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Retirement Income Investment Planning - Step One
by
Steve Selengut
Your retirement income investment plan starts now, right now, no matter
how old or well heeled you happen to be.
Step One is to understand what a retirement plan is, and to identify the
three large numbers you need to keep track of while you are developing
your stash. With these three totals on your spreadsheet, it's much
easier to develop long-range retirement income goals that make personal
sense. A retirement plan is an income production plan. Guaranteed
retirement income - projected expenses = the gap. No gap, add parents
and children to the expense number. There's always a gap.
Employer provided pension plans, Social Security, and (always much too
expensive) fixed annuity contracts, are retirement income providers.
They are monthly income machines that you have paid dearly for but which
may not be adequate to cover your retirement expenses--- most of us will
need more income than our guaranteed benefits will provide.
And we need to develop these additional income sources while we are
still earning some kind of income. The retirement plan is the investment
process you employ to eliminate the gap between your projected
guaranteed income and a conservative estimate of your retirement
expenses. The sooner and smarter you invest before retirement, the
easier the transition from full employment to full vacation will be.
Smart investing involves separating your security selections by purpose,
and monitoring their performance in the same way. You're never to young
to start developing the income side of the portfolio.
Once you start to draw income at retirement, it is much more difficult
to invest effectively and unemotionally. Since your income will need to
remain secure and constant through several economic, market, and IRE
(interest rate expectation) cycles, you really need to develop
appropriate portfolio market value expectations if your program is to
survive. You cannot afford to take your eye off the income ball, because
income is the only thing you can spend without depleting the productive
value of the assets in your investment portfolio.
Obvious? Yes, but only until the market value of your portfolio begins
to shrink as a result of economic, market, and IRE cycles. If you invest
properly, it (the income) should continue to grow in spite of changing
market conditions and fluctuating market value numbers. You must learn
to expect market value fluctuations and take advantage of them---
assuming, of course, that you are following appropriate quality,
diversification and income generation standards.
Retirement income planning became more difficult for most of us around
the time corporate America realized that defined benefit pension plans
were far too expensive to manage and maintain. At around the same time,
the Social Security trust fund somehow disappeared (Did it ever exist at
all?), and more and more of our hard earned was needed to support our
aging friends and relatives. Why haven't the myriad of defined
contribution programs been able to fill the retirement income gap?
Because millions of totally investment-inexperienced people were given
discretion over billions of investment dollars that could be tax
detoured out of their paychecks and into IRAs, 401ks, 403bs, Thrift,
Savings, Thrift/Savings Plans, etc. Self directed investment programs
generated a need for an investment media; the investment media fueled
the speculative juices of an emotional and naïve mass of newbie
investor/speculators; Wall Street created tens of thousands of new
products and compound income schemes to sponge up the wayward dollars.
The Masters of the Universe were ROTFLOL while the Investment gods gaped
in disbelief.
Defined Contribution plans are just not retirement plans--- even if your
employee benefits department, the media, Wall Street, and Uncle assure
you that they are. Most plans are difficult to self-manage with a
retirement income objective. Still, these benefit plans are necessary
and quite capable of taking you close to where you want to be. Their
only drawback is the false sense of wealth and retirement security that
they promote. Either the money has to be converted into an income
portfolio--- a costly and time-consuming process--- or far too many
mutual fund shares have to be sold to produce the spending money
Most people think of savings and investment programs as retirement
plans, and rationalize away the need for additional, outside development
of an income investment portfolio. This is because all of the
information they receive speaks to market value growth instead of to
income. It's very likely that less than half the money will ever be
yours to spend! What, you say--- why? Here's an example. A NYC resident
with a $3 million IRA retires with the expectation of maintaining her
life style. Even invested for income alone, $15,000 per month is easy to
generate. But how much more has to be disbursed to satisfy three levels
of tax collection?
Next example. The same portfolio in equity mutual funds during a
correction--- now your dipping into principal!
Even though defined-contribution plans are excellent mechanisms for
growing an investment portfolio with your hard earned, pre-tax, dollars,
most plans and most plan participants worship the market value god to
the exclusion of all others. Most people are too greedy and/or
tax-averse to convert them into income producers during rallies--- when
they can lock in a meaningful cash flow. Additionally, the counter
productive IRC encourages our use of owned assets first--- a universally
ignored phenomenon.
The "buy and hold" mutual fund mentality doesn't transition well from
growth to income--- regardless of the fund category or description; the
idea of helping people into a comfortable retirement hasn't stopped the
tax collectors; the market cycle is just as likely to be down as up when
your gold watch is presented. You have to do more, and less, to secure
that comfortable retirement.
Step One of the retirement plan is developing a focus on income, and
understanding that spending money and market value are not blood
relatives. Step Two is developing the right combination of tax deferred
and tax-exempt income--- among other things.
Steve Selengut
http://www.kiawahgolfinvestmentseminars.com
http://www.valuestockindex.com/
Author of: "The Brainwashing of the American Investor: The Book that
Wall Street Does Not Want YOU to Read", and "A Millionaire's Secret
Investment Strategy"
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Last modified:
January 01, 2010
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