Join Early Retirement Today
Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Is it legit to re-run when market rises?
Old 03-20-2015, 07:58 PM   #1
Confused about dryer sheets
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: lake forest
Posts: 7
Is it legit to re-run when market rises?

Is it legitimate to recalculate my maximum safe withdrawal over time, and increase it when the market is good? Do I have to decrease it when the market is bad, or does my original calculation remain safe even when the market drops over time? Thanks.
letsquit is offline   Reply With Quote
Join the #1 Early Retirement and Financial Independence Forum Today - It's Totally Free!

Are you planning to be financially independent as early as possible so you can live life on your own terms? Discuss successful investing strategies, asset allocation models, tax strategies and other related topics in our online forum community. Our members range from young folks just starting their journey to financial independence, military retirees and even multimillionaires. No matter where you fit in you'll find that Early-Retirement.org is a great community to join. Best of all it's totally FREE!

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest so you have limited access to our community. Please take the time to register and you will gain a lot of great new features including; the ability to participate in discussions, network with our members, see fewer ads, upload photographs, create a retirement blog, send private messages and so much, much more!

Old 03-20-2015, 08:17 PM   #2
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Northern IL
Posts: 26,888
Quote:
Originally Posted by letsquit View Post
Is it legitimate to recalculate my maximum safe withdrawal over time, and increase it when the market is good?
Historically - yes.

If you think about how a historical reporter like FIRECalc works, (and this is easier to discuss if you assume you went for a 100% Safe Withdraw Rate), the periods of almost failing, but didn't, were when that period started at a market peak. No where to go but down.

You are entering a fixed number (let's say $1M) and clearly, that $1M is worth more at the bottom of a trough than at the peak. But with 100% success, it still succeeds.

A poster on Bogleheads was discussing a 'retire again and again' strategy, which was exactly that - recalculate each up year, and use that higher WR, inflation adjusted going, forward. Historically it works (it has to).


Quote:
Do I have to decrease it when the market is bad, or does my original calculation remain safe even when the market drops over time? Thanks.
See above.


That said, many of us want some buffer, as the future could be worse than the worst of the past. You still have to do what feels comfortable, and be ready to live with the results.

-ERD50
ERD50 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-20-2015, 08:20 PM   #3
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
harley's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2008
Location: No fixed abode
Posts: 8,765
If you are using the standard 4% SWR, you are supposed to start with 4%, then increase the draw by your chosen inflation rate each year. Definitely not supposed to recalculate each year. If you do, then you would absolutely need to recalculate when the market is down too.


Having said that, I don't know of anyone who does a straight 4% WR. Most are flexible, at least on the down side. I drop my spending when the market is down, but I don't necessarily raise it when the market is up. I'm more concerned with longevity than maximum SWR. If I leave some money to my heirs I'm fine with that.
__________________
"Good judgment comes from experience. Experience comes from bad judgement." - Anonymous (not Will Rogers or Sam Clemens)
DW and I - FIREd at 50 (7/06), living off assets
harley is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-20-2015, 08:26 PM   #4
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
audreyh1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Rio Grande Valley
Posts: 38,140
Quote:
Originally Posted by letsquit View Post
Is it legitimate to recalculate my maximum safe withdrawal over time, and increase it when the market is good? Do I have to decrease it when the market is bad, or does my original calculation remain safe even when the market drops over time? Thanks.
I reset every year .

I also reset down when the market falls.

It's called the % of remaining portfolio method. There is no inflation adjustment - just whatever the markets do.

I take a fixed % of whatever my Dec 31 portfolio value is each year.
__________________
Retired since summer 1999.
audreyh1 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-20-2015, 08:39 PM   #5
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Northern IL
Posts: 26,888
Quote:
Originally Posted by harley View Post
If you are using the standard 4% SWR, you are supposed to start with 4%, then increase the draw by your chosen inflation rate each year. Definitely not supposed to recalculate each year. If you do, then you would absolutely need to recalculate when the market is down too. ...
Actually, that is not true (historically).

This is the supposed 'paradox' of the person A retiring one year after person B. If the market went up higher than inflation, why can't person A increase his/her WR (above inflation)? They can.

