The big trade-off in retirement is enjoying the present while also planning for a long life.
The trick is how to pull it off.
Wade Pfau, a professor at the American College of Financial Services, says the key is in pacing — how you spend down your assets.
“You have to pace out how you spend on your assets to make sure you don’t outlive them. You don’t want to spend too aggressively, but at the same time, no one’s assured of living a long time,” said Pfau, who recently published the third edition of his “Retirement Planning Guidebook.”
“You have to enjoy things as well and live for the present. So on the non-financial side, you plan for a short retirement so that you don’t have any regrets. Do the highest-priority things first, whether that’s travel or spending time with grandkids, whatever the case may be,” he added.
Pfau spoke with Yahoo Finance about other must-dos as well as some pitfalls in retirement planning. Here are edited excerpts of our conversation:
Kerry Hannon: How should retirees view stocks and bonds in their portfolio?
Wade Pfau: When you think about investing pre-retirement, it’s about growing the assets — a diversified portfolio with a mix of stocks and bonds. The general idea is you want to invest more aggressively in stocks, but only subject to your ability to stomach the volatility of the markets. Bonds are meant to reduce the volatility of the portfolio and help you find a good balance.
Post-retirement, you use bonds as fixed income to fund your upcoming expenses, and then you don’t have to worry about market volatility in the short term.
You use stocks as earmarked toward longer-term expenses and draw from those stocks over time to replenish your short-term bond buckets.
It’s a different way of thinking about asset allocation. Bonds are more for funding upcoming expenses. Stocks are more for providing long-term growth.
Some target-date retirement funds now offer an annuity feature. Thoughts?
That has been an interesting trend. Both BlackRock and Vanguard have introduced versions of their target-date lineups that allow retirement plan participants to buy into a target-date fund that includes an annuity.
Target-date funds were never designed to treat what happens post-retirement. So as we’re seeing the development of annuity options inside target-date funds, as you get closer to the target date. That’s a great idea to provide more flexibility.
When you find your retirement style, you can build the strategy that works for you. ·Maskot via Getty Images
Why is it important to know your retirement style?
Some people love annuities; some people hate annuities. Some people love the investing approach; other people hate it. People who are more investment-oriented in retirement are comfortable relying on market growth. If markets do well in their retirement years, they’ll spend more. If markets go down, they’ll spend less.
Some individuals don’t want to rely on market growth to fund their expenses. They’re comfortable committing to something that will solve their lifetime need, like an annuity with a floor of reliable lifetime income to cover basics, and then they can invest on top of that for more discretionary goals. Either approach can work. It depends on a person’s preferences.
When you find your style, you can build the strategy that works for you. If you’re pushed into a total return investing strategy and you’re not comfortable relying on market growth, that’s where people might abandon the strategy at the worst possible time, say, after a big market downturn, and then they miss a subsequent recovery, and it really disrupts their retirement plan.
You believe that Social Security is the best annuity that a retiree can have, hands down. Discuss.
Social Security is an annuity. It’s inflation-adjusted lifetime income. Claiming your Social Security benefit at age 70 will give you, with the delayed credits, 77% more inflation-adjusted benefits at that point than if you started at age 62.
That completely dominates what any commercial annuity is able to do. So anyone who’s thinking about annuities in retirement, step one is delay your Social Security benefit.
When it comes to retirement income, can you explain front-loading and back-loading?
Front-loading is: ‘I know I’m alive and healthy today. I want to make sure I get the most enjoyment possible. I want to spend my money now. I’m not so worried about getting into my nineties and running out of money.’
Back-loading is for people who are more worried about running out of money than about dying. They’re worried about getting to an advanced age and not having the necessary resources to fund expenses and being pushed into poverty. That means spending a little bit less at the present.
Let’s talk about why the 4% rule might not cut it for some people.
The 4% rule was a simple research idea developed by Bill Bengen about what’s a sustainable spending rate in retirement.
But there are reasons why it might be too low. One reason is the 4% rule assumes your spending will increase for inflation every year in retirement. And the reality is that tends not to be the case. We have go-go, slow-go, and then no-go years in retirement. People tend to spend less as they age, at least until healthcare expenses can pick up late in life.
Most people can expect their spending will not maintain pace with inflation throughout retirement. And that can allow for a higher spending rate at the beginning because you don’t have to build on that assumption of those future inflation increases.
For the average retiree, relative to inflation, their spending might drop by 20 to 30% between their sixties and their eighties. That lets you spend more at the beginning.
Have a question about retirement? Personal finances? Anything career-related? Click here to drop Kerry Hannon a note.
“What’s a common pitfall in retirement planning that has nothing to do with money?
People don’t fully anticipate what changes when they leave work. Their work provides all kinds of benefits that they may not have appreciated outside of a salary — social companionship, a feeling of purpose, a way to spend your time, and a structure to your day. Now you have to fill that gap.
Not having a plan for how to replace work, not having something else that gives you purpose and passion, is something people don’t expect. They just might find themselves doomscrolling on their phone all day until they figure it out.