EPISODE · Nov 5, 2014 · 32 MIN
My #1 Retirement Planning Tool to Help People Find Balance
from Retirement Answer Man · host Roger Whitney, CFP®, CIMA®, RMA, CPWA®
I'm convinced that the most stressful part of planning for and living in retirement is that we don't know how to balance living well today, while not sacrificing tomorrow. As a result, most of us live out of balance. Some of us are so worried about tomorrow that they sacrifice their current life in order to be "prudent". Others "live for the day", assuming without a thought for their future. both are wrong. In this episode, I talk about my #1 retirement planning tool to help other find this delicate balance. Invest Wisely--Investing Potholes in November and December If you're planning on making large investments in your taxable accounts be careful. In December, most pooled investments, like mutual funds, distribute to shareholders the capital gains and dividends they've accumulated throughout the year. If you buy one of these products in a taxable account before this distribution, you could have a tax liability for capital gains that were realized before you even owned the fund. In this episode, I discuss how this works and some things you can do to avoid a potential nasty tax surprise. Plan Well--My #1 Retirement Planning Tool to Help People Find Balance Can I afford to retire a year earlier?Do I need to change my spending plan after this market correction?Can I save less now and still retire comfortably?Do I need to take so much investment risk?These are some of the frustrating questions that people struggle with every day as they plan for retirement. About 16 years ago, I discovered a tool to help me help people answer these questions and confidently live a more balanced life.It's called Monte Carlo engine. Today, I've integrated it into my Plan Well process to help other make smarter financial decisions and find some balance between living well today without sacrificing their tomorrow.Like most tools, some are better than others and much of it's usefulness is dependent upon the skill of the user.In this episode, I use a planning example to demonstrate how I use it and some of it's advantages and drawback. Note: Normally just read these show notes, it's best to listen to this one. Just click on the audio play at the bottom of this post. Here is the Fact Set for John Smith Age 55Retirement goal 60Investment assets $2,000,000Retirement lifestyle goal, $100,000 annual Retirement lifestyle goal #2, $70,000 RV at age 60Life expectancy, age 90Target Portfolio, balanced IITo see the full report that I discuss, click here. How Not to Use It It's not a one time evaluation tool (you can't set it and forget it)It does not determine or predict resultsIt can't overcome bad inputs or assumptionsHow to Use It As a important part of your annual financial reviewAs a tool to help you prioritize competing goalsAs a tool to help you evaluate tradeoffs between competing priorities Spending/SavingWorking/RetiringRisk/RewardCollege/RetirementGiving/InvestingAs compass to help evaluate and correct course as your life unfoldsAs a guide an warning system to help you know when your plan may be unsustainableTo provide more color on the long-term impact of today's financial choicesThere is no tool that will solve for all the uncertainty in your life or the world. The best we can do is acknowledge what we don't know (can't know) and use a sound compass to help guide our life's journey. "He who is enslaved to his compass, will enjoy the freedom of the seas" Ken Davis Are You Confident in Your Compass?
What this episode covers
I'm convinced that the most stressful part of planning for and living in retirement is that we don't know how to balance living well today, while not sacrificing tomorrow. As a result, most of us live out of balance. Some of us are so worried...
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My #1 Retirement Planning Tool to Help People Find Balance
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