Afraid Your Money Will Vanish before You Do?

Afraid Your Money Will Vanish before You Do?

By Andrey Dashkov

Unlike Jack Nicholson’s character in A Few Good Men, we trust that you can handle the truth. No matter your age, securing a comfortable retirement is a huge concern. Folks want the whole truth about their financial outlook, but straight answers are hard to come by.

Both sides of the mainstream media habitually present opinion-tainted partial facts. Case in point: the unemployment numbers announced earlier this month. One side is cheering because unemployment dropped to a six-year low, while the other side is calling it pure fraud.

I found author and libertarian-about-town Wayne Root’s remarks in a recent article for The Blaze particularly telling:

The middle class isn’t getting richer, it’s getting poorer…

The only people being hired are your grandparents. 230,000 of the new jobs went to those in the 55-to-69-year-old age group. In the prime working age group of 24 to 54 years old, 10,000 jobs were lost

It means grandma and grandpa are desperate and willing to take grandson’s low wage job to survive until Social Security kicks in. The US workforce is now the oldest in history. And if grandpa has to work (out of desperation) until the day he dies, there will never be any decent jobs for the grandkids.

Here’s the part Root gets wrong: Baby boomers are not working until Social Security kicks in. They’re working well past that point, because they feel they must. Smart boomers know they can’t afford to wait until robust interest rates return; they’re taking action to protect themselves now, lest their circumstances become truly dire.

You’re 65—Now What?

The Employee Benefit Research Institute surveys workers each year concerning their retirement confidence. Despite an uptrend, the latest report shows that 82% of workers feel less than “very confident” about having enough money to retire comfortably.

With that statistic in mind, we looked at three different 40-year retirement scenarios. Note that the numbers and charts in this overview are meant to illustrate several scenarios, not provide individual guidance. Every person’s situation differs in terms of taxes, time horizons, and other parameters, and we encourage you to work with a financial planner to manage your savings.

The data exclude other sources of retirement income you may have, such as Social Security or a pension. All of the amounts, including annuity incomes, are pre-tax.

  • Scenario 1. At age 65, you decide to retire with $500,000 in personal savings. You anticipate your expenses will rise approximately 3% annually. Thus, with each subsequent year, you will need to withdraw 3% more than the previous year. You estimate that your savings will grow by 5% annually. You are planning for a 40-year retirement, meaning your savings must last until age 105.How much money can you withdraw each year, using those assumptions?
  • Scenario 2. At age 65 you have the same $500,000 in personal savings that you did in Scenario 1; however, you take $100,000 from your account and buy an annuity. Our go-to source for annuity information, Stan The Annuity Man, says that currently, this annuity would pay $527 for the rest of your life. You use the remaining $400,000 as principal for the next 40 years in the same fashion as in the first case: assuming the same 5% rate of return and an annual 3% withdrawal increase.
  • Scenario 3. Instead of retiring at age 65, you work for five extra years and buy a 100,000 annuity at age 70. We will assume you did not add to your savings during that time (though it did earn interest). Many boomers use extra working years to eliminate any lingering debt, so they can retire 100% debt-free. (However, note that we encourage a different approach: using extra working years to save as much as possible, including maximizing catch-up contributions to your 401(k) or IRA.)If your nest egg grew at a 5% compound rate, it will total $638,141 when you are age 70. So, excluding the $100,000 spent on an annuity, you have $538,141 to draw from. As with Scenarios 1 and 2, we’ll assume the withdrawals last for 40 years here, stretching the retirement period until age 110. Buying the annuity at age 70 instead of age 65 raises your monthly annuity payout to $582 per month.

Now, let’s take a closer look at each of these cases.

Scenario 1: He Who Takes It All Is Not the Winner

For your nest egg to last 40 years, in year one, you can withdraw $17,747, or $1,479 per month, from your $500,000 nest egg. Each year you take out 3% more to keep up with rising expenses.

Follow the yellow line representing your nest egg in the chart above. As you can see, after 40 years your $500,000 is gone.

What happens if you stay within your monthly allowance and live past age 105? Here’s hoping you have generous grandchildren. If not, you might be at the mercy of a Social Security system that may or may not be around in its current form.

