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How to Avoid the Retirement-Income Death Spiral 

Rob Berger
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A recent survey found that retirees are more afraid of running out of money than dying! The fear is understandable. The big question is how we can know we are heading toward financial calamity so that we can make some adjustments.
In this video, I'll cover what's called the Momentum Ratio. It's a simple ratio you can use as an early warning sign that you are heading toward what some call the retirement-income death spiral.
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While still working as a trial attorney in the securities field, I started writing about personal finance and investing In 2007. In 2013 I started the Doughroller Money Podcast, which has been downloaded millions of times. Today I'm the Deputy Editor of Forbes Advisor, managing a growing team of editors and writers that produce content to help readers make the most of their money.
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10 май 2024

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Комментарии : 212   
@MsTubbytube
@MsTubbytube 14 дней назад
I think this is a good argument for why you should not depend entirely on financial market holdings for retirement. Social security or other annuitized income streams, income from part time work or sales, insurance, real estate, maintaining a strong network of friends/family
@alex182618
@alex182618 14 дней назад
That is easy. Take cruises, go to restaurants, drive corvette, give money to your working children, buy expensive wine and whiskey, go to a doctor every week just to talk, discuss politics with your younger relatives, watch TV, buy organic food. Did I forget anything?
@emphyrio
@emphyrio 14 дней назад
Divorce??
@SpookyEng1
@SpookyEng1 14 дней назад
I’m not giving my Corvette or the whiskey 😂😂😂😂
@pensacola321
@pensacola321 14 дней назад
You must spend 60 hours a week doing these calculations before you can enjoy retirement.
@rjb7260
@rjb7260 14 дней назад
@@emphyrio Its cheaper to keep her! lol
@lg7728
@lg7728 13 дней назад
Exercise 4-5 days per week.
@ryantinney
@ryantinney 14 дней назад
That FI Calc tool is awesome.
@00tich
@00tich 14 дней назад
agreed ! nice tool I couldnt get it to go below 100% success even with my current spending while working and adding social security 5 years after retirement. Im 63 I need to retire 😀
@Byssbod
@Byssbod 14 дней назад
​@@00tich yeah hurry up and retire then
@Socrates-jz3oo
@Socrates-jz3oo 14 дней назад
Basically, if you have less money, spend less. If you have more money, you can spend more.
@warnerwinborne
@warnerwinborne 14 дней назад
Yup. Great video, great advice. But the basic takeaway is that if the market is up, you sell more. If down, sell less. For the first fifteen years, don't eat your seed corn. After that, you can eat a little. Nevertheless, a simple way of keeping tab on your investment balance. Add to this a cash "bucket" for those years where the market is good to you and you withdraw more than you need, and you can weather the more lean years.
@Byssbod
@Byssbod 14 дней назад
It's super nice to have tools help you figure out how much less or more to spend tho
@user-qd2ky3mg9o
@user-qd2ky3mg9o 14 дней назад
Good stuff Rob. Thanks!
@danklein8587
@danklein8587 14 дней назад
I have been retired for 2 years and have not needed any of my retirement money.
@todddunn945
@todddunn945 14 дней назад
Same here after 25 years of retirement.
@encampsaround
@encampsaround 12 дней назад
Details ?
@danklein8587
@danklein8587 12 дней назад
@@encampsaround I know what I am doing. Its called . . . Educate Yourself and Stop listening to so called financial planners. Most of them are Crooks and want to Steal Your Money from my experience. Good Luck.
@frontiermusings
@frontiermusings 11 дней назад
I retire early (at 60) in less than 2 years and also won’t need to use my retirement accounts until minimum distribution hits. Might take some out to buy a small house since we’re selling ours to go nomadic traveling. Or might tap it to upscale our world travel. My secret? I planned when I was 30 years old and now I have a very large government pension, hubby has a significant SS check 4 years after I retire and he also a tiny pension (a couple to three hundred $). If you didn’t plan your retirement when you were younger, and chose jobs with pensions, then it’s too late when you’re 50.
@WardCo
@WardCo 7 дней назад
@@frontiermusings Yeah, I used to mock my wife -- "When are you going to get a REAL job?" -- because I made so much more than her in the private sector (Software Engineer). Now that we're both retired, her fat pension and my SS cover all the running costs and the big portfolio is for fun stuff before we're too old to do it.
@kw7292
@kw7292 14 дней назад
Rob, doing his thing, teaching us important things. Thanks Rob
@missyvanwinkle9247
@missyvanwinkle9247 14 дней назад
I read the Sunday newsletter and read the Death Spiral article and got so interested I also read his Retirement Vital Signs and created a cheatsheet. Good stuff. Keep up the good work.
@gregorymcd944
@gregorymcd944 14 дней назад
Great video Rob!
@pfreeburn
@pfreeburn 14 дней назад
Thanks Rob.... as always excellent and relevant content.
