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3 Simple Steps to Determine If You Can Retire 

James Conole, CFP®
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How do you know if you can retire? It seems straightforward, but the answer is far from simple. Beyond portfolio balances and age thresholds, there are other things to consider. James explains his three-step test to determine your retirement readiness.
By pulling together principles from the 4% Rule, straight-line projection, and a Monte Carlo analysis, you can assess whether your portfolio can sustain your desired lifestyle over decades amid various market conditions. However, these tests alone don’t paint the complete picture. James emphasizes the importance of considering other assets like potential inheritances or property downsizing to more fully and confidently evaluate when you can retire.
Questions Answered:
How can I determine if I’m financially ready to retire?
Is the 4% Rule sufficient for determining retirement readiness?
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⏱Timestamps:⏱
0:00 - Consider withdrawal rate
2:14 - 4% Rule
5:12 - Not a perfect strategy
7:39 - Straight line projection
9:09 - Downside of SL projection
11:07 - Monte Carlo test
13:07 - Understand severity of failure
16:20 - Defining success,
18:25 - Looking ahead
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Опубликовано:

 

31 май 2024

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Комментарии : 76   
@michellewinkler3985
@michellewinkler3985 16 дней назад
NO debt. That is the key.
@toddmaniatoddmania9844
@toddmaniatoddmania9844 29 дней назад
Retirement shouldn’t be such a complicated and oftentimes confusing process. Unfortunately, we have a system where only those who are on top of EVERYTHING do the best. Even then, it’s no walk in the park trying to navigate through every facet of what’s supposed to be the happiest time of one’s life. It’s too bad that for many, retirement is ‘work.’
@andreziegler445
@andreziegler445 Месяц назад
Always appreciate the perspective, James. As an aside, Rithotz Wealth Management's Josh Brown (Ritholtz was recently named one of the top Wealth Management firms in the nation) gave you-James Canole-a shout out in his email newsletter. He said you were a RU-vid Ninja and crushed it in this format. I've gotta say that I agree. Keep up the good work!
@theoriginalmrs.d538
@theoriginalmrs.d538 Месяц назад
James and his partner, Ari, are getting shout outs in other youtube channel communities also! So well deserved; glad to see them getting recognition!
@heidikamrath1951
@heidikamrath1951 Месяц назад
That’s awesome!
@justliberty4072
@justliberty4072 27 дней назад
Ooooh, the youtube "comment advertisement" for a financial advisor. Never use an advisor who is slimy enough to try and trick you into checking them out.
@M22Research
@M22Research Месяц назад
6:10 - I realize this was for illustration purposes, but at age 65, on Medicare, your healthcare expenses do not “go away”. They might drop by half if you are lucky. Or if you’re currently managing your 1040 income to get the ACA healthcare premium tax credit, your healthcare expenses might go UP dramatically.
@jdenino6022
@jdenino6022 Месяц назад
Ours went up bc my husband’s union used to pay for his health insurance and now he has to pay Medicare part b premiums which aren’t free. He did get a Part D drug plan and they offered him a Medicare Advantage plan but he doesn’t know if he should get rid of it and go on a supplemental plan G. These premiums are never going down. When I go on Medicare then I will have to pay for part B premiums. Right now we pay $30 a month through husband’s union. It’s not going to be free. Everything keeps going up in price. P.S. my neighbor who is turning 65 is paying $1500 a month right now. We were only paying about $70 a month for 2 people. Health insurance is very expensive.
@MidlifeCrisisManagement
@MidlifeCrisisManagement Месяц назад
"this is me paying for higher healthcare expenses because I'm not yet 65. when I go to Medicare, those expenses will go away." true. Medicare itself will be an expense, but for the majority, it will be less than paying ACA. he never said healthcare expenses go away. and yes, for illustrative purposes.
@iainamurray
@iainamurray 17 дней назад
That's really interesting. In the UK, healthcare costs don't even feature in our retirement conversations.
@happyappy19931
@happyappy19931 5 дней назад
@@iainamurray but is the care rationed? How long does it take you to get care? What is the quality of care?
@markbabcock40205
@markbabcock40205 Месяц назад
Very well thought out video. Thanks for posting
@janethunt4037
@janethunt4037 15 дней назад
You are ALWAYS so clear and concise. Thank you for covering this so well and for explaining what the perspective of Monte Carlo should be.
