence.
- How much can I safely withdraw?
Probably more than you think and more than your current brokerage is telling you you can. After all, if your balance is shrinking due to spending, their income is shrinking too. There are a lot of moving parts to answering this question and lots of opinions in my profession about each of those parts: inflation, taxes, regulatory risk, volatility, market corrections, health care expenses. Because this is a relatively complicated question, I focus on a cash flow plan as the foundation of every retiree's plan. - How long will my money last?
Unless one of your goals is to leave an inheritance, what if you knew that your money would last as long as you will? We can't know for sure but we can manage longevity risk. - Can I guarantee I won't run out of money?
Yes. You can. - Can I protect my assets from losses?
Yes. You can. - How much tax will I pay?
We can only guess based on current and projected tax policy. Will required minimum distributions (RMD) age be pushed out to age 75? Or even eliminated? The key is, this is an important question to ask! I have yet to meet with a new client who even has an estimate of their lifetime cumulative tax bill. Believe me, seeing that number really motivates people to do tax planning. Because you can not only significantly reduce your lifetime tax bill, you can reduce or eliminate the risk of future higher taxes. - How much could I lose in the next crash?
Everything we recommend to clients in my firm must be based on evidence, on data. In some cases the best, and only, data we have is historical with just a hint of future expectations. It is essential to know not only the maximum drawdown risk in your portfolio but also the annual volatility as well. Either one can decimate your cash flow plan. - Can I reduce my fees?
Maybe. Maybe not. The question implies that you already know the fees you're paying. Very few do because total fees include more than just the AUM (assets under "management" [quotes mine]) fees on your statement. The key is, are you getting commensurate benefits for those fees? - Is it OK to start spending?
What is the ideal spend down order of my assets? Should I spend taxable money first or taxed money first? When? Why? The only rational way to answer this question is to test alternatives to see which has the best results. For your situation. - What if one of us dies?
It comes as a shock for the surviving spouse to realize they don't get to keep both Social Security benefits when the other spouse dies. Will there be sufficient savings to make up the difference? Will the survivor's monthly income needs stay the same? - What's the best way to leave assets to my beneficiaries.
An indirect answer to this is the worst way to leave assets to beneficiaries: In a pre-tax retirement account. Unless you are the surviving spouse, the beneficiary will probably have to liquidate the account within 10 years. This regimen makes it difficult to do any tax planning, especially if your adult child is successful in their own right. One of the best ways to leave money to your children is with a Roth IRA. Real estate and brokerage accounts have advantages also with the step-up in basis but it's becoming clear that Congress intends to limit or eliminate that tax dodge.
Tuesday, June 29, 2021
You Can't Spend More Than 4% of Your Retirement Savings Without Going Broke
Yes you can! Another easily disproved myth.
In their study "Why Annuities Work Like a License to Spend" David Blanchett and Michael Finke* conclude:
. . .every $1 of assets converted to guaranteed income will result in twice
the equivalent spending compared to money left invested in a portfolio.
The size of the effect is large enough that the explanation is likely a
combination of behavioral and rational factors.
I find this to be true in the plans my clients & I develop together as well. Here is a good example.
Imagine you plan to retire 0-10 years from now and are entering another market similar to that shown in the chart below. In fact, just change that 3rd digit in the years from 0 to 2 and from 1 to 2. So the time range is 2020 to 2033.
What happens if you are retiring "now", in 5 years or in 10 years?
Retire Now. Let's say you're starting with $500,000 and need $20,000/yr withdrawals in today's dollars. At average inflation for the period of 2.15% by the 10th year you would need $24,740 in withdrawals. And you would have already spent over $220,000 of your original $500k. Your remaining $280k will last only 10 years (with no inflation but also no gains).
Retire in 5 years. As you can see, in the 5th year your money has shrunk by 20%. 4% only yields $16,000/y, not enough to meet your budget. So, withdrawing $22,244 (your 2020 budget gap inflated by 2.15%) you are out of money after 18 years.
Retire in 10 years. By the 10th year you have just recovered from a second market "correction". The amount you need for your budget is now $24,740. Just to make the math easy let's assume no inflation and also no earnings on your conservatively invested retirement portfolio. Your money will last 21 years at that withdrawal rate.
Consider another scenario, the income annuity. This illustrates the guaranteed lifetime payout for a 58 yr old with $500,000 in an average indexed annuity with an income rider. If he begins income immediately, he is guaranteed $20,787/yr for life. That is slightly better than the 4% rule on a market-based portfolio. And it will last a lifetime.
How about in 5 years? Without the annuity, at that point his account would be worth $400,000. But with the annuity he is guaranteed $29,106/yr for life, an effective payout rate of 7.2%. Unthinkable at the bottom of a market correction.
What does taking annuity income in the 10th year look like? As you can see, it looks unbelievable. Consider this:
- Had he stayed in the market he would still just have his $500,000.
- To keep up with inflation he would need $24,740 a 5% withdrawal rate which would last to his mortality.
- But with the annuity he is guaranteed $47,457.yr. in the 10th year. For life, an effective payout rate on his market-based money of almost 10%.
This illustrates the problem of sequence of returns risk and how income annuities protect you. It also illustrates how correct the authors of this study are: The annuity has doubled spending. (Typically, unless the client has significant other assets we would ladder the annuities to kick in successively to handle inflation.)
Your Constructive Comments are Welcome!
David Blanchett is managing director and head of retirement research at QMA, the quantitative equity and multi-asset solutions specialist of PGIM, the $1.5 trillion global investment management business of Prudential Financial.
Michael Finke, Ph.D., is a professor and Frank M. Engle Chair of Economic Security at the American College of Financial Services, where he leads the Wealth Management Certified Professional program.