@22wabbit
@22wabbit 12 дней назад
How is historical data relevant for future retirees ?
@briankelly7632
@briankelly7632 10 дней назад
Great video. Thanks Rob.
@theamerican7131
@theamerican7131 13 дней назад
good info. I don't want to death spiral. thanks for sharing your knowledge
@tankeryanker4671
@tankeryanker4671 14 дней назад
Great video 🙌
@stephtraveler7378
@stephtraveler7378 8 дней назад
Great message Rob. It all comes down to curbing your expenses in "down" years. Some doing just skipping the inflation adjustment. Inflation hurt in the last few years because it hit groceries exceptionally hard... A volleyball sized watermellon for $10...Hard to get creative with spending when its a basic necessity of life.
@mickpeters8002
@mickpeters8002 14 дней назад
Great video, great clarity as always Rob. Sometimes these papers seem to be a bit of a solution looking for a problem. For example, my NR plan based on "real life" does indeed have my portfolio decreasing in the early years, but then Medicare followed by social security kick in and it starts to increase again. Sure, if the market tanks I might reign things in, but living by these arbitrary numbers seems weird when you can easily model many more factors of your real world situation, run Monte Carlo etc etc.
@stever1210
@stever1210 14 дней назад
Hi Rob, Love the content and videos. Wanted to point out a potential flaw in the assumptions. You are assuming the portfolio would remain at 1mm....if the market went down you likley wouldn't be starting in the same place delaying 1 year or 2. You would have contributions but they would have to be at or above the decline in portfolio value. Just a thought.
@patrickfichtl8246
@patrickfichtl8246 13 дней назад
Thanks Rob - brilliant youtube video - And it can easily be applied wherever your home country is (I'm UK based currently). I wonder if one can add a second filter based on market p/e ratios and inflation, i.e. future expected returns.
@robertsesi
@robertsesi 12 дней назад
There is a fundamental flaw in this method. The order in which the returns happen (sequence or returns) will significantly affect your end balance, however for this method you just add them on the numerator and denominator and end with the same ratio.
@tsts00
@tsts00 7 дней назад
That is why there are higher percentages in the later years, to account for early hits to the portfolio.
@ItsEricAZ
@ItsEricAZ 13 дней назад
We need to keep in mind that this is just our nest egg portion. Social Security COLA will help, paid off housing will also help keep expenses down too making high inflation times a bit easier to weather.
@todddunn945
@todddunn945 14 дней назад
My solution to this over the 25 years I have been retired is simple. 1. Put your money in after tax accounts. That eliminates RMDs. 2. Only withdraw income from your portfolio, i.e., don't touch principal. If you do that you will never run out of money, particularly if you don't even take out all the income income. It also helps to structure your retirement so that you live off of income from sources other than your portfolio - social security, pension, etc. So far it has worked well for me to the extent that if social security and my pensions disappeared tomorrow I would be fine for the 8-10 years I have left (~150% of life expectancy from the social security actuarial life table).
@lisab5263
@lisab5263 14 дней назад
wow, Notre Dame would have been helpful when I was 9! I'll have to pass that to my grandson 😆 Good stuff, I read the article but this explanation helped me understand it more clearly. I think its a good argument for a cash cushion if portfolio withdrawals are not adequate.
@peterbuck3134
@peterbuck3134 14 дней назад
Hi Rob I use 1/N which starts off conservatively and work part time as I draw down and as the portfolio naturally increase I work less to maintain same overall income !! Dead easy
@hevoforo1629
@hevoforo1629 4 дня назад
Time for flattery: I've read a lot of finance, watched a lot of talks/videos, and I have a large amount of education and career experience (meaning I think I am in a pretty good position to judge talent/ability). I understand you were a career attorney. You would have done very well too as a CFP in my estimation. Impressive. Don't change what you do - it's working.
@feetforward75
@feetforward75 8 дней назад
I never sell my stocks, I live off of dividends and capital gain distributions. plus other sources of income. for me, I will not experience any death spiral. Rental Income, Pension, Book royalties, Social Security, Stock dividends, RU-vid channel, all provide passive income that does not run out.
@torstenk3486
@torstenk3486 13 дней назад
Valuable content! Your channel never disappoints. Now I am going to check out the FI Calc tool. In my situation, we retired to the EU and on top of inflation we have the uncertainty of the strength of the mighty USD. .....it would be awesome if any of these tools could also take historic forex cycles into account .... somehow. 😮
@pensacola321
@pensacola321 14 дней назад
Planning for retirement does not need to be a high school science project. Do some reasonable planning and live your life. During a 25-year retirement you will come across any number of economic conditions. You deal with them and then move on . Stop worrying so much.
@Texas_Cruiser
@Texas_Cruiser 2 дня назад
Good advice, are you retired?
@susanharkema2888
@susanharkema2888 День назад
Great video Rob! Should I count future social security in today’s dollar as part of the portfolio or just actual totals.