@robertc7640
@robertc7640 25 дней назад
Thank you for taking the time to create this video. It is helpful info and confirms my early retirement approach.
@pglover19
@pglover19 Месяц назад
Great video James. Your videos are so educational and well presented. I have learned so much from your videos.
@KiJambo
@KiJambo Месяц назад
Great commentary and wisdom. Rational and easy to understand
@bridgetgruich
@bridgetgruich 20 дней назад
Love your succinct thoughtful explanations. Thanks 😃
@xokissmekatexo
@xokissmekatexo Месяц назад
Great video. I have learned so much from you and Ari. Thanks for sharing!
@mkmac9539
@mkmac9539 Месяц назад
Thanks, James. Great video.
@MilwaukeeNW
@MilwaukeeNW Месяц назад
James, your informative videos have helped me understand and become more confident in my financial status as I look forward to retirement in the near future. Thanks!
@shannonmurphy9790
@shannonmurphy9790 Месяц назад
yet another excellent video. thank you
@markb8515
@markb8515 Месяц назад
Thanks James for the great information!
@LarryManiccia
@LarryManiccia 9 дней назад
Very informative thoughts, James. Definitely good food for thought.
@Bruce_S763
@Bruce_S763 Месяц назад
Thank you, James. Excellent information as always. Retired early and initial withdrawal rate is higher for me until social security kicks in. Still need ongoing modeling to plan Roth conversions and best time to start S/S. I plan on checking each option every year as we go. As you say things change and it’s just a matter of having options to deal with the undesirable stuff as it happens. Thinking if things start to go badly (low returns/high inflation) to simply adjust things (spending) before the retirement death spiral can start. Good and continued planning can help avoid the worst from happening (in most situations).
@aperson2020
@aperson2020 16 дней назад
Beautifully explained. Best explanation in layman's terms ever.
@M22Research
@M22Research Месяц назад
The home as an asset - so many plans ignore it. For example, as a potential means of funding long term care, either by selling it if you are single, or downsizing/renting or reverse mortgaging it.
@xlerb2286
@xlerb2286 23 дня назад
For me it was a combination of portfolio balance, the Monte Carlo simulations, having no debt, and being sick of work. The last one was the one that initiated the analysis, the others are the ones that said "yes you can".
@ManjitSandhu
@ManjitSandhu 22 дня назад
What tool do you use for monte carlo simulation? Thanks
@dannyjensen4954
@dannyjensen4954 28 дней назад
Great video. I have most of my expenses paid for and most of my expenses are discretionary. Variable distribution seem to have good guard rails. I'm doing 5% of my portfolio. If I fail, I cut back on expensese.
@AnhNguyen-bi6vg
@AnhNguyen-bi6vg Месяц назад
Great points ❤❤❤
@moe-smoke8602
@moe-smoke8602 26 дней назад
Thanks, James! Nicely explained… One question… is it valuable to re-do the Monty Carlo test every couple of years or so? If these past years have been a bull or a bear, your portfolio may have changed enough to move up your planned retirement date or push it back a few years…. How do you look at this and what would you recommend for tracking progress against your retirement readiness “date”?
@jameschaves5723
@jameschaves5723 Месяц назад
Brilliant
@ManjitSandhu
@ManjitSandhu 22 дня назад
What if a retiree has a dividend portfolio and dividend is sufficient to retire on (along with SS etc) and div growth is more than inflation. What advice would you give to this client as withdrawal rate will not apply. Thanks
@ddxl459
@ddxl459 29 дней назад
When you work on something that only has the capacity to make you 5 dollars, it does not matter how much harder you work - the most you will make is 5 dollars.
@jefflloyd394
@jefflloyd394 27 дней назад
Thanks, worth noting that SS is best and cheapest longevity insurance, so plan to take it at 70. Also good for your spous typically and gives a bigger roll-over window. Secondly the sequence of return risk can be hedged with roll overs. If market drops 50%, you can roll over twice as much for the same tax. Cheers, Jef
@happyappy19931
@happyappy19931 5 дней назад
Except for the point that it is supposed to be insolvent by 2034.
