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Anil Vazirani Scottsdale Investment Advisor shares Retirees, forget the 4% withdrawal rule:  Teresa Ghilarducci

July 8, 2021Financial Advisor Scottsdale AzRetirement Planning Scottsdale

Anil Vazirani Scottsdale Investment Advisor shares Retirees, forget the 4% withdrawal rule:  Teresa Ghilarducci 

By Theresa Ghilarducci July 02, 2021, 1:53 p.m. EDT 3 Min Read 

(Bloomberg Opinion) — Let’s say you’re one of the lucky ones and have accumulated $1 million in  your 401(k) retirement account after years of working. But, like many, maybe the pandemic has  made you second guess being in the office, and your employer is pushing older employees aside.  So you’ve decided to retire. 

How can you safely withdraw that $1 million and not run out of money before you die? You’re  probably considering two options: Live for the moment and cash out the money as needed, or cut  back and conserve to ensure it lasts for the rest of your and your partner’s life. Both decisions are  wrong. 

Before I tell you what to do, remember that this money management problem is uniquely American.  Other rich nations don’t require their elders to make high-stakes, complex financial decisions. To do  it right, you need to make assumptions about when you and your spouse will die and how financial  markets will fare. No wonder research shows elders are less depressed having a guaranteed stream  of income worth $1 million than having $1 million to manage.

Blindly following the 4% withdrawal rule, a mainstay of retirement planning for decades, is financially  unwise. 

Bloomberg News 

But let’s say you aren’t the typical American. Not only do you have $1 million, but you beat the 30%  chance of being in cognitive decline after age 70 and the 35% risk of Alzheimer’s after age 85. And  you were able to evade financial predation, though people over 80 experience the highest average  loss to financial fraud of any age group. 

The standard rule of thumb has generally been to draw down 4% of your total assets every year. For  many years, financial planners have used a 1994 study showing that 4% was a safe withdrawal rate  if you had a conservative portfolio with low fees and wanted a cushion for the worst case scenario. 

It was wonderful to have a specific number; it gave retirees some confidence in the abyss of the  unknown. 

But now, the only real rule is that blindly sticking with 4% is dangerous. Most experts agree it’s no  longer safe to just assume the same historic returns for stocks and bonds, so 3% or 3.5% withdrawal  rates might be better. Future inflation, especially for out-of-pocket health care costs, may also make  the 4% withdrawal rate too high. Still, there may be others for whom 3% is too low — no one wants  to die poor with $25,000 in a shoe. 

Some advisors like annuities, but private annuity markets are tricky. The best annuity is to delay  claiming Social Security even if you have to tap into your retirement assets. Social Security is  inflation-indexed (a great deal in the face of future price hikes) and the payments last until the end of  your and your spouses’ lives. 

Tapping into retirement assets and delaying Social Security can result in an annual 8% increase in  inflation-indexed Social Security benefits. If you wait until, say, 70, you’ll have more Social Security  income; then you can withdraw closer to 5% and live it up a little because you’ll have fewer years to  draw the assets down. 

If you really want some kind of guidance on how much to withdraw, Boston College retirement  economist Alicia Munnell suggests following the Internal Revenue Service’s required minimum  distributions (RMD) rule. The IRS requires you to start taking your tax deferred retirement money out  at the age of 72 (or 70 ½ if you were born before July 1, 1949). At age 72, the IRS requires you to  withdraw about 3.9%, and at age 90 the RMD is 8.8%. 

Congress wants you to spend that money while you’re ali ve;the tax break wasn’t intended for your  heirs. What’s brilliant about the IRS RMD minimum distributions rule is that it adjusts the amount  according to your life expectancy. The math is done for you and the required minimum distribution is  automatic. 

Finally, while it may feel overwhelming to figure out how to make your $1 million last, it’s a fortunate  problem to have.

The median wealth for people in the bottom half of the wealth distribution scale is about $300,000,  with most of that tied up in a house. If the house were sold and the old 4% rule were applied, retirees  would typically wind up with $1,600 a month for the rest of their lives assuming average life  expectancy — and they still would have to pay rent. Clearly, the American system needs a reboot. Theresa Ghilarducci 

Bloomberg News

Read More: Retirees, forget the 4% withdrawal rule: Teresa Ghilarducci

Anil Vazirani is president of Secured Financial Solutions, independent insurance advisor investment advisor rep with a fiduciary obligation and in the financial services industry since 1994. A+ rating with the Better Business Bureau for over a decade and a half, members in good standing with the National Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors.

Dial 1-800-957-5604 x 200 and set up a complimentary strategy session to understand what your goals are, understand what objective you’re trying to accomplish, your risk tolerance, and let us show you how to reduce your investment fees from stocks, bonds and mutual funds down to one point, or five percent when you work with our investment advisory platform. Dial 1-800-957-5604 x 200, and on the web at: DreamRetire.com

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Tags: 4 percent rule, 4%, 401k, inflation-indexed

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