@tomgradel4999
@tomgradel4999 13 дней назад
I thought the concept of momentum was great. It also provides a way to gauge the effect of a large expenditure. If the purchase pushes you close to, or over the 100% momentum ratio, it's better to defer it.
@edtaylor7816
@edtaylor7816 12 дней назад
Hey Rob, Great info here! Where can I find the article? Thx!
@kdcowboy9478
@kdcowboy9478 14 дней назад
I'm just going to work until I die so I can't go into a death spiral.
@ryantinney
@ryantinney 14 дней назад
Problem solved.
@OurRetireEarlyJourney
@OurRetireEarlyJourney 14 дней назад
😂😂😂
@jmc8076
@jmc8076 14 дней назад
Thought for day. Husb still consults and likes it but accountant told us he prob makes too much to qualify for GIS (pension subsidy in Canada). Lesson don’t earn too much.
@hanwagu9967
@hanwagu9967 14 дней назад
you are in a death spiral the moment you are born😂
@asandrik3124
@asandrik3124 14 дней назад
Seems to be the only solution.
@arthurcooper3484
@arthurcooper3484 14 дней назад
I read that article and found it confusing so I'm glad you are able to clarify. If I understand it, for the first 15 years we don't want the portfolio value to drop and then subsequently it can drop a certain percentage over time? This coupled with a guard rails approach in case these targets are not achieved. Of course, it's great if the portfolio never drops, but how realistic is this for the average retiree with limited resources? Certainly we are holding off taking Social Security until 70 and doing Roth conversions so the nest egg is partially spent down, with the promise of SS to come. Seems like these models don't consider SS at all.
@seniorsouthwick976
@seniorsouthwick976 13 дней назад
Rob- I am noticing your video content in terms of time, have been reduced substantially and I thank you for that. I found it very difficult to devote the time to your lengthy, say 45 min.+, videos often just because of time in the day or maybe even the inability to stay focused later at night. And I do realize some financial management approaches or philosophies just can’t be articulated well in a shorter clip. But breaking things down into shorter segments is to me like having a magazine put in front of me rather than a book. But all good no matter how you decide to release your insight. Just my 10 cents adjusted for inflation.
@thepecourts4836
@thepecourts4836 12 дней назад
Interesting version of dynamic withdrawal. Between simple skip inflation adjustment during down market years, and the dynamic (+/-20%) guardrails of Guyton and Klinger. A video I'd really like to see done would be looking back at a few key start years like 1973 and 1975, which of these dynamic withdrawal methods would actually have succeeded in avoiding running out of money but also which method adjusts appropriately so you don't end up with too large a bag of money.
@theYoutubeHandle
@theYoutubeHandle 14 дней назад
don't think of it as division. Think of it as the number at the bottom must be > the number at the top divide by the percentage. So in this case, zero is not greater than 3 divide by 100%.
@duc1198s
@duc1198s 9 дней назад
I think you can add SS into the tool in the “add income” section.
@MN-wg8qd
@MN-wg8qd 14 дней назад
I use this tool way too often lol. Man, the mid 60s and 70s were SO bad.
@davidperry2725
@davidperry2725 14 дней назад
set the duration to 20 years and check out how hairy the periods beginning 1999-2001 are.
@dforrest4503
@dforrest4503 13 дней назад
@@davidperry2725right, and we made it through those!
@MN-wg8qd
@MN-wg8qd 13 дней назад
At least there it was a big crash right away. 1965/66 retirees had a much more insidious sequence. Things looked relatively normal and then dropped hard about 8 years in. Long enough to be well out of the higher paying work force one would've built the skills for.
@tedosmond413
@tedosmond413 14 дней назад
you should have created a table of values to input into the ratio. it would make more sense.
@butopiatoo
@butopiatoo 14 дней назад
Where's the link to the paper? Interesting way to adjust, the example is not clear. Will have to do a spreadsheet after I read the paper. Thanks for posting.
@MountainManFred
@MountainManFred 14 дней назад
Another good video! I've watched at least 100 youtubes in some fashion talking about retirement or 4% rule etc. The part that just hit me...if you did nothing and drew 4% a year..your money would last 25 years. I don't know why I missed that simple math. So, in essence, you should at least try for 4% yaer gain to have the same balance after 25 years.. Thanks again Dave
@kw7292
@kw7292 13 дней назад
Would that also depend on if the investment you are using goes up or down? If it goes negative for a few years, it’s worth less than year 1.
@djsnowpdx
@djsnowpdx 14 дней назад
If you can, I think one terrific way to mitigate the sequence of returns risk is to over-save, and to plan to stop working at least 10 years before your body won’t be able to work. That way, if you have a year or two super early on that call your portfolio’s longevity into question, you can return to the workplace, save more in the rough environment, potentially get great returns on those final saved dollars, and take social security early if your portfolio just isn’t holding up. Now, I think anything below the age of 70 (67 for a spouse claiming the spousal benefit) is early.