@gizmobowen
@gizmobowen Месяц назад
An interesting thought crossed my mind while you were discussing sequence of returns. I often hear about having a few years of expenses out of the market. Normally the idea is to use this cash in the first few years of retirement so you don't have to worry about the market. But what if the first few years of retirement the market goes on a big run and you're account is growing like crazy. In that scenario, I would think that you would want to be taking money out as it's going up for expenses and then just leave your cash alone for when the market goes down. You could even pull a little extra cash to give you a bigger buffer for bear markets. It seems like that would be a way of insulating yourself from the sequence of returns risk, but maybe I'm missing something?
@jamesglassford9657
@jamesglassford9657 Месяц назад
I also may be missing something but we retired in 2018, and have been making good returns. While watching our tax rates, started pulling money and putting in Treasury Bills and doing some Roth conversions. I'm not a wise or rich person but feel pretty good about current status. Also thanks for all the good information on these videos, appreciated!
@Jim2708
@Jim2708 Месяц назад
From what I understand you are on track with your thinking. Google "bucket retirement strategy". You basically have enough liquid assets available to use during any market downturns. When the market goes back up, you replenish the "liquidity bucket".
@SpookyEng1
@SpookyEng1 Месяц назад
That is part of my plan, keep a 3 year buffer in cash like (T-bills, CDs, MMF) assets. If the market is doing well pull out my withdrawal, if the market has a prolonged drop (greater than 1 yr), pull from cash. Not perfect but my mandatory withdrawals are low (< 2%).
@Jl-620
@Jl-620 28 дней назад
That is exactly how it works. You are supposed to use the cash only when the market is down, and sell investments for expenses when the market is high. You would hold even more cash if you retire before Medicare to help keep your reportable income low to get subsidies for ACA health insurance, still the priority for a cash buffer is to be used in down markets.
@LaurelLeeLRGP
@LaurelLeeLRGP 23 дня назад
I retired last year. I'd been planning it for five years, and part of my process was creating my own retirement spending spreadsheet. I incorporated various factors -- dynamic inflation and ROI, and progressive withdrawals -- based on an initial withdrawal amount and then RMDs from age 74 on. up to 100. Each time I've listened to you, I've opted to incorporate another small tweak to my methodology. Last time, I incorporated randomized ROI percentages; this time I've incorporated an initial 4% withdrawal until RMDs kick in. Since I have built-in randomization, I can repeatedly recalculate withdrawals and balances to simulate a sort of Monte Carlo effect. While not perfect, it gives me a better glimpse at my future situation than I would have had before I listened to you. It definitely reinforces my confidence that I'm on a good trajectory for the future. Thanks for the added boost of confidence.
@vladimirlomen3859
@vladimirlomen3859 7 дней назад
Would you be willing to share your spreadsheet? I am creating my own and have a good start but could definitely use further insight and ideas to add to it.
@meibing4912
@meibing4912 29 дней назад
Adaptability to changing economic circumstances is hugely underestimated in standard retirement calculations. There is simply no scenario available that will leave me without excellent long term fall-back strategies in spite of being 100% invested with liquid assets in stocks. Have (in big terms) 1/3 annuities, 1/3 housing and 1/3 stocks. If I get wiped out in the market (very unlikely as I'm not a stock "gambler") I can easily fall back onto my annuities and just scale down my housing stock if I want cash on hand.
@susieq9186
@susieq9186 19 дней назад
Are you on Rumble?
@123moof
@123moof Месяц назад
I am frequently amazed talking with folks who just have no interest in putting in the work needed to plan their retirement. They would rather work several extra years than spend maybe a man-week or two to map out their expenses, assets, risk tolerance, and turn that into a good first cut plan. Tax optimization, and all those gory details can wait, but just figuring out your actual living expenses and throwing the 4% rule at it should be something people are doing for themselves by mid-career, but most just run screaming away from any sort of planning.
@stevenginsberg1463
@stevenginsberg1463 5 дней назад
I don't think you have touched on this subject- If you can financially wait til age 70 to take the max Social Security, should you? If you take it earlier (what age?) then the money that you would have used from your savings (that social security benefit amount) is still growing while left in your 401.
