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#1 |
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Recycles dryer sheets
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Posts: 419
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How did you adjust to making regular withdrawals and watching your balance decline?
During your working years, you make regular contributions to your investment accounts, and you watch as the balance continues to grow over time. Eventually, you reach the point where you retire, and you start to make regular withdrawals from the nice nest egg that you spent your whole working life to build up. At that point, instead of building up your nest egg and watching it grow, you start the exact opposite process as you slowly watch your nest egg get smaller and smaller.
My logical brain tells me that this is normal, and I know with the proper planning, there will be enough to last into old age, but isn't it psychologically hard to watch as the balance of your hard earned nest egg slow dwindles and gets smaller and smaller? Has this been an issue with some of you? Have you had to adjust? Have you come to grips with it and simply accepted it? Did you find yourself spending less so that your portfolio balance would fall at a lower rate? Last edited by JustCurious; 05-14-2008 at 09:04 PM. |
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#2 |
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Moderator Emeritus
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Yep. But when I consider the alternative (working), it ain't too bad...
![]() Actually, the first two years of retirement my nest egg grew even though I was drawing on it for 100% of our living expenses. That changed of course when the market tanked - but that's another adjustment story... ![]()
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Some claim to have a crystal ball when it comes to investing in stocks and real estate. Me, I've got a disco ball... Last edited by REWahoo; 05-14-2008 at 08:38 PM. |
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#3 |
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Full time employment: Posting here.
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Location: Halfway to the Stars
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I've just finished the accumulation phase and what you describe was not my experience; I made irregular contributions and it was not simply watch it grow; it was watch it stall during the '70s, grow for a while, fluctuate a lot, sometimes down 30%. I'm very interested, too, in hearing about others' experiences with the withdrawal phase.
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To R in Sept. or to put in an extra 6 mo. to cushion the Medical? That is the question. "Planning to plan." |
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#4 | |
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Recycles dryer sheets
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Posts: 380
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Quote:
I think my Mom did it by having all of her money in fixed income assets. She spent all the interest, so she had a declining real wealth. But, since the dollar amount never went down, she was okay psychologically. I expect a lot of people in her generation did that. Sounds corny, but remember that we're talking feelings not logic here. Of course, people on this board who are planning to take 4% are planning to spend less than their "most likely" investment returns. So the only time their assets go down is when they get poor market performance, and then they view the drop as a market event, not a long term glide to zero. But then there are people who retire early, with neither SS or pension at first. They must be running into this right away. I'm interested in what they have to say. |
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#5 |
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Moderator
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I am almost one year into ER and I can tell you it hurts. Between spending a ton on getting the house updated, DW health issues and the market going South it does hurt to see the balances drop. But, we also realize that the bleeding will stop and the balances will stabilize at some point. Some years they will even go up. It is all part of what happens in retirement.
Some seem to adjust to it more easily than others. I have always been a bit of a miser so a balance that goes down is painful but is also the reason you save like crazy during your w*rking years and investing for the future.
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Work? I don't have time to work....I'm retired. |
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#6 |
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Recycles dryer sheets
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Posts: 419
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There is a third alternative...spend less than your portfolio earns, so that the balance continues to grow even without working. But I would hate to deprive myself so that my heirs can live it up when I'm gone.
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#7 |
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
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Posts: 2,174
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I'm ER'd and have been avergering into the market for more than 1 year. I look at it this way - I'm buying low. Also, you need to manage your cash flow and think for the long term. So if you have a couple of year of expenses in low risk investments you are doing the right thing.
PS - don't look at your investments too often
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Sometimes death is not as tragic as not knowing how to live. This man knew how to live--and how to make others glad they were living. - Jack Benny at Nat King Cole's funeral |
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#8 |
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
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Posts: 1,505
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I'm retired and living off my savings for 1 1/2 years now. In the beginning I was a wreck thinking about spending down the money it took me most of my life to put together. Now I just watch expenses, trust firecalc and take my money out as needed.
The market was doing well when I first retired but the last 8 months or so have been tough. Let the markets go up and down, at this point I don't worry so much and just go with the flow. |
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#9 | |
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Moderator Emeritus
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Quote:
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#10 |
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
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Posts: 1,505
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#11 |
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Recycles dryer sheets
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Posts: 397
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I have been retired for 8 years and my net worth has increased each year. This year, however, may end in a decrease. At this point, I have more in assets than I need so I'm not too concerned about it.
