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7 Key Tasks for Investors Approaching Retirement

As you edge closer to retirement age, it becomes more and more important to identify ways to maximize your investments and set the stage for the next chapters. As you plot out your strategy at this life stage, here are some key tasks identified in this Morningstar article to consider.

  • Nourish your human capital.
  • Start mulling your Social Security strategy.
  • Maintain your safety net.
  • Assess the adequacy of your portfolio.
  • Embark on a preretirement saving sprint.
  • Build your stakes in safe(r) securities.
  • Think about withdrawal sequencing.

 

Nourish Your Human Capital

A good thing you can consider for your finances, regardless of life stage, is to invest in your human capital—your lifetime earnings power—as long as you’re employed. It’s true that large-scale outlays of time and money to build up your resume don’t usually make a lot of sense later in life, but investing in continuing education and staying current on developments in your field do. Keeping abreast of the latest technology developments—both inside and outside of your workplace—is also crucial. Ultimately, one of the best things you can do to improve the financial viability of your retirement plan is to put in as many years in the workplace as you can.

If you’re not interested in sticking it out in your main career any longer than you absolutely need to, you might still consider an “encore career”—a later-in-life job that’s more gratifying and less taxing (but potentially less remunerative) than your main career. Being able to earn income from even a part-time job can reduce in-retirement portfolio withdrawals, thereby helping to ensure that your portfolio lasts longer than it otherwise would.

Start Mulling Your Social Security Strategy

Staying in the workforce up to or beyond traditional retirement age has another salutary benefit: It can help you delay filing for Social Security, thereby enlarging your benefit when you eventually do file. Check out the Open Social Security program to test-drive different filing dates and examine repercussions for lifetime benefits. Married couples should take special care to strategize about Social Security together, with an eye toward enlarging their total lifetime benefits from the program.

Click here for a comprehensive guide to Social Security Benefits authored by HC Wealth Advisors, Robert Carnegie, CFP®, and April Schultz, CFP®. It covers things like when to file (to maximize benefits), spousal benefits, options for married couples, and other pertinent information.

Maintain Your Safety Net

The usual insurance recommendations apply for the years leading up to retirement: property and casualty, personal liability, and health and disability, of course. If your children are grown and off your payroll, it’s also wise to revisit your need for life insurance at this stage; while life insurance can make sense in some instances, you’ll have less of a need for it once your dependents are grown.

Long-term-care insurance may be prohibitively expensive by the time you reach your early 60s, or you may have encountered a health condition that disqualifies you from buying it. But it’s still worth pricing out a policy and formulating a plan for long-term care, especially if you have built up a sizable but not enormous nest egg.

Maintaining an adequate emergency fund remains important at this life stage. Because higher-income and/or more-specialized jobs are often more difficult to replace than is the case for people who are earlier in their careers, consider holding at least a year’s worth of living expenses in liquid assets, rather than settling for the standard advice of three to six months’ worth. There’s an opportunity cost to holding too much cash, of course, especially these days. But having an adequate cushion will keep you from having to raid your retirement assets prematurely.

Assess the Adequacy of Your Portfolio

With five to 10 years to go until retirement, it’s time to take a close look at the viability of your portfolio. You can start with a simple guide: Would 3% or 4% of your portfolio be enough to get by on in year 1 of retirement, provided you augmented that amount with Social Security or a pension? For a more detailed check on your portfolio’s viability, use a tool like T. Rowe Price’s Retirement Income Calculator and/or Vanguard’s Retirement Nest Egg Calculator (or ask an advisor!).

Even if you’ve been a dedicated do-it-yourselfer throughout your investment career, this is also an ideal life stage to check in with a financial advisor to assess the viability of your plan, as well as the structure of your portfolio.

The good news is that if you have five to 10 years left until retirement, you still have some levers left to pull if it looks like you could have a shortfall; working past 70 may not be your only option.

Embark on a Preretirement Saving Sprint

Many parents spend their 40s and 50s multitasking on the saving front, stashing money away for both college for their kids and retirement (and often beating themselves up for not doing a great job on either). For those with college expenses receding in the rearview mirror, your final working years before retirement are an ideal time to give your all to retirement savings. Financial planning guru Michael Kitces notes that “the empty nest transition” provides an opportunity for people in their 50s and 60s to avert a looming retirement shortfall. He estimates that 15 years of saving 30% of income—no small feat, of course—before retirement can help bring a too-small retirement portfolio back from the brink.

It is still a good idea to favor tax-sheltered vehicles like IRAs and 401(k)s at this life stage, taking advantage of the additional catch-up contributions to retirement plans that are allowable for people who are post-age 50. Health savings accounts, which boast tax-free contributions, compounding, and withdrawals, can serve as additional funding vehicles for investors who have already maxed out their dedicated retirement accounts; catch-up contributions to these accounts are available to people over age 55.

Building assets in nonretirement accounts will also provide valuable flexibility once you begin drawing down from your accounts in retirement. By employing tax-efficient investments like equity index funds and exchange-traded funds, you can reduce the ongoing tax drag on your taxable portfolio. Moreover, you’ll be able to enjoy today’s relatively low (or even zero) capital gains rates when you withdraw your assets, giving you valuable flexibility to control your tax bill in retirement.

Build Your Stakes in Safe(r) Securities

As retirement approaches, it’s crucial to begin reducing risk in your investment portfolio. Holding a share of your portfolio in lower-risk assets like short- and intermediate-term high-quality bond funds won’t earn you much of a return. But such assets can help you reduce the damage from what retirement researchers call sequence of return risk—the possibility of encountering a lousy market early in your retirement years, when your portfolio value is at its highest. By holding enough assets in low-yielding but safer securities as retirement approaches, you can help safeguard against the need to withdraw from stocks when they’re depressed, thereby improving your portfolio’s long-run viability.

Yet even as pre-retirees need to build an adequate cushion in safer securities, it is crucial to not go overboard. People in their 50s and 60s still need plenty of stocks, as they likely have 30 or even 40 years ahead of them. Thus, they have an ample amount of time to absorb the higher volatility that comes along with stocks in exchange for the potential for higher returns.

Think About Withdrawal Sequencing

If you still have five to 10 years before retirement, it may seem premature to start thinking about which accounts you’ll draw upon when you begin spending from your portfolio. But doing so before retirement approaches can influence how to position each of those pools of money. The standard sequence for in-retirement withdrawals is taxable accounts first, followed by traditional tax-deferred, with Roth last in the queue. That argues for putting more liquid assets in your taxable accounts (which you have probably done anyway, assuming you’re holding your emergency fund there). Meanwhile, the most aggressive, highest-returning assets (usually stocks) likely belong in your Roth accounts. Because they will probably fall into the intermediate part of your distribution queue—and also compose the biggest share of your portfolio—your tax-deferred accounts can hold a blend of safer, income-producing securities like bonds as well as higher-returning, higher-risk assets like stocks.

 

Disclosure: The information provided here is general in nature and is shared for information purposes only; nothing herein should be interpreted as investment or tax advice. Any and all tax laws and/or specific tax rates referenced are subject to change. It should not be assumed that future performance of any specific investment or investment strategy will be profitable. Always consult your CPA/tax advisor/attorney (or reach out to us;) to discuss your specific situation. All investments carry the risk of loss, including the permanent loss of principal. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

 

 

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