Historically, it has to work. If I had 100% success at all points in history, then I had... 100% success at all points in history! Think about it.

-ERD50
ERD50 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-20-2015, 08:51 PM   #6
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
NW-Bound's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 35,712
What ERD50 says is correct about increasing one's WR (in dollar terms) when the market is good not necessarily resulting in your bankruptcy.

What happens is that, if you look at the huge range of possibilities that FIRECalc shows you, when you increase your spending for good market times, you are taking away the chance of your portfolio going up and up with the years. You are working yourself towards the worst-case trace that skims the zero line, like a sea-skimming missile.

You may be trading the good time now for sleepless nights later in your retirement. Or you may not, but it does increase the risk.
__________________
"Old age is the most unexpected of all things that happen to a man" -- Leon Trotsky (1879-1940)

"Those Who Can Make You Believe Absurdities Can Make You Commit Atrocities" - Voltaire (1694-1778)
NW-Bound is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-20-2015, 09:09 PM   #7
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
audreyh1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Rio Grande Valley
Posts: 38,140
If your goal is to leave little remaining at the end of life, this can be an effective strategy.

Even so, I wouldn't be able to keep increasing inflation-adjusted withdrawals in the face of a shrinking portfolio.
__________________
Retired since summer 1999.
audreyh1 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-21-2015, 05:47 AM   #8
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
 
Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 8,410
I suspect that many of us here started FireCalc (and other) runs years before we needed to start withdrawals.

If so, a few good market years would increase the portfolio's starting point at retirement time but not necessarily the 4% SWR of that increase.

For me, I haven't needed to fully access my 4% SWR as of yet (more like 1.5%) so I view that extra 3.5% as 'annual savings' in case I need to overwithdraw from time to time in the future. Not sure if that is safe but that's my thinking.
__________________
Living well is the best revenge!
Retired @ 52 in 2005
marko is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-21-2015, 05:47 AM   #9
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
donheff's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Washington, DC
Posts: 11,327
Quote:
Originally Posted by NW-Bound View Post
What ERD50 says is correct about increasing one's WR (in dollar terms) when the market is good not necessarily resulting in your bankruptcy.

What happens is that, if you look at the huge range of possibilities that FIRECalc shows you, when you increase your spending for good market times, you are taking away the chance of your portfolio going up and up with the years. You are working yourself towards the worst-case trace that skims the zero line, like a sea-skimming missile.

You may be trading the good time now for sleepless nights later in your retirement. Or you may not, but it does increase the risk.
+1 ERD is correct. The standard method simply says you have 100% (or whatever) likelihood of success based on what happened in the past. But with each raise in initial valuation (recalc) you are eliminating the numbers of historical scenarios that apply and are skating closer and closer to the worst case historical scenarios. Not a good idea if you don't have a plan B.
__________________
Idleness is fatal only to the mediocre -- Albert Camus
donheff is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-21-2015, 05:51 AM   #10
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
 
Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 8,410
Quote:
Originally Posted by audreyh1 View Post
I reset every year .

I also reset down when the market falls.

It's called the % of remaining portfolio method. There is no inflation adjustment - just whatever the markets do.

I take a fixed % of whatever my Dec 31 portfolio value is each year.
Audreyh1, do you use an approximate 4% for that calc or a different number? (I know this has been discussed in many earlier threads)
__________________
Living well is the best revenge!
Retired @ 52 in 2005
marko is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-21-2015, 06:24 AM   #11
Recycles dryer sheets
 
Join Date: Mar 2014
Location: Islands
Posts: 363
Quote:
Originally Posted by audreyh1 View Post
I reset every year .

I also reset down when the market falls.

It's called the % of remaining portfolio method. There is no inflation adjustment - just whatever the markets do.

