Originally posted by jpg7n16
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I have done significant research on retirement... and much of the discussion comes back to advice this board gives to some degree or another- and that is live on less, not earn more or spend more. You are putting word in my mouth and misusing the posts well out of context because of some textbook definition.
Once a person retires, their income is fixed. Even if they use the 25X rule and 4% rule, those guidelines can test the risk tolerance of a retiree because selling stocks at a low into a 40% down market to get an inflation increase just adds bad money after bad money... to point where when inflation kicks in, the best thing to do is adjust expenses, not increase income.
This research has also shown one other inflation catching issue... the #1 risk to all portfolios is inflation. Its not the 2.4% average which will get you, and its not the 40% down markets which will get you, its the spikes in inflation.
There are many examples in history where a 40% down market recovered in 2-3 years (or less) which include both 1987 and 2008-2009 and 1999-2003. There are many examples where inflation over a short period of time was 10% or 20% (double digit) and that is where most of the damage is done.
I am not into text book definitions of what words mean, I am into the practice of understanding how most people deal with financial problems. Most people do not deal with inflation by increasing income, they deal with it by cutting expenses.
I think you're missing that these costs will be in 30 years. Your options of a, b, or c - only consider how I will pay for them today. But you don't have them today... they are 30 years away.
The question is: "how much do I need to maintain the same spending habits in 30 years?" not "how can I afford higher costs today?"
If a family wants to maintain a lifestyle of eating out at a nice restaurant twice a week, flying across country on vacation once a year, driving the car to and from work instead of taking the train, and living in an upscale neighborhood, then you need to evaluate the costs of maintaining those same habits (see definition above) in 30 years.
In general, a basket of identical goods will go up in cost by 2-4%/year on average. And therefore, you should expect the costs to maintain the same habits to roughly double in 30ish years.
But if you want to boycott the gas stations when you retire, that's your choice. "Well 30 years ago, I only had to pay $2 a gallon! I'm not buying more than $25 of gas this week!"
Can you imagine trying to live in today's economy with a "Leave it to Beaver" budget? "Here's $5 for groceries honey, that should last us a while" - well that's what your method will force you to do in retirement. Live on a budget that was suitable for the economy 30 years ago.
The question is: "how much do I need to maintain the same spending habits in 30 years?" not "how can I afford higher costs today?"
If a family wants to maintain a lifestyle of eating out at a nice restaurant twice a week, flying across country on vacation once a year, driving the car to and from work instead of taking the train, and living in an upscale neighborhood, then you need to evaluate the costs of maintaining those same habits (see definition above) in 30 years.
In general, a basket of identical goods will go up in cost by 2-4%/year on average. And therefore, you should expect the costs to maintain the same habits to roughly double in 30ish years.
But if you want to boycott the gas stations when you retire, that's your choice. "Well 30 years ago, I only had to pay $2 a gallon! I'm not buying more than $25 of gas this week!"
Can you imagine trying to live in today's economy with a "Leave it to Beaver" budget? "Here's $5 for groceries honey, that should last us a while" - well that's what your method will force you to do in retirement. Live on a budget that was suitable for the economy 30 years ago.
my planning uses only 1 projection:
25X of CURRENT expenses
once I hit 25X of current expenses, I know I can retire, and once I am within 12X of current expenses, my asset allocation will change drastically (from 95-5 to about 40-60) within 2-3 years (and maybe within 6 months).
I know my expenses today will not be the same in 30 years
for one thing, my mortgage will be long gone
for another, I will be retired in about 16-20 years
for another my kids will have started HS, finished HS, started college and I HOPE finishes college within 20 years.
so projecting current expenses 30 years out is silly, if I look back 10 years and check my expenses, they look nothing like what I have now. House changed (3 times), cars changed (2 times), kids were born (2 years ago), kids did not need formula (1 year ago), wife switched jobs (4 times), I changed jobs (once).
All those inputs changed expenses, so projecting expenses out, and adding an inflation number to them creates sticker shock only, but that number is not a realistic target.
If you have 25X of CURRENT expenses saved, you are at minimum financially independent. Depending on risk tolerance, length of retirement, immediate increases in expenses (like kids college, lump sum payments or similar) and lifestyle (maybe you like working), you might need to save more or have little desire to retire. Measure current savings vs current expenses.
Do NOT measure projected future expenses (an unknown) to projected future investment assets (another unknown). Too many unknowns will lead to bad planning decisions.
The decision this could steer people too... if current expenses are 40k and you project the 25X number (current expenses) to be $1 M, then add in inflation (3%) and see in 24 years you need $2 M, then set all plans based on getting $2 M, the following problem might present itself:
1) person saving around 7k per year sees the $2 M and decides to take on more risk because timeframe for $2 M might be 40 or 55 years.
2) the "more risk" from #1 has person make bad decisions and or see bad results (if they get bad results, they stop investing or look for a different asset class which lowers returns)
The solution to above is keep your eye on the process and then the process finds the prize...
1) $40k of expenses is $1 M nest egg needed
2) when they have $500k (half way there) re-run the process
a) look at expenses
b) 25X that number
c) verify allocation meets the current risk profile (in my case I am expecting to drop risk profile considerably once I am halfway there)
In the solution step, if one of those 10% inflation years has appeared, then its probable that 500k is not halfway there. If the CPI inflation was 2.4%, its very possible expenses went DOWN. As bills get paid off expenses decrease... depending on how the family treats bill payoffs, it's possible expenses go down even when inflation is positive my net expenses today are about the same as they were 2 years ago, we added some bills recently- like satellite radio- which increase expenses, but generally speaking when student loans were paid off (2008) or car is paid off (2010) or mortgage is paid off (2025?) expenses go down, not up, and the expenses go down even in a positive inflation environment.
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