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“I guess I should warn you, if I turn out to be particularly clear, you've probably misunderstood what I've said” Alan Greenspan |
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#12 | |
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Dryer sheet wannabe
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Posts: 19
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Quote:
Now, 2000-2002 while I was still working - Then it shrunk! ![]() |
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#13 |
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Full time employment: Posting here.
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My plan is to setup my portfolio so that it yields about 3.5-4% a year and to live on those dividends without touching the principal. Ideally I would want the principal to keep increasing at the rate of inflation so I won't be using only bonds to achieve that result, but rather a mixture of dividend paying stocks, bonds and REITs. If I were to retire right now my portfolio would be centered around a mixture of (pssst) Wellesley and Wellington with some REITs thrown in. Of course this strategy would not protect me from market gyrations and short term declines in portfolio value... But over the long term my account balance should, hopefully, continue to increase long after I retire.
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"Solitary trees, if they grow at all, grow strong" - Winston Churchill |
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#14 |
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Full time employment: Posting here.
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I've been living off my portfolio exclusively for about 2 years now. I'm a youngster (under 40) planning to live off it for the rest of my life. So it is annoying to see it down about 8% from the high water mark. But I did so many thought experiments about being in this situation before ER that I just feel like I'm executing the plan now. Having 4+ years in bonds and about 1 year in money market does feel comforting.
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#15 |
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
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Posts: 2,325
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As far a fluctuations... Bonds should do the trick.
But spending down the portfolio is a different matter. I look at it this way:
What has caused me to rethink my approach a bit is the emergence of vehicles like the Managed Payout funds. I think part of the issue is how you look at the risk fundamentally. The concern is not spending the money and a declining portfolio, instead it is running out of money. Good planning, budgeting, discipline will help. But to feel safe... you must have some confidence. Confidence comes with planning, knowledge, and risk mitigation strategies.
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Disclaimer: I make no warranty or guarantee about the accuracy or completeness of this information. I am not a financial planner, my comments only represent my opinion. |
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#16 |
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Recycles dryer sheets
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Posts: 70
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It is going to be incredibly difficult for me and I know it. I have a "never spend the savings" mentality and after 40 years it will be hard to change. However, hubby takes the better view of diversification and use. He plots our course and keeps me informed and trys to overcome some of this "never use it" attitude I have. Amazing that I found someone who compliments my personality so well. (and has good investment sense).
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#17 |
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Moderator Emeritus
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One factor that has been of great assistance in my transition from growing to spending our nest egg is the death of friends and siblings. Nothing like the ultimate reminder of the fleeting and temporary nature of life to make you ask yourself "What am I saving it for?".
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#18 | |
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Moderator
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I am not retired yet, so I suppose I can look forward to this sinking feeling when my portfolio declines during withdrawal phase.
What I am PLANNING on doing (theoretically), is withdrawing somewhere between 0%-2% when the market is tanking and only from a cash buffer. SS+pension will total $21K before taxes, so that will give me subsistence and I plan to have no mortgage. Then, when the market improves I can replenish the cash buffer and increase my withdrawals as appropriate, to a maximum of 4%-5%. I plan to rebalance at least yearly or more often if I vary too far from my desired asset allocation, which is pretty conservative (45:55 equities:fixed). When I start worrying during down years, I will read this message board and the bogleheads board and others, since misery loves company. Chinaco said, Quote:
I am the world's biggest worrier, so we'll see how this does for me. Tune in in 2010 for the rest of this story! ![]() Last edited by Want2retire; 05-15-2008 at 07:02 AM. |
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#19 |
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
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Been ER'd for nearly 6 years. Each month I download the bank account statement and project the full year cash requirement and compare that to the portfolio size needed. I adjust for once a year large items (like income tax) in the projection.
As long as there is still a buffer, I relax. If the buffer goes away, I look to defer expenses until it returns. (We are expecting that living in Mexico for 6 months a year should increase the buffer and compensate for the current bear markets.) |
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#20 |
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
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Location: Sarasota,fl.
Posts: 2,314
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I'm a year and a half into retirement and at first it was strange taking the money out but now it has gotten routine . I have a pension and SS widow's benefit that provides $30,000 of income and while lots of people on the board could live on that amount I'm not one of them . I write down what 4% of my portfolio will be a year and track withdrawals from it . I really only use about 2 1/2 to 3 % and that's with travel , paying for my Mom's care and spoiling my new grandson . I have really haven't had a down year just a no gain one . I'm a reformed worrier . The deaths of people I love cured me of that . Money is just money but people are irreplaceable .
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"Freedom is just another word for nothing left to lose " |
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