I take a fixed % of whatever my Dec 31 portfolio value is each year.
I like this one, too. % of remaining portfolio is reassuring in that you should never run out of money. In an up year, you get to spend more, but in a down year you need to be prepared to spend less. I'm ok with that.
Travelwanted is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-21-2015, 06:51 AM   #12
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
audreyh1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Rio Grande Valley
Posts: 38,140
Quote:
Originally Posted by marko View Post
Audreyh1, do you use an approximate 4% for that calc or a different number? (I know this has been discussed in many earlier threads)
I chose 3.3% as my target and will probably increase it as we get older.
__________________
Retired since summer 1999.
audreyh1 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-21-2015, 06:56 AM   #13
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
audreyh1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Rio Grande Valley
Posts: 38,140
Quote:
Originally Posted by Travelwanted View Post
I like this one, too. % of remaining portfolio is reassuring in that you should never run out of money. In an up year, you get to spend more, but in a down year you need to be prepared to spend less. I'm ok with that.
You don't have to spend everything you withdraw in the same year. If you set aside a little of the increase after a good year, it can be available for spending after a bad year.

For us withdrawal is > spending, so we have an accumulating short-term cushion anyway.
__________________
Retired since summer 1999.
audreyh1 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-21-2015, 07:31 AM   #14
Full time employment: Posting here.
 
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Marco island
Posts: 815
The problem with firecalc is that it doesn't know whether you just had a good year or bad one as the data isn't included. If I were to adjust my swr based solely on firecalc, I would use probably do it based on results a few years in arrears.
Gatordoc50 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-21-2015, 07:55 AM   #15
Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
 
Join Date: Jun 2013
Posts: 1,019
I look at it this way: If I retire with a 90% FireCalc success rate (and say a 4% withdrawal rate), and the market tanks in the first few years of retirement, I've eliminated most if not all of the positive outcomes, so my success rate is now significantly less than 90%. The success rate has changed because I have a lot more information after a few years than when I retired. I can lower my spending to get it back up to 90%.

Conversely, if I retire at the start of a bull market, after a few years, I've eliminated almost all of the negative outcomes, and my success rate is now more than 90%. I can increase my spending to get it back down to 90%.
Which Roger is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-21-2015, 08:15 AM   #16
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
haha's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Hooverville
Posts: 22,983
This just shows how goofy the premise of FireCalc is. That a fundamental question like this could engender a long discussion with a lot of differing ideas makes this clear. Unless someone is a proven successful trader, then what counts is what Warren Buffet calls "look through earnings". When you retire you aim to replace your labor earning power with the earning power of your portfolio. What somebody is bidding for that earning power is meaningless, unless you are selling it to them at that price.

Also, the idea that Firecalc could contain some sort of ratchet mechanism that, like a come along, allows you to increase your spending but does not compel you to decrease it is very strange on the face of it.

Ha
__________________
"As a general rule, the more dangerous or inappropriate a conversation, the more interesting it is."-Scott Adams
haha is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-21-2015, 09:25 AM   #17
Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
2B's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Houston
Posts: 4,337
This is my first year of retirement so I'll have to see how what I do works out over the next few years.

I have a target amount of small pensions and social security as my base budget. I have a "sinking fund" for the deferred SS until age 70 for me and age 64 for DW plus private medical insurance between now and medicare. The total amount needed for this will drop year by year until I reach age 70 and start my SS.

I take my total portfolio and the start of the year and subtract the remaining sinking fund. I take 5% of this total and add my pensions, eventual SS and medical insurance cost. This becomes my total spending available for that year.

I expect to have a highly variable amount of spending during my retirement. I can reduce my traveling, charities and gifts if the market tanks. I also expect the Bernicke effect to kick in so I won't want to travel as much when I get older. I've thought about using 6% and may switch to that as my factor. I'm making Year 1 more conservative.

IMHO there is no absolute answer except don't spend freely into a financial disaster. Have a "downside" you can live with if spending needs to be reduced.
__________________
The object of life is not to be on the side of the majority, but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane -- Marcus Aurelius
2B is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-21-2015, 10:04 AM   #18
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
Midpack's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: NC
Posts: 21,300
Quote:
Originally Posted by Gatordoc50 View Post
The problem with firecalc is that it doesn't know whether you just had a good year or bad one as the data isn't included. If I were to adjust my swr based solely on firecalc, I would use probably do it based on results a few years in arrears.
Problem? FIRECALC uses actual market history from 1871 to present which includes starting in good years/periods AND bad (including the Great Depression, 1965-1983, 1987, 2000, 2008 etc.). It doesn't need to "know" - that's kinda the whole point of FIRECALC.

