Can I hold 5X expenses in cash bucket and the rest in equity after retirement? (2024)

Last Updated on October 11, 2023 at 8:31 am

Recently, a reader shared his post-retirement investment strategy: Hold expenses for five years in a cash bucket (savings funds + liquid fund + money market funds + safe bank fixed deposits) at all times during retirement and invest the rest in equity!

I do not share the reader’s enthusiasm and would prefer the approach adopted by the freefincal robo advisory tool. That is way too much equity exposure, and a bad sequence of returns could result in huge withdrawals, and the corpus could quickly deplete. Still, it got me thinking: will it work if I hold a significantly more conservative portfolio (in addition to 5X expenses at all times)?

Let us try out this simple example.

  • Annual expenses in the first year of retirement: Rs. 7.2 lakhs (Rs. 60K a month)
  • Years in retirement: 30
  • Inflation 6%
  • Overall return expected from the retirement corpus after tax: 6%

If we first consider the usual simplistic way of retirement planning, where the expenses for the year (inflating at 6%) are first withdrawn from the corpus and the remaining corpus grows at 6%.

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The corpus needed for this is Rs. 2.16 Crores. This is 30 times the first year’s expenses. This corresponds to a withdrawal rate of 3.33% (first year’s expense divided by initial corpus).

Now, we shall assume an income or cash bucket for the same inputs as above. At the start of each year in retirement, this bucket will hold expenses for the next four years, plus that year’s expenses will also be in cash. So, a total of five year’s expenses in cash at the start of each retirement year.

For example, at the start of the first year, this bucket will hold the expenses for the next four years (years 2,3,4 and 5). The first year’s expense is available separately. At the end of the first year (barring any sudden expenses), the bucket will hold expenses for the next four years (2,3,4,5).

At the start of the second year, we remove the second year’s expenses for spending and add the six year’s expenses. So, the bucket now holds expenses for year’s 3,4,5,6 (the next four years).

At the start of the third year, we remove the third year’s expenses for spending and add the seventh year’s expenses. So, the bucket now holds expenses for year’s 4,5,6,7 (the next four years). And so on, resulting in this kind of cash flow.

The corpus goes to zero by year 26 (four years earlier). The expenses for those four years are taken from the income bucket, which goes to zero by year 30. The corpus necessary for this approach is Rs. 2.67 Crores – about 52 lakhs more than the first approach without a bucket! This corresponds to 37.2X corpus or a withdrawal rate of 2.69%. This is significantly more comfortable.

Notice the huge gap between the amount in the income bucket and the expenses. This grows for most of retirement and comes down only in the last four years. This gap acts as a solid emergency buffer for the retiree.

The reader must appreciate that the rest of the corpus is expected to grow only at the rate of 6% post-tax. This could mean an equity exposure of not more than 20-30%, which is quite conservative, provided the adequate corpus is available to begin with. We shall study this method more rigorously in future.

Note: This method still heavily depends on a sequence of returns risk. If there is a poor stretch of returns, especially at the start of retirement, the corpus could deplete faster than expected. We believe our Robo Advisory Tool presents a more robust way to handle this with a separate income bucket for the first 15 years of retirement without any dependence on the rest of the buckets. For an example, see Retirement plan review: Am I on track to retire by 50?

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Can I hold 5X expenses in cash bucket and the rest in equity after retirement? (2024)

FAQs

What is the 3 bucket strategy for retirement? ›

The buckets are divided based on when you'll need the money: short-term, medium-term, and long-term. The short-term bucket has easily accessible money, the medium-term bucket has money in things that generate income, and the long-term bucket has money in things that grow over time.

What is the best asset allocation for retirement? ›

For example:
  • You can consider investing heavily in stocks if you're younger than 50 and saving for retirement. ...
  • As you reach your 50s, consider allocating 60% of your portfolio to stocks and 40% to bonds. ...
  • Once you're retired, you may prefer a more conservative allocation of 50% in stocks and 50% in bonds.

How much cash should a retiree hold? ›

You generally want to keep a year or two's worth of living expenses in cash in retirement. Not having enough cash could force you to sell your investments at a loss, while stockpiling too much cash could cause you to miss out on further investment growth.

What should a 60 year old asset allocation be? ›

According to this principle, individuals should hold a percentage of stocks equal to 100 minus their age. So, for a typical 60-year-old, 40% of the portfolio should be equities. The rest would comprise high-grade bonds, government debt, and other relatively safe assets.

What is the 4 rule in retirement? ›

The 4% rule limits annual withdrawals from your retirement accounts to 4% of the total balance in your first year of retirement. That means if you retire with $1 million saved, you'd take out $40,000. According to the rule, this amount is safe enough that you won't risk running out of money during a 30-year retirement.

What are the three big mistakes when it comes to retirement planning? ›

Here are some of the most common retirement planning mistakes: Not getting an early start. Reducing your savings over time. Agreeing to support adult children.

What is the 95% rule retirement? ›

Under the Rule of 95 members can retire when their age plus their years of service equal 95, provided that they are at least 62 years old. For example, a member who is 62 years old could retire with 33 years of service rather than waiting until their schedule based eligibility date (62 + 33 = 95).

What is the 5 percent rule for retirement? ›

We did the math—looking at history and simulating many potential outcomes—and landed on this: For a high degree of confidence that you can cover a consistent amount of expenses in retirement (i.e., it should work 90% of the time), aim to withdraw no more than 4% to 5% of your savings in the first year of retirement, ...

What is the asset allocation for a 65 year old retiree? ›

For most retirees, investment advisors recommend low-risk asset allocations around the following proportions: Age 65 – 70: 40% – 50% of your portfolio. Age 70 – 75: 50% – 60% of your portfolio. Age 75+: 60% – 70% of your portfolio, with an emphasis on cash-like products like certificates of deposit.

What is the $1000 a month rule for retirement? ›

The $1,000-a-month retirement rule says that you should save $240,000 for every $1,000 of monthly income you'll need in retirement. So, if you anticipate a $4,000 monthly budget when you retire, you should save $960,000 ($240,000 * 4).

How much cash does the average 70 year old have? ›

How much does the average 70-year-old have in savings? Just shy of $500,000, according to the Federal Reserve. The better question, however, may be whether that's enough