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Showing posts with label retirement income planning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label retirement income planning. Show all posts

Tuesday

Hollis Lamon is on LinkedIn

VISIT ME
ON LINKEDIN
Hollis Lamon
President at Lamon & Stern, Inc.
Atlanta, Georgia (Greater Atlanta Area) | Investment Management

Hollis Lamon specializes in 401k growth retirement planning, maintaining and growing retirement income, 401k bench comparisons and corporate retirement advisement. With this knowledge, Lamon has assisted retirement professionals in making sound investments that has helped them prepare for their future.

As a registered municipal principal, options principal and investment advisor, Hollis Lamon has also worked side by side with third party marketers and administrative firms.





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Read more about the Lamon & Stern, Inc. Team

Sunday

FINANCIAL PLANNING TERMS...Stock

What is stock?

A stock is a share in the ownership of a company. As an owner, investors have a claim on the assets and earnings of a company as well as voting rights with the shares. Compared to bonds, stock investors are subject to a greater risk of loss of principal. Stock prices will fluctuate, and there is no guarantee against losses. Stock investors may or may not receive dividends. Dividends and gains on an investment may be subject to federal, state or local income taxes.

Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index is an index consisting of 500 stocks chosen for market size, liquidity and industry grouping, among other factors. The S&P 500 is designed to be a leading indicator of U.S. equities and is meant to reflect the risk/return characteristics of the large-cap universe.

The DFA Micro Cap Portfolio (formerly U.S. 9-10 Small Company Portfolio) is a mutual fund investing in the smallest 5% of the market universe or smaller than the 1,500th largest US company. The DFA U.S. 9-10 Small Company Portfolio targeted companies in the lowest 9th and 10th deciles ranked by market cap. Small company stocks tend to be less liquid and have greater price fluctuations compared to large company stocks.

Friday

ROAD OF RETIREMENT INCOME Series | PART 3 of 7

Alleviate reverse dollar
cost averaging with a
trusted retirement advisor.
SEQUENCE OF RETURNS &
REVERSE DOLLAR COST AVERAGING

PART 3 of 7 Series:
THE ROAD OF RETIREMENT
The Process of Managing Retirement Income

The effect on a retirement portfolio under the stress of systematic withdrawals can be quite dramatic.

Sequence of returns is simply the order in which returns are realized by a retiree. The consequences of a bad sequence of returns, especially early in retirement, can mean premature depletion of the portfolio.

Retirees need to avoid being in the position of having to sell during inopportune market environments. Being forced to sell at the wrong time can result in "reverse dollar cost averaging".

Reverse Dollar Cost Averaging
PLAN TO ALLEVIATE REVERSE DOLLAR COST AVERAGING

During the pre-retirement or accumulation stage, investors making systematic deposits into an investment portfolio will typically benefit from "dollar cost averaging". This benefit results from nothing more than taking advantage of periodic drops in the price of an investment being systematically purchased. During these periods of share price decline, the investor is getting more shares for the dollars being invested.

Once an investor retires and begins to receive systematic withdrawals from their retirement portfolio, these periodic declines in the price of these shares, now being sold to cover expenses, becomes detrimental. Retirees look to generate a certain amount of dollars to pay expenses so when the share prices of the investments in the portfolio decline, the retiree has to sell more shares to raise the dollars needed. This is "reverse" dollar cost averaging.

Best Practices for Retirement Income Planning
RETAIN CONTROL OVER YOUR RETIREMENT ASSETS

To help alleviate the effects of the sequence of returns and reverse dollar cost averaging, there are four very simple best practices that can be incorporated into your retirement income planning.

   1. Diversify Your Portfolio by staying invested in cash, fixed income and stocks.

   2. Use a Cash Flow Reserve Ladder when structuring the portfolio to provide allocations to cash and short-term, highly liquid investments, which is optimal. The retiree is not under duress to have to sell.

   3. Develop a Growing Income Stream using high and growing dividend paying stocks for the equity portion of the portfolio can provide a growing income stream that should reduce the dependency on capital appreciation to achieve the retirement plan.

   4. Use a Trusted Financial Advisor who can help thoughtfully develop and manage your retirement income plan. They can provide a line of defense during times of market turbulence.

While there is no way to adequately predict the sequence of returns you will experience during your retirement, you can control the timing of when you sell your assets to support expenses. Using the strategies outlined in this article can provide a framework that will help alleviate the negative effects of reverse dollar cost averaging and should be appropriate for the majority of retirees looking to retain control over their retirement assets.

If you would like us to mail you the information KIT with a FREE CD discussing the ins and outs of managing your retirement income please contact us today.
Review it online here: www.Thornburg.com

Let us get you started!
Online at our website: www.LamonAndStern.com
Call us at 770-951-8411


 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Disclosures:

Following these strategies does not assure or guarantee sustainability of a retirement portfolio or better performance nor do they protect against investment losses.

Investments carry risks, including possible loss of principal. Bonds are subject to certain risks, including interest rate risk, credit risk, and inflation risk. The principal value of bonds will fluctuate relative to changes in interest rates, decreasing when interest rates rise. Investments in equity securities are subject to additional risks, such as greater market fluctuations. Investments in stocks and bonds are not FDIC insured, nor are they deposits of or guaranteed by a bank or any other entity.

The views expressed in this article are subject to change.

Diversification does not assure or guarantee better performance and cannot eliminate the risk of investment losses.