There’s good reason the Bureau of Labor Statistics projects that workforce participation for people age 75 and over will rise to 10.5% by 2022, up from 7.6% in 2012. For the 65-74 age group, it projects that the rate will jump to 31.9%, up from 26.8% in 2012 and 20.4% in 2002. Better health and a sustained desire to work may be one reason more seniors are working longer, but another is fear.

61% of older Americans fear outliving their money more than they fear death. This is a fear we hope no one encounters as they near the end of the line. Other than the late George Burns, I doubt many centenarians are holding down a job.

Running out of money and having Social Security as your final safety net is a legitimate concern. Every politician, regardless of party, acknowledges the US government cannot make good on all of its promises. No one knows what the future will bring.

With that in mind, let’s move on to Scenario 2.

Scenario 2: Spreading Out Risk

Insurance companies have a range of annuities that will pay you for the rest of your life, which our team covered in detail in Annuities De-Mystified. In essence, holding an annuity as part of your overall retirement plan is one way to reduce the risk of running out of money. Since going back to work at 105 is both unappealing and impractical, let’s look at how Scenario 2—the same $500,000 nest egg with $100,000 used to purchase an annuity at age 65—plays out.

Your annuity will provide monthly payouts of $527. Using the same 40-year time frame, your monthly income from the remaining $400,000 will be approximately $1,183 per month in first year, or a total of $1,710.

You start out with a bit more money; however, the annuity payment will remain constant, with no adjustment for inflation. At the end of 40 years, your nest egg will be gone, but you will still receive the annuity payments.

There is no way to know how long you will live. Today, a man who reaches age 65 can expect, on average, to live to age 84.3; a woman, 86.6. One in ten 65-year-olds, however, can expect to live past age 95. Medical advancements are pushing those numbers up, making life after age 105 seem not too far fetched. An annuity is just one way to hedge against running out of money too soon.

One big disadvantage of an annuity is that it doesn’t offer real inflation protection. Even annuities with inflation riders usually yield marginal results.

If you receive Social Security, you can hope the annual inflation adjustments make up some of the difference, but it’s unlikely to be enough to maintain your current lifestyle. That brings us to Scenario 3.

Scenario 3: Delayed Gratification

Congratulations! You made it to age 70. The $500,000 in savings you had at age 65 has grown to $638,141 (at an annual rate of 5%). You buy an annuity for $100,000 that will pay you $582 every month until death and draw down the remaining $538,141 over the next 40 years—again assuming 5% growth rate and 3% annual withdrawal increase.

The lump sum of $538,141 will provide approximately $1,592 per month during the first year. Add the annuity payouts and your total monthly income comes to $2,174, before taxes.

In the first year, your total income, including withdrawals and annuity income, will be $26,085 compared to $17,747 in Scenario 1 and $20,516 in Scenario 2.

And although your savings will still run out after 40 years, you will be 110. By working an additional 5 years and deferring the start date you get an additional five years before you have to rely on the annuity only.

The Takeaways

This is all a reminder that the best way to enjoy retirement is to build a portfolio that can generate enough capital gains and dividend income to satisfy your spending needs, while leaving the principal intact as long as possible. If you want to end up in the 18% of people who are very confident about having enough money to retire, you may want to keep working after age 65, if possible, and invest part of your savings in an annuity to ensure you have at least some income if you outlive the rest of your nest egg.

To determine if an annuity is right for your retirement portfolio, read your free copy of our special report, Annuities De-Mystified. It includes tips for uncovering hidden fees and a frank look at the risks associated with annuities. Plus, it’s the only such report we know of written by financial educators who do not sell annuities. Access your free copy of Annuities De-Mystified here.

The article Afraid Your Money Will Vanish before You Do? was originally published at millersmoney.com.
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16 Comments
John the bruce
John the bruce
October 23, 2014 10:40 am

Who the hell plans to live to 105 or 110 yrs old?
Realism would be to plan for 85
And 1500 to 2000 a month wont get it done

Pirate Jo
Pirate Jo
October 23, 2014 10:43 am

Medical advancements could push the average lifespan up, but it won’t make any difference if no one can afford them.

