Monday, June 2, 2014

Retirement Income Planning: Risky Business


With millions of baby boomers in or nearing retirement, a huge concern is what to do with the trillions of dollars in retirement savings that they have accumulated. How do they reinvest their savings, ration it over time, or protect it from taxes?

Few employer-sponsored retirement plans offer advice or options for converting savings into retirement income. Many people will leave their plans with a lot of money but no strategy for investing it, protecting it from taxes, or spending it. Without a strategy, an employee may withdraw her money in one lump sum, fail to roll if into an IRA, and lose 25 percent of it to taxes in the first year. Obviously, the a sense of an income plan raises the risk of running out of savings during retirement. 


Running out of money in retirement is too large a risk to self-insure. Retirees need the best information and tools to help them determine how much income they will need, where the money will come from and how to make it last. They need access to safe, affordable lifetime income products.

Given the continued importance of individual responsibility in accumulating and managing retirement assets, there is a greater need than ever before for education and guidance. Individuals who do not fully understand their situation can be unduly influenced by emotions. For example, as the Hueler Companies noted in in its written statement to the United States Senate Special Committee on Aging in June 2010, research indicates that retirement decisions are often influenced by behavioral factors - such as fear of the unknown, lack of trust, and desire for control.

Retirement age plays a critical role
One of the most important decisions individuals face is when to retire. The Society of Actuaries 2007 and 2009 Surveys Post-Retirement risk indicate that many people do not fully understand the impact of retiring later, and that they underestimate the impact of working longer. In addition, the decisions surrounding Social Security claim in age are misunderstood, especially by couples.

An unprecedented challenge 
The challenge for those who are pension-less - including those who have ample savings - will be to convert those savings into do-yourself pensions. The new retiree will face three important risks: sequence-of-return risk, investment risk, and longevity risk. These risks exist for almost everyone, but not everyone chooses to acknowledge them - and even fewer choose to insure against them. Transferring these risks are for people who choose not to ignore:
  • Investment risk: The possibility that your portfolio won't earn enough to support you in retirement.
  • Sequence-of-returns risk: The chance that, just before or after you start drawing down your savings, a sharp market downturn and take a huge bite out of your portfolio and greatly increase your chance of running out of money too soon.
  • Longevity risk: The chance that you'll outlive your financial resources.
In the distant past, many people worked at a single company for their entire career. At retirement, most people left the company with a pension that took care of their retirement income needs for the rest of their life.

When it came to figuring out retirement income, all one had to basically do was fill out a form to determine how they wanted to take their pension and whether or not they wanted to include a spouse. From there, their job was quite simple: merely deposit each check every month (before direct-deposit days) for the rest of their lives.

All the difficult and complicated decisions as to...
  • Where to invest
  • How to get the most amount of income
  • How to compensate for inflation
  • How to ensure one wouldn't run out of money
  • How to keep income flowing to a surviving spouse
...were left in the hands of professional actuaries and managers who collectively spent all their time making all these complex decisions for us.

These days, however, things have changed quite a bit. Especially of the last decade, pensions have quickly become a dinosaur of the past. Only a select few still get them and for those that do, governments and corporations are successfully reducing, and in some cases, completely eliminating them.

So it's now up to us individuals to do the job that those full-time, experienced pension managers once provided. In most cases, retiring simply means retiring from one's job but the work isn't over. In many cases, it's just begun and this new work is being the CEO of your own retirement company. Are you prepared to handle this responsibility and these risks on your own?$

www.RayBuckner.retirevillage.com

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