The "problem" with FIRECALC is there's no crystal ball, e.g. if future real returns are significantly worse than any period from 1871 thru present. That's the Achilles heel of all retirement calculators and the reason many use to withdraw more conservatively than their historic SWR.

And "a few years in arrears" could just as easily be up, as down.

Frankly I like using % of remaining portfolio methodology (like audreyh1, 5 year timeframes IIRC) for retirement income at the outset, and maybe going to inflation adjusted (Classic SWR, like FIRECALC) only when we reach 75-80 years old or thereabouts. YMMV
__________________
No one agrees with other people's opinions; they merely agree with their own opinions -- expressed by somebody else. Sydney Tremayne
Retired Jun 2011 at age 57

Target AA: 50% equity funds / 45% bonds / 5% cash
Target WR: Approx 1.5% Approx 20% SI (secure income, SS only)
Midpack is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 03-21-2015, 11:00 AM   #19
Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 2,288
FireCalc also doesn't know when you retired so if I retire in 2005 and it says I can withdraw $40,000, but in 2014 my portfolio is much higher, there's no reason I cant re-run FireCalc as if I was retiring in 2014 and if it says its safe to withdraw $62,000, then I should be able to increase my withdrawals to $62,000. There's no reason I would have to lower my withdrawals from there just because the market took a hit anymore than I would have to lower them from the original $40,000 in 2005 if the market took a hit.
utrecht is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-21-2015, 11:03 AM   #20
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso)
Give me a forum ...
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Northern IL
Posts: 26,888
Quote:
Originally Posted by haha View Post
This just shows how goofy the premise of FireCalc is. That a fundamental question like this could engender a long discussion with a lot of differing ideas makes this clear. Unless someone is a proven successful trader, then what counts is what Warren Buffet calls "look through earnings". When you retire you aim to replace your labor earning power with the earning power of your portfolio. What somebody is bidding for that earning power is meaningless, unless you are selling it to them at that price.
Goofy? I really don't see that, though clearly it is only a look at history. It provides information, what you do with it is another thing. I'll probably move to some sort of RMD-like weighted approach at some point, but right now, the historical reports from things like FIRECalc make me feel pretty comfortable with a conservative ~ 3%-3.5% WR

Quote:
Also, the idea that Firecalc could contain some sort of ratchet mechanism that, like a come along, allows you to increase your spending but does not compel you to decrease it is very strange on the face of it.

Ha
Many things are strange on the face, until you dig in and understand the underlying premise. It took me some time to get my head around the 'ratchet up but not down' approach, and have the light bulb come on. But when applied to the historical data, it absolutely works. It has to, by definition.

Another simple way to look at it, (again, I like to use a 100% success WR rate to keep this simple), FIRECalc is conservative, and reports what will succeed in any period. A large number of periods will end up with as much or more than you started with, sometime much, much more. Each of those periods would have succeeded with a higher WR% than the conservative 'succeed all periods' number.

So if you started out in one of those many 'good periods', you can increase your WA (Amount not % - edit/add - but it is a higher % of the original portfolio), because we know that % succeeded every period in history, and this is now just one of those periods. And it has already passed, with any downturns that follow, with no reduction in WR%. Like I said, it has to, by definition.

In fact, if you use a tool that supports this mode, you will see that it is absolutely provides the best results of getting the most out of your portfolio w/o failing, and leaving the least 'on the table'. But that is also getting into data-mining territory, as it is really matching withdraws to that history.

But more pragmatically, for me, a conservative take on the data provided by these calculators tends to converge on any other conservative analysis. A 3-3.5% WR is pretty much in-line with a spend the distributions approach.

-ERD50
ERD50 is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Maximum 401(k) contribution rises to $17,000 in 2012 Helen FIRE and Money 11 11-13-2011 05:01 PM
OPEC Increases Quotas, Crude Oil Price Rises haha FIRE and Money 0 09-11-2007 01:16 PM
Dollar rises, profits fall...? Caroline FIRE and Money 2 06-14-2005 04:57 PM
Online Survey Marketing--B.S. or Legit? Tommy_Dolitte Young Dreamers 3 10-12-2004 02:11 PM

» Quick Links

 
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 05:19 AM.
 
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8 Beta 1
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.