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Article Title:
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Will You Outlive Your Retirement?

Article Description:
====================

Today, Americans are living longer than ever. During the
twentieth century life expectancy in America increased from age
47 to age 77. Longer life spans present problems for retirees,
however. Assuming some rate of inflation, you will need an ever-
increasing income to maintain your standard of living.


Additional Article Information:
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1193 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2007-12-26 10:12:00

Written By:     Bill Garrett
Copyright:      2007
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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Will You Outlive Your Retirement?
Copyright (c) 2007 Bill Garrett
Garrett Financial, LLC
http://www.GarrettFinancial.com



Today, Americans are living longer than ever. During the
twentieth century life expectancy in America increased from age
47 to age 77. Longer life spans present problems for retirees,
however. Assuming some rate of inflation, you will need an ever-
increasing income to maintain your standard of living.

The Question is: "Will you have enough saved to last throughout a
twenty or thirty year retirement?"

Social Security

Social Security was designed as a pay-as-you-go plan, i.e.,
retired workers collect benefits funded by workers still paying
into the system. Today, the system's ability to maintain current
benefit levels is in jeopardy. It is apparent that your financial
security in retirement is to a great extent dependent upon your
personal resources.

Four Risks to Your Retirement

There are four major risks to your retirement: Long-term Care
Expense, Inflation, Investment Risk, and Withdrawal Rate Risk.
Any could threaten your retirement security. Understanding how to
counter them may be vital to your financial future.

Long-term care

Middle America needs to be concerned with the high cost of
long-term care. Statistically, 40% of retirees are expected to
incur long-term care expense. The cost of 24-hour care in or out
of the home is so high that it poses the single greatest threat
to the average retiree's financial security. The most practical
method of dealing with this risk is through long-term care
insurance. There are no government programs to handle the full
cost. Even if you are in your 50's it makes sense to consider
purchasing a policy to keep the premiums down.

Inflation

Since 1926 inflation for Americans in the workforce has averaged
3% a year. However, largely due to increased medical cost, the
Consumer Price Index for the Elderly (CPI-E) has averaged 3.38%
over the last twenty years.  If you don't plan for at least the
higher rate you might be under-funded.

So, how do you guard against inflation? One way is by investing
in the stock market. This may sound risky but there are ways to
reduce the risk, which will be covered later.

Let's look at the historical returns of various investments
since1926: large cap stocks have averaged 10.4% and small cap
stocks 12.7% a year. Long-term U.S. Government bonds have
averaged 5.2%, and Treasury Bills have averaged 3.72% compared to
Inflation's average 3.03% during the same time period.  After
taxes only stocks substantially outpaced Inflation.

Investment Risk

Investing Too Conservatively

Many retirees stay away from the stock market preferring to
invest in interest-bearing investments like bonds or Certificates
of Deposit (insured by FDIC). Here's an example of the risk
inherent in these instruments:

Example 1: You have $1,000,000 invested in twenty-year interest
investments paying $50,000 a year. Inflation is averaging 3.38%
(CPI-E). At that inflation rate in twenty years $50,000 will buy
only half what it did twenty years before.

Investing Too Aggressively

On the other hand, having your money in the stock market can be
dangerous, especially if you are systematically selling shares
for income.

Example 2: You have $1,000,000 invested and are taking $50,000 a
year for income. The market goes down. You remain invested.
Assume that three years later your investments have lost 15% a
year and your portfolio is now worth $485,500. To recover,
assuming a 10.4% annualized return and taking $50,000 a year out,
will take 48 years! That return is what the S&P 500 Index has
averaged since 1925.

Today's longer retirements have greatly complicated the
withdrawal phase of retirement. It is apparent that a successful
investment strategy in retirement is crucial. Decisions made
today may have serious unforeseen long-term consequences so it is
important to have a sound withdrawal plan in place. This means it
must be both flexible, prudent, and still provide long-term
returns adequate to offset inflation.

Withdrawal Rate Risk

How fast you take money from your savings is the third risk
factor to contend with in retirement. What is a safe rate?
Probably a good target is 4% or less. We have seen in Example 2
what can happen if the market drops while taking withdrawals. You
have to sell more investments because they are worth less in a
down market. That's how systematic withdrawals work against an
investor.

A Solution

You can no longer depend on the old buy and hold approach when in
retirement. You may now be wondering if there is a solution.
Actually, there is. Your income needs to come from investments
not exposed to the stock market. Interest-bearing instruments and
those offering guaranteed income and/or protection of principal
could be used for income. You will need to have enough invested
to provide income for at least ten years. Invest the rest of your
money in growth until you have earned enough to create another
ten-year income stream. Then repeat the process. Although simple
in its approach, a retirement income plan is anything but
simple.

Once you decide how much income you want from savings you must
determine how you will invest for income. One way is to invest in
investment grade bonds with varying maturities up to ten or
twelve years. Income will come from interest on the bonds and
principal as each bond matures. By consuming principal and
interest less money is needed to generate income thereby leaving
more for long-term growth. For shorter periods you might use
money market and CDs. Fixed annuities and some of the new breed
of variable annuities that provide guaranteed income without
having to Annuitize work very well, too. Remember to always keep
an emergency fund available for unexpected major expenses. This
method of staggering bond maturities is called "laddering".

The rest of your savings then goes into a well-diversified growth
portfolio. Mutual funds are probably best for most people. Don't
make the mistake of assuming a few mutual funds will adequately
diversify your holdings. It depends on what they are. If you
don't know a lot about selecting mutual funds get professional
help from a fee-based or fee-only financial planner. The bond
ladder allows your growth investments enough time to help reduce
market risk.

Where people can get into trouble is when they must sell
investments that are more exposed to market volatility such as
one year holding periods. In the last eighty years the market has
lost money about 31% of the time over rolling one-year periods.
It has lost money only 3% of the time over rolling ten-year
periods. Of course, the past does not predict the future of
markets but it can illustrate how long holding periods can help
reduce investment risk and that's exactly why we establish the
bond ladder.

This new methodology can work. You will have to allow for
inflation and understand how to properly invest for this to work.
It is designed to provide a dependable rising income throughout
retirement and flexibility to handle unforeseen expenses so you
can have a retirement without wondering, "Will I outlive my
retirement?"


1. Source: "Social Security and the Consumer Price Index for the
Elderly," Federal Reserve Bank of New York, 2003. Data
represented from 1984-2001.

2. Results of 2006 Capital Markets, "Stocks, Bonds, Bills and
Inflation 2007," Morningstar.

3. Ibbotson & Associates, "Stocks, Bonds, Bills and Inflation",
2006.




---------------------------------------------------------------------
Bill Garrett is a practicing Certified Financial Planner(tm) 
in Brentwood, TN specializing in retirement income planning 
and portfolio management. His trademarked WealthSpring(tm) 
retirement income system is designed to provide reliable 
inflation adjusted retirement income for decades. To find 
out more visit http://www.GarrettFinancial.com Securities 
Offered through Securities America, Inc., Membe FINRA/SIPC, 
Wm. B. Garrett, CFP(tm), CCPS, a Registered Representative.
Securities America, Inc. is not affiliated with Garrett 
Financial, LLC.


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