@pensacola321
@pensacola321 14 дней назад
CDs or annuities.. There
@rstspecos
@rstspecos 14 дней назад
Almost sounds like using Gaurdrails?
@user-jb8vt9dl4j
@user-jb8vt9dl4j 14 дней назад
Should also point out max out of pocket
@dforrest4503
@dforrest4503 13 дней назад
That 1973, 1975 comparison was crazy. I think just being careful and having a cash bucket can help a lot for those first few years of retirement.
@JasonSmith-zs1he
@JasonSmith-zs1he 12 дней назад
But delaying retirement by one year wouldn’t really mean success. Your portfolio would still have taken the 1973 hit.
@dforrest4503
@dforrest4503 8 дней назад
@@JasonSmith-zs1he correct. But not having to withdraw from a reduced amount of investments for a few years May help.
@gecko10x
@gecko10x 14 дней назад
Interesting. Have you looked at how this ratio would compare to just looking at your current portfolio value vs value at retirement? I assume there must be a reason why he created the ratio, but intuitively it seems like they should give similar indications of a poor sequence.
@Anna-kg5dy
@Anna-kg5dy 11 дней назад
If saving for a replacement car, where would you stash the $? If you recommend a high-yield savings account, is there a second recommendation (once the yields finally drop)? I was considering a CD but wondered if there was a better option.
@erdrick22
@erdrick22 14 дней назад
This is the modern Oregon Trail game.
@dforrest4503
@dforrest4503 13 дней назад
You died of dysentery!
@arunthomas189
@arunthomas189 14 дней назад
This is interesting, I don’t have a full grasp on the withdrawal process, but If I withdraw 4% a year, wouldn’t the rest of the nestegg continue to accrue interest? Wouldn’t that be enough to keep it going some more?
@chrisvild1263
@chrisvild1263 14 дней назад
You say to avoid a bad year if you wait to retire but you still have investments while you’re working that are going to go down. Did you factor that in in that one year differential
@ScottHess
@ScottHess 14 дней назад
Yeah. It’s not “wait a year”, because it will take five or ten years to get things back to parity. I mean, thats better than just living with it.
@beb10
@beb10 13 дней назад
Good point. I thought the same thing. Started out at $1,000,000 beginning of 1973 which then dropped to under $700,000by beginning of 1974. How do you replenish that $300,000 loss a year later to begin 1975 with $1,000,000?
@tomohawk52
@tomohawk52 12 дней назад
Getting rid of RIDS.
@phuocle
@phuocle 11 дней назад
Rob, where's the link to the paper?! You say @ 7:10 link below but I don't see it...
@murkri8723
@murkri8723 12 дней назад
What exactly do you mean by taking the inflation adjustment?
@mooring10
@mooring10 13 дней назад
Interesting. Considering the volatility of the market, when do you take the change measurements?
@pensacola321
@pensacola321 13 дней назад
I am thinking maybe Tuesday afternoon about 2:30 or 3:00 PM.😊 Markets, inflation, recessions, and all sorts of economic conditions happen all the time! Deal with it!
@rdderrick75
@rdderrick75 13 дней назад
I think the simplification to ‚just wait a couple years‘ doesn’t take into account that the individual ‚s investments were down substantially…it could be many years of waiting while saving and hoping the portfolio recovers?
@Rdominca
@Rdominca 11 дней назад
Rob, I noticed that you used a default 80%/15%/5% split of stocks, bonds and cash for the illustration. I was not able to get to FICalc directly. Does it make much difference if those ratios are instead 60/40/0?
@clsanchez77
@clsanchez77 4 дня назад
Rob, great video but you are oversimplifying the annual inflation adjustment. You do not have to limit yourself to yes or no. If skipping the inflation adjustment in a high inflation period is not doable, you could settle for half the inflation adjustment. Whether this works for an individual or not will depend on their specific numbers.
@blaupunkt1619
@blaupunkt1619 14 дней назад
Legitimate question: if someone manage to live off half of the dividend income (buying more shares with the other half), there's no need to worry about the sequency of returns, right? BTW, excelent video. Keep up the good work!
@pensacola321
@pensacola321 14 дней назад
You should take all of your money put it in speculative stocks and take as much risk as possible!! Then again you can live comfortably off of your dividends.
@sunchips5
@sunchips5 14 дней назад
Assuming you are in relatively safe stocks with good dividend paying track records. However, even those stocks have suffered from deep dividend cuts, such as Walgreens, AT&T, and Kraft, to name a few.
@blaupunkt1619
@blaupunkt1619 14 дней назад
@@sunchips5 Indeed. Absolutely right. But I assume we're somewhat "safer" when diversifying on 'cash flow stocks' through a reliable and time proof ETF. By doing so, we can eliminate the risk of relying on a specific company, since we have lots of them on the basket (and the fund is always changing stocks).