@larriveeman
@larriveeman 24 дня назад
Fortunately I have no debt, a great federal pension and will take SS at FRA and can afford higher risk been retired for 2 years and don’t plan on touching IRA/TSP other then Roth conversion
@woodrowbeavers5238
@woodrowbeavers5238 Месяц назад
What do you think of the Honest Math Monte Carlo application?
@Chilliconcarnage
@Chilliconcarnage Месяц назад
I played around and great to have such a tool although the inability to specify individuals with different timings (e.g, taking social security and different ages) is limiting.
@bobby350z
@bobby350z Месяц назад
Tried it very limited. I would say pay $100 for a better tool.
@mkmac9539
@mkmac9539 Месяц назад
In my view, NewRetirement is much better.
@noodlegawd
@noodlegawd 22 дня назад
Step 1: Do you have $10M? Yes? Retire. No? Goto step 2. Step 2: Hire a financial advisor and ask him, yes or no, can I retire? Step 3: Did he say yes? Retire. Did he say no? Don't retire.
@iainamurray
@iainamurray 17 дней назад
In the UK we call it Draw Down. Do Annuities exist in the US?
@heidikamrath1951
@heidikamrath1951 6 дней назад
Yes, they do. Many RU-vid financial advisors scoff at them. I own a few as part of a diversified plan and was disheartened to find that they don’t have a great reputation among many advisors and also among people in the comments. THEN I read “Die with Zero” * and was relieved when Bill Perkins recommended having these in your portfolio. *highly recommend this book, btw
@pensacola321
@pensacola321 Месяц назад
Even with Medicare your retiree medical costs will likely be quite expensive. Premiums, drugs, supplements, out of pocket, maybe IRMAA etc . Could easily be thousands a year
@jimgeneva2464
@jimgeneva2464 Месяц назад
Expensive, for who? Smokers, diabetics, beat bodies, sure. If Americans could just walk, quit smoking and eat a little less it would make a difference.
@DionTalkFinancialFreedom
@DionTalkFinancialFreedom 20 дней назад
Medicare is a lot more expensive than people expect.
@happyappy19931
@happyappy19931 5 дней назад
How much more?
@rkw2917
@rkw2917 26 дней назад
Rethink to 2 % if you are near retirement
@robertkelly6189
@robertkelly6189 29 дней назад
Where's the guns?? 🤩
@sammencia7945
@sammencia7945 29 дней назад
$1600 a month SSA and $50k saved as permanent emergency fund and absolutely ZERO debt and you can retire. You will be doing all free activities but you can stop working. What people like James never mention is this: They will not waste their time on clients with a portfolio below $500k. 2% of 1 million is $20k a year that THEY EARN. They get 10+ clients like that and THEY ARE SET NOT YOU. We dont need the $2million. They do.
@nater556
@nater556 28 дней назад
But here you are soaking up the valuable information… Clearly he provides value
@horanz
@horanz 28 дней назад
Depends on your lifestyle, goals, where you live, if others depend on you, etc.
@donkemp8151
@donkemp8151 26 дней назад
$1600 SS and $50k saved - sure you can retire. Not what most would choose but you could retire. When costs double in 20 years you will be hurting. And 2% fee on $1mm portfolio is not even close; figure half that at best for the advisor.
@user-bz4we6ni3v
@user-bz4we6ni3v 26 дней назад
This can only work if you have a paid for home and health insurance. On this plan you are likely to crash and burn.
@Jean-Luc-sh2pg
@Jean-Luc-sh2pg 24 дня назад
are you single?
@jn3674
@jn3674 Месяц назад
1. Withdrawal rate sustainability. 2. Straight line projection. 3. Monte Carlo simulations. No idea why this has to take 20min.
@suzanneemerson2625
@suzanneemerson2625 28 дней назад
There are actually many people who need help and don’t know what those words mean. It will be good for all of us for those who don’t know to learn and to become more self sufficient. Perhaps you are just too knowledgeable for this podcast to be of value for you.
@SpoonyLuvification
@SpoonyLuvification 19 дней назад
​@@suzanneemerson2625no
@glenn9057
@glenn9057 25 дней назад
retirement planning is overrated. its a conspiracy to make financial advisors wealthy. just retire. do it. and never buy an annuity😂
@happyappy19931
@happyappy19931 5 дней назад
Sounds like a plan for homelessness
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