Dutchman
Dutchman
October 23, 2014 11:05 am

Retirement – a failed idea. Most of us will work until the day we die.

The taxes on our home are $8,000 / yr. The gas / elec / water are $4,800 / yr. Home owners insurance is another $3,000 / yr – that’s over $1,300 month just to live in a home that you own.

I’m waiting for the ‘great reset’ or the extinction asteroid – which ever comes first!

bb
bb
October 23, 2014 11:48 am

Pirate Jo.,don’t have kids or get sick.Right?

SKINBAG
SKINBAG
October 23, 2014 12:45 pm

How the fuck can ANY American these days save for retirement of any kind ? ALL nations as bankrupt as the USA have destroyed the value of the currency so that pensions, savings and insurance funds evaporated into worthlessness. Many persons in Wiemar Germany cashed in their life savings or their whole life insurance policies just to be able to put a few good meals on the table. What the fuck is the use in planning for a retirement future when the dollar will evaporate into dust?

SKINBAG
SKINBAG
October 23, 2014 12:46 pm

This article serves absolutely no purpose in today’s world ! It is based on ‘what was’ – not ‘what will be’.

SKINBAG
SKINBAG
October 23, 2014 12:48 pm

This article is theoretical at best – this article has no grounding or guidance in today’s world.

SKINBAG
SKINBAG
October 23, 2014 12:49 pm

Maybe the author is a former FED Reserve employee.

SKINBAG
SKINBAG
October 23, 2014 12:56 pm

This article is out of sinc with all the many TBP posts about how the middle class is being decimated. Many / most people of formerly middle class standards are working longer hours for way less money that a few years ago. Many are working two or three (or more) dead end minimum wage jobs just trying to survive. Many have cashed in their pensions or 401K’s to pay urgent bills or for pure survival. This article is a TOTAL FUCKING WASTE of valuable TBP real estate !

Aquapura
Aquapura
October 23, 2014 1:05 pm

So what the F do people in the 24-54 age group do? We are losing our jobs so grandpa can theoretically have enough dough to last until age 105. This article is worthless aside from telling us that the boomers are NOT retiring. Everything I’ve been hearing since I was in senior high is that I have such great career opportunity because “the boomers will retire.” Ha ha ha! The boomers are in hock up to their eyeballs and will NEVER be able to retire.

Billy
Billy
October 23, 2014 1:25 pm

Dutch,

You forgot Property Taxes… gotta pay the rent on the shit you allegedly “own”, right?

Dutchman
Dutchman
October 23, 2014 2:43 pm

Articles like this are just “stock broker” BS. Peddling info that’s about 50 years out of date. He’d probably suck your cock if you would by an annuity from him. These guy’s are slime sucking bottom feeders.

ragman
ragman
October 23, 2014 4:00 pm

Only chance to make it work: retire wif no debt, outta the big city wif big city taxes and insurance, control impulsive internet purchasing of ammo and “prepper” items, &TC. Not much fun, but doable. Who the fuck wants to live to 105? I’ll be happy for 85 good ones and then have a heart attack getting an airstart from a foxy 65yr old. Hope Mrs Ragman doesn’t see this!

Pirate Jo
Pirate Jo
October 23, 2014 6:06 pm

Aquapura, bb expects young folks like you to take care of him in his old age. So you’d better start earning some money soon and having lots of kids of your own.

Bot
Bot
October 23, 2014 11:26 pm

As soon as you saw the free publication offer at the end of the article you knew he was a shill. C’mon Admin, keep these schmucks peddling outdated and useless tripe off the site.

Dr. Stucky's Teaching Assistant
Dr. Stucky's Teaching Assistant
October 24, 2014 12:05 am

105 and 110? Only a mendacious salesman can suggest with a straight face that you will still be alive after 40 years of retirement. Current estimates are for a 65 yo to live to 85, not 105. A 5% growth rate is also exaggerated or visionary.

If they are stretching out the payout like that, it’s because they need to keep more of your money to make annuities profitable again. Notice he is eager for you to wait until 70 to buy that 40 year annuity, they’d only have to pay out 12 to 14 years an pocket the rest of your $100,000. That’s a 20% front end load there.