@JWL427
@JWL427 12 дней назад
Sequence of return risk... sounds more cool and sophisticated. 2 and 3 bucket allocation approach supposedly helps eleviate the problem. Wait another year. Thats dangerous too, in another way. Is he saying withdrawals shouldn't exceed gains for 15 years? Wow. And no consideration for expenses v portfolio size. Let's say a per needs to withdrawal 2 or 3 percent of portfolio to meet expense needs? This formula doesn't make any sense.
@jomo4976
@jomo4976 14 дней назад
Rob - your explanatory videos are uniformly excellent but the way you have portrayed the benefit of waiting a year or two at the 2:30 mark is definitely misleading. As you don’t know ahead of time that the market is going to nosedive, your 1m portfolio in early 1973 would be 850k if you just waited through the year and down a further 25% if you waited to retire till early 1975.
@pensacola321
@pensacola321 14 дней назад
If you work to age 90 you will have a foolproof retirement plan
@johnscott2746
@johnscott2746 12 дней назад
Not simply that but “waiting a year” does not extend your life by a year. If you are figuring a 30 year retirement and you wait 2 years, now you have a 28 year retirement. Of course it’s all speculation. You could try to wait a year and keel over at your job.
@neilrosenberg4437
@neilrosenberg4437 6 дней назад
If a retiree is so worried about a death spiral then they could consider a SPIA or DIA annuity. Rob did a video a few years ago ( should update to address if interest rates have impacted the potential payouts) You give up potential growth and upside for insurance that you dont run out of money. I would limit to no greater then 25% of total and take from fixed income allocation.
@ryann8348
@ryann8348 14 дней назад
Coming up on 40, I'm just trying to get my needed withdrawal rate as low as possible. Currently moving towards 1%
@SaintCuthbertoftheCudgel
@SaintCuthbertoftheCudgel 14 дней назад
Note to self: keep losses and withdrawals less than growth and end year equal or positive on total investment value.
@pensacola321
@pensacola321 14 дней назад
And buy low sell high 😊
@sbcplays
@sbcplays 12 дней назад
To over simplify, does the ratio mean if you start the year with 1 million dollars you should end the year with 1 million or more in the first period after withdrawals? I don't think I'm getting it. What is the scenario if the portfolio dips in value below 1 million due to market conditions, pre withdrawals?
@wacoharder
@wacoharder 14 дней назад
You never changed the denominator?
@richardhead2318
@richardhead2318 14 дней назад
I’d like to hear about perpetual withdrawal rates.
@royprovins7037
@royprovins7037 14 дней назад
There is a thread I just read on the bogleheads website
@rob_berger
@rob_berger 14 дней назад
I'm working on it!
@richardhead2318
@richardhead2318 14 дней назад
@@rob_berger thank you!
@DavidDLee
@DavidDLee 7 дней назад
The formula will make more sense if it was multiples, not a ratio of sums. What is the ratio of sums from the paper mean? It's difficult to give a clear answer. Only someone dethatched from math can think of strange construct like this. If after a year, taking account for all activities, your portfolio grew by 10% -> 1.1. If it dropped by 5% -> 0.95 Multiply these numbers together. The result is the overall growth of your portfolio (or decline if less than 1). You're welcome.
@BiggMo
@BiggMo 8 дней назад
9:27 WAIT… year 1 is on top (2%), year 2 on bottom (5%)…. Them every subsequent year is added to top and every year is divided by year 2? Why doesn’t the denominator ever change?
@joeskwara5823
@joeskwara5823 9 дней назад
Very wise man but like all other planners and experts they use history and basic math to predict the future but we are facing times that could rival the Great Depression. That’s what the planning and advice should focus on unless someone can explain to me how with the debt the BRICS and possible CBDC doesn’t cold cock everyone. I’m willing to learn. USD ceases to be the reserve currency for oil so how does that impact retirement is one question.
@hopefilledfinancial
@hopefilledfinancial 14 дней назад
While the ratio is simple enough to calculate, I believe that many retirees need an even simpler approach. In my work, I like to gauge the boundary or trigger at the original buying power of the nest egg. It can be easy to put the original value of your nest egg in an inflation calculator that you bookmark and then check the current value of nest egg against the inflation corrected initial value. This follows the concept that you want to eat the golden eggs without killing the goose. When the goose is in trouble, you can drop down to a lower SWR. Even simpler than that is scheduling out the nest egg's initial value if it grew at 3% and using that as the lower boundary or guardrail. This would produce a table that a retiree could go through and check each month before withdrawing income. It essentially accomplishes the above goal without needing to look up actual inflation while still effectively protecting against the death spiral. Rob, in a past video, you talked about splitting a SWR into a portion dedicated to needs and the rest to wants. This approach allows someone to still, with an inflation adjustment, drop their SWR to their needs with little to no SWR for wants until the market heals the nest egg and it again exceeds its initial buying power. I have graphically tested this against the RISK ZONE concept and it very good at mitigating the retirement death spiral. It also does not yield the drawback of having a plan on paper where your needs may not be met by the SWR reduction as the plan works around the SWR that is tied to needs. The trick is planning retirement around the SWR for needs and keeping it at or below 3% (in my research).