Thursday

ROAD OF RETIREMENT INCOME Series | PART 2 of 7

Determine how the real return
from an investment compares
to the real return hurdle.
PRESERVING PURCHASING POWER
PART 2 of 7 Series:
THE ROAD OF RETIREMENT
The Process of Managing Retirement Income

Baby-boomer retirees may be particularly susceptible to the eroding effects of inflation, given that they will be less likely than past generations to have some form of pension that could be indexed for inflation. 

This generation is relying more on savings accumulated in 401(k), 403(b), IRA, and after-tax savings accounts to support them in retirement. Unless these savings are prudently invested during retirement to allow the income stream to grow at a pace comparable with the increase in inflation, purchasing power will be diminished.

To illustrate this concept, let's use a simple hypothetical case of a retiree who has $1 million in retirement savings and has decided to spend the amount evenly over a 30-year period ($33,333 per year). The retiree also decides not to invest the money to ensure safekeeping. Over the next 20 years, at an average annual inflation rate of 3%, purchasing power drops by 42% to the equivalent of $19,010 per year; and if inflation runs at 4% annually, purchasing power declines by 52% to $15,821. Imagine retiring at age 62 and by age 82 only being able to spend the equivalent of $15,821 per year in today's dollars!

3 Basic Variables to Retirement
BABY BOOMER RETIREES ARE SUSCEPTIBLE TO THE ERODING EFFECTS OF INFLATION

There are three basic variables that a retiree needs to factor: the length of time to be spent in retirement; the initial spending rate desired; and a legacy, if any, that the retiree wishes to leave. Each of these variables is described below.

    * Time Frame – the longer a retiree plans for their retirement to last, the more investment earnings are needed to support it. For retirement planning purposes, most advisors will use a minimum of 30 years, but in some instances 40 years may be even more realistic.

    * Spending Rate – the first year's after-tax spending amount (say $40,000) divided by the total retirement savings (say $1 million) for a 4% initial spending rate.

    * Legacy – how much of the initial retirement savings account is desired to be left as a gift to family members or charity upon the end of the retirement period.

Combining these three factors and preparing a simply cash flow model yields a real return hurdle (after the cost of inflation, investment expenses, and taxes) that must be achieved or exceeded each year to provide a retirement that will sustain itself for 30-40 years and beyond. 

For a majority of the baby-boomers retiring in the coming years, most, if not all, of the retirement savings accumulated during retirement plus the future earnings on these savings will be spent over their planned retirement period. The concept of spending some, if not all, of the retirement savings to fund a retirement will be the norm, not the exception.

Retirement Return Hurdle
STARTS WITH IDENTIFYING EACH RETIREE'S  UNIQUE COST STRUCTURE

For these retirees, a legacy amount will be available only if they do not use all their financial resources due to an unusually strong investment market or if spending amounts are actually less than planned. However, for those retirees who want to plan a legacy at the beginning of the retirement plan the real return hurdle would be required to provide for a sustainable spending plan, plus leave a legacy at the end of the 30-year plan. Needless to say, higher returns are required to achieve both objectives.

Planning for a 30- to 40-year retirement period makes preserving purchasing power of paramount importance.

Being able to see how the retirement plan variables relate to a real return hurdle is a great first step. Going through the process of identifying each retiree's unique cost structure, including inflation assumptions, investment expenses, and taxes, will determine how the real return from an investment compares to the real return hurdle needed to accomplish the plan.

Please note that any discussion related to average returns over a long period of time, such as a 30- to 40-year retirement, needs to be accompanied by a good understanding of the order in which returns are realized, called the "sequence of returns". For a retiree who is liquidating a small amount of their retirement savings each year to support the expenses, the order in which returns are realized is very important. We have addressed this sequence of return issue as a separate piece in this kit and it should be deemed as integral part of the discussion on preserving purchasing power.


If you would like us to mail you the information KIT with a FREE CD discussing the ins and outs of managing your retirement income please contact us today.
Review it online here: www.Thornburg.com

Let us get you started!
Online at our website: www.LamonAndStern.com
Call us at 770-951-8411


 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Disclosures:


Bonds are debt investments in which an investor loans money to an entity (corporate or governmental) which borrows the funds for a defined period of time at a fixed interest rate. Bonds are subject to certain risks including loss of principal, interest rate risk, credit risk, and inflation risk. The value of a bond will fluctuate relative to changes in interest rates; as interest rates rise, the overall price of a bond falls.

Government bonds, or Treasuries, are negotiable debt obligations of the U.S. Government, secured by its full faith and credit and issued at various schedules and maturities. Income from Treasury securities is exempt from State and local, but not Federal, taxes. Treasury bill data is based on a one-bill portfolio containing, at the beginning of each month, the bill having the shortest maturity not less than one month. Intermediate government bond data is based on a one-bond portfolio with a maturity near five years. Long-term government bond data is based on a one-bond portfolio with a maturity near twenty years.

A corporate bond is a debt security issued by a corporation. Corporate bonds are taxable and have more credit risk compared to Treasuries. The Citigroup Long-Term High Grade Corporate Bond index includes those issues from the Credit Index that have at least 10 years to maturity (long term) but exclude asset-backed securities and non-U.S. sovereign/provincial issues.

A stock is a share in the ownership of a company. As an owner, investors have a claim on the assets and earnings of a company as well as voting rights with the shares. Compared to bonds, stock investors are subject to a greater risk of loss of principal. Stock prices will fluctuate, and there is no guarantee against losses. Stock investors may or may not receive dividends. Dividends and gains on an investment may be subject to federal, state or local income taxes.

Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index is an index consisting of 500 stocks chosen for market size, liquidity and industry grouping, among other factors. The S&P 500 is designed to be a leading indicator of U.S. equities and is meant to reflect the risk/return characteristics of the large-cap universe.