Clements: Keeping Clients from Sabotaging Their Retirement

In an ideal world, everyday Americans would march steadily through life, saving diligently and making rational investment decisions. But as every financial advisor can attest, the reality is considerably messier. Many people save too little, shun strategies that are good for their financial health and fall short of their goals.

Consider the most important goal of all: retirement. Over the years, massive brain and computer power have been thrown

at the problem, so we have a solid idea of what Americans should do to ensure a comfortable retirement. Yet many potential clients choose a less-advantageous path — which means there’s a great opportunity for advisors to add value. But doing so often means devising strategies that clients will find palatable and that will work with their shaky finances.

Reality No. 1: Clients retire with the nest egg they have, not the one they want.

If you spend a few minutes with a financial planning program or even a simple online calculator, you can get a handle on how much clients need to save every month for a comfortable retirement. Yet there’s a good chance that clients will retire with less than their target nest egg, for several reasons.

They might earn a lower rate of return than you assumed, especially after figuring in investments costs. Also, even if they are committed to saving the necessary sum every month, there will be times when they save less because major expenses crop up or they have stretches when they are out of work.

In addition, most folks end up retiring earlier than planned. The Employee Benefit Research Institute’s 2015 Retirement Confidence Survey found that workers planned to retire on average at age 65 — and yet the typical retirement age turns out to be 62.

My advice: Push clients to save as much as they can whenever they can, so they’re in better shape if the unforeseen comes to pass. What if the bad stuff doesn’t happen and clients end up saving more than is necessary? When you tell them they can retire early, I doubt they’ll be too angry.

Reality No. 2: A withdrawal rate of 4% or less might be prudent, but it simply is not enough.

In 1994, the financial planner William P. Bengen published his famous study, which illustrated that if retirees wanted to be confident that their investments and savings would last through a 30-year retirement, they should limit their first-year withdrawal rate to 4%. The study was a wake-up call for advisors, many of whom were recommending 6% or more.

Recent research has suggested that even 4% may be too aggressive. A 2015 study by American College of Financial Services Professor Wade Pfau analyzed a variety of strategies and found that the safe withdrawal rate could be as low as 2.85%.

I find these studies fascinating. But I wouldn’t want to be the advisor who tells a 65-year-old couple that their $1 million will generate first-year retirement income of $28,500, putting them uncomfortably close to the federal poverty level.

Instead, I would go for the commonsense conversation. Start by mentioning the studies, so clients know anything above 3% or 4% is risky. You might then suggest they opt for 5%, but stand ready to slash their spending if the markets go against them, especially in the early years of retirement.

The ability to vary spending is one of our great financial advantages — but it’s a lever that’s too rarely used. To make sure your clients have the financial leeway to lower spending, counsel them to keep their fixed living costs low.

Reality No. 3: Retirees are still coupon clippers at heart.

When I say coupon clippers, I’m not referring to the supermarket variety. Rather, it’s a reference to old bond certificates that came with coupons that holders would use to claim their regular interest payments.

Many retirees are still inclined to invest for yield, while hewing to the principle that they should “never dip into capital.” This might sound prudent, but it’s often a recipe for disaster. Consider 2015: Those who reached for yield by purchasing master limited partnerships and high-yield bonds ended up suffering mightily.

Instead, the truly prudent strategy for retirees is to invest for total return, while also annuitizing part of their savings. Neither approach is popular.

Most advisors I talk to use a variation on the “cash cushion” approach. They figure out how much clients need to spend from their portfolio over, say, the next five years and then allocate that money to short-term bonds and cash investments. That frees up clients to invest the rest of their portfolio in stocks and riskier bonds, knowing they have enough cash set aside to carry them through a long bear market. But clients often push back against this approach, because they’re unnerved by having so much of their money in volatile investments.

While many retirees are reluctant to invest substantial sums in stocks, that reluctance turns to outright resistance when it comes to annuitizing.

In a recent column, I encouraged advisors to train clients to worry less about dying early in retirement and more about living longer than they ever imagined. But I realize this is an uphill struggle — which shows up in two ways.

First, almost half of all retirees claim Social Security at age 62, the earliest possible age. Yet delaying benefits, thereby getting a larger monthly check, is often the smartest move a retiree can make, especially if the retiree is the family’s main breadwinner. That larger check can provide insurance against outliving other assets. If the retiree is married, it can also ensure a handsome survivor benefit for his or her spouse.

That brings us to the second sign of resistance. Sales of immediate fixed annuities ought to be booming, as cash-strapped baby boomers look to squeeze maximum lifetime income out of their skimpy nest eggs. Yet in the first nine months of 2015, total sales were just $6.5 billion, according to LIMRA Secure Retirement Institute. Compare that with ETFs, which hauled in $140 billion over the same stretch, says the Investment Company Institute.

I can’t think of a killer argument that will persuade clients to allocate part of their savings to immediate fixed annuities. But you might suggest that clients make modest purchases over five or 10 years.

That may ease their fear of buying and then immediately dying, plus their enthusiasm could grow as they become accustomed to the healthy income stream annuities can generate.                     

Jonathan Clements, a Financial Planning columnist in New York, is a former personal finance columnist for The Wall Street Journal. He’s author of Jonathan Clements Money Guide 2016 as well as the new How to Think About Money. He’s also former director of financial education at Citi Personal Wealth Management. Follow him on Twitter at @ClementsMoney.

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