@lowspeed2000
@lowspeed2000 14 дней назад
got a link to a good one?
@pensacola321
@pensacola321 14 дней назад
WTF? Are you retiring or planning to build a rocket ship to fly to Mars
@hopefilledfinancial
@hopefilledfinancial 14 дней назад
@@pensacola321 Is this in reference to the level of detail/thought that I put into my comment or the fact that I process data like the engineer that I am?
@pensacola321
@pensacola321 14 дней назад
​@@hopefilledfinancial I retired at age 57 in 2007. IMHO, you are way over thinking this. But you need to do what makes you sleep at night.
@hopefilledfinancial
@hopefilledfinancial 14 дней назад
@@pensacola321 Being able to sleep at night is the goal. I want to have confidence in my retirement plan. The topic of Rob s video here is one that can be hard to recognize unless there is good plan in place to mitigate risk. For retiring in 2007, did you run into any major bumps with the housing crash? I am sure that it is a very interesting story.
@Gabrielandy738
@Gabrielandy738 16 часов назад
Thank you for bringing up this strategies, I always look up to your video for update. Things appear strange right now. The value of the dollar is declining due to inflation, but it is increasing in comparison to other currencies and commodities such as gold and real estate. People are flocking to the dollar because they believe it is safer. I'm worried that rising inflation will cause my 400k in retirement funds to lose value.I'm really happy for today. I finally got my profit of 170k with my little investment of 45k on this Stock investment with the help of Miss Clara Brandon after feeling so ecstatic and heavy minded that nothing good can come out of it
@Edward-kb7oq
@Edward-kb7oq 16 часов назад
Absolutely, retirement planning is about more than just reaching a specific financial milestone. It's about figuring out how to generate income, manage expenses, and maintain your desired standard of living throughout your retirement years.
@p.c.h.6721
@p.c.h.6721 14 дней назад
Now we need another formula to calculate how many years we have left 🤔
@Yette
@Yette 14 дней назад
There are numerous life expectancy projection tools. Some are very detailed
@JeanValjean875
@JeanValjean875 14 дней назад
​@@YetteEh, I'm not sure I'd want to know. Seems kinda creepy.
@pensacola321
@pensacola321 14 дней назад
Just live a good life until you don't. In the meantime don't spend too much time planning retirement calculations and withdrawals.
@p.c.h.6721
@p.c.h.6721 13 дней назад
@@pensacola321 💯
@BobbyDon8
@BobbyDon8 14 дней назад
The vast majority of people who retire will not live more than eighteen years in retirement. People act like they're going live forever.
@davidbrooks8809
@davidbrooks8809 8 дней назад
But what if you retire at 60 and live to your 85 Mr Sherlock... I'd rather be caught with than without😮😢😅😊
@BobbyDon8
@BobbyDon8 8 дней назад
@davidbrooks8809 I guess you didn't read my post. The vast majority will not live to be 85. So you will be pinching your pennies thinking you will live to be a 100. What if you croak at 65 or 70? Wouldn't you feel foolish not living your life, especially when you're a little younger and can enjoy it more?
@farrellterry
@farrellterry 13 дней назад
What does ‘skipping inflation adjustment’ mean?
@johnscott2746
@johnscott2746 12 дней назад
Most retirement plans call for adjusting your withdrawals each year by about 3% or more for inflation. If you are taking out $60,000 the first year you would take out $61,800 the next year.
@erickarnell
@erickarnell 14 дней назад
All of the projections assume you start out with the same amount. But if I just weathered a bad year, my portfolio will probably not be the same as if I had retired the year before. Unless we plan to convert 100% to TIPS for the five years before retiring?
@FrankGransee
@FrankGransee 14 дней назад
Just have enough cash, stable investments or income (ssc) to not withdraw any money for as long as the bad years last.
@greggpurviance7252
@greggpurviance7252 14 дней назад
Course if you don't take 5%. Maybe less than 1% things last longer
@whatsup3270
@whatsup3270 14 дней назад
Between Aug 2000 and Feb 2013 there were 2 very short new highs, multiple drops of over 30% (12years of no growth) Between Dec 1972 and May 1980 there were ZERO new high and a drop of over 40% (8 years no growth) So the point is there are plenty of warning signs, now of course not everyone can say re-enter the workforce full time, however most can do some part-time work or income or serious cost cutting when the warning signs are flashing. Similarly new retirees can watch for signs of trouble 1) market dropping more than 30% 2) no new highs, 3) Use a one-year smooth moving average to signal concerns, 4) use a bucket strategy to offset flash crashes (shorth lived).
@MN-wg8qd
@MN-wg8qd 14 дней назад
A big part of my plan is moving into part time work for a few years once we get to 75% of our goal number. Freedom and flexibility and semi retirement earlier. Plus that way I stay in a high paying field and can pivot to more work or doing part time for longer if things look grim during that time.
@vikramkaushik
@vikramkaushik 14 дней назад
Listened twice not able to follow what does skipping inflation adjustment means ? Can some one explain please. For example - on a given year let’s say I am at 100% ratio and inflation is at 4%, how do I understand skipping of inflation?
@MichaelVasey
@MichaelVasey 13 дней назад
The assumption is that expenses will increase by inflation each year in retirement. This approach is saying that, if your percentage is 100% or more, you would skip that increase in spending in those years. Hope that helps.
@vikramkaushik
@vikramkaushik 13 дней назад
@@MichaelVasey thanks Mike, helpful.
@jamesmccarty8988
@jamesmccarty8988 13 дней назад
You can divide by zero but the number becomes infinity
@70qq
@70qq 14 дней назад
🤘
@CaseyClow
@CaseyClow 13 дней назад
Have you seen statistics about what percentage of retirees actually run out of money? Probably hard to measure....
@pensacola321
@pensacola321 13 дней назад
Unless you are totally irresponsible, the only time it will happen is in the event of medical expenses or long-term care expenses.
@Thomasbonner752
@Thomasbonner752 13 дней назад
As a middle-class citizen who is trying to have stable finances, I’ve always been an advocate of investing in the stock market because it has paid off handsomely since I got into it.
@Gary-ib8dz
@Gary-ib8dz 14 дней назад
In a high inflation year, you could also take a partial increase. If inflation is 8% and the market is down, maybe you take a 4% increase.
@pensacola321
@pensacola321 14 дней назад
Inflation, recessions, up markets, down markets they all come and go. Please.
@feetforward75
@feetforward75 8 дней назад
withdraw 4% will last 30 year retirement = rule of thumb.
@BiggMo
@BiggMo 8 дней назад
That’s $3,333 a month, pre-tax, for a $1,000,000 portfolio. Even with SS that’s a thin budget
@haldriver1378
@haldriver1378 14 дней назад
I have a simpler plan. Figure SS + 4% as an oversimplified starting point. Say that's 100k. My plan is to stay as far as possible under that number. In other words, it's a ceiling that I don't want to go near because "sequence of returns" and "Murphy's law" are close cousins. Looking at current market valuations, I don't see how anyone (in their right mind) is expecting decent returns for the next decade. In a nutshell, I say plan for the worst.
@pensacola321
@pensacola321 14 дней назад
You should plan for the worst but your very negative outlook is irrational
@haldriver1378
@haldriver1378 14 дней назад
I have an extremely positive outlook because I have a plan.
@pensacola321
@pensacola321 14 дней назад
​@@haldriver1378Not with the stock market.
@nickt2159
@nickt2159 7 дней назад
Good advice Haldriver. Most financial experts don’t get it. For them it’s all about maximized returns. Swing for the fence and rely on the averages. That’s too risky for me. I focus on generating retirement cash flows to augment my retirement fixed income; pensions and SS.
@amireallythatgrumpy6508
@amireallythatgrumpy6508 13 дней назад
Retirement is one of the dumbest things a person can do. Save for retirement but never retire. Always Be Working.
@z1osufan
@z1osufan 14 дней назад
Anybody else in their mid-20’s watching these vids? Lol
@dberry256
@dberry256 14 дней назад
You are smart to learn about this stuff as you go instead of having to do intensive research crammed into less time later!
@OurRetireEarlyJourney
@OurRetireEarlyJourney 14 дней назад
Start planning and aggressively saving early! We wish we would have… 😊
@DCWilliam24
@DCWilliam24 14 дней назад
Mid 30s but it’s helping me a lot with my parents!
@silentnot4812
@silentnot4812 14 дней назад
Investing early. I didn’t start until I was in my mid 30s and not making much money. Still managed to grow a nest egg. My son is way ahead of where I was at his age.
@OurRetireEarlyJourney
@OurRetireEarlyJourney 14 дней назад
@@silentnot4812 great advice
@manuvns
@manuvns 14 дней назад
saving for whole life and making a cut in retirement is something not right , this needs to be addressed
@dl777
@dl777 14 дней назад
How can things in the next 5-10 years be good with a $32T national debt and $1-2Trillion annual deficits which our government will never be able to curb? Sure seems like a time that we have never seen before. We need some AI calculators with this in mind to tell us who are are retiring in the next year where to put our money. Thanks for these reviews Rob. They are very helpful.
@pensacola321
@pensacola321 14 дней назад
You need a crystal ball.
@Yette
@Yette 14 дней назад
Stock Market Historian here 😂😂
@22wabbit
@22wabbit 12 дней назад
Didn't get anything out of this video, it doesn't contain any useful information other than a reflection on history. Most people cannot pick and choose when they retire. Hindsight is a wonderful thing, looking into the future is impossible.
@scott1441
@scott1441 14 дней назад
Increasing withdrawal rate , you must consider tax consequences. Profits made annually in your portfolio, place and lock in a money market account, if loses occur, rebalance to your original allocation. Keep it simple.
@pensacola321
@pensacola321 14 дней назад
The more money that I make, the more taxes I pay. I'm fine with that. It means that I am doing very well.
@jasonbroom7147
@jasonbroom7147 14 дней назад
For anyone who has followed an actual budget, based on their income at any given time, this is nothing more than an intuitive response. I can't believe it takes a "study", or a 17:00 long video, to explain that you should spend less when you "earn" less. I mean, it's logical and reasonable, but also just plain old common sense to anyone who lives in the real world...isn't it?
@pensacola321
@pensacola321 14 дней назад
Of course. Don't overthink this retirement thing. People have been doing it successfully for years.
@roberthuff3122
@roberthuff3122 14 дней назад
Why lawyers charge the way they do.
@rolandconnor575
@rolandconnor575 12 дней назад
Didn't even watch video, but have answer. do what I am doing, work into your late 70s.
@davidbrooks8809
@davidbrooks8809 8 дней назад
Ok😢😂😊
@pensacola321
@pensacola321 14 дней назад
I will never understand why people "plan to fail" in retirement. What is this "running out of money thing" ? You live on your dividends, fixed income, interest and any entitlements... SS, Pension, rent etc. Your portfolio can be used to fund long-term care later in life if needed or to leave a legacy. But having a "withdrawal strategy" and living in constant fear of running out of money sounds nuts to me.
@JohnsFishTales
@JohnsFishTales 14 дней назад
Amen!
@Sackattack_
@Sackattack_ 14 дней назад
Right. I want to draw mine down from age 60-70 on account of IRMAA and RMD's. If 401k lasts 20yrs from age 60-80, thats more than enough. Ss at 70 will cover plenty if they don't make a major cut to it.
@joenavarrete5246
@joenavarrete5246 14 дней назад
A simpler solution is to annuitize a portion of your portfolio--a simple immediate annuity. Not sure why many folks are afraid to at least consider doing that.
@olfart7902
@olfart7902 14 дней назад
inflation
@marcioandreazzi6223
@marcioandreazzi6223 14 дней назад
Annuity Company may go broke
@whatsup3270
@whatsup3270 14 дней назад
wrong, and if you don't know why please learn before it is too late.
@heidikamrath1951
@heidikamrath1951 14 дней назад
Yes! I’ve done this.
@pensacola321
@pensacola321 14 дней назад
​@@heidikamrath1951 Me too.❤ It.
@rickrutledge9363
@rickrutledge9363 14 дней назад
It's very unrealistic to assume that most of your audience has over a million dollars to retire with.
@payroll970
@payroll970 13 дней назад
Skipping your inflation increase in the first year of your retirement is HUGE!, it means your real income has decreased for every year of your retirement.
@vitawater4259
@vitawater4259 14 дней назад
First
@hanwagu9967
@hanwagu9967 14 дней назад
i presume he settled for 25yrs since that would put a 65yo at 90yo. You skip the inflation adjustment? Inflation happens whether or not you like it, so ignoring it, which is basically what he's advocating to fudge your fictional portfolio success %, is absurd. You can fudge numbers all you want just like you can fudge your input variables in NR or any other MC based sim to generate a warmer fuzzy feeling success % if applied to the past. If I understand his prescription correctly: instead of going with your safe 4% withdrawal, you are just adjusting for inflation by not taking inflation adjustment. If inflation 3% then you are only withdrawing 1%. If you are withdrawing 4% and inflation is 5%, you withdraw nothing and presumably should be coming up with 1% somewhere to add to your portfolio. He's prescribing to just ignore inflation. Frankly, this is utter nonsense, given that life expectancy is less than 78yo average, with men being lower and women being higher. Unless you are adjusting for the probability you will live longer than 78yo, 30yr retirement from 65yo is unrealistic. Looking at historic patterns is simply meaningless to predict the future. You are literally playing bacarat believing that 95 dealer wins in a row means the next 5 plays have to be player wins. The odds of the next play don't change simply because x number of plays panned out one way and not the other. The portfolios also didn't fail. The portfolios ran out of money after the probability of the person's life expectancy, which means there was more money than needed during the person's lifetime. Sounds like success to me. Why is it MoRo anyway? Shouldn't Momentum Ratio be MoRa? I can see why he didn't go with the Momentum Ratio Number, since that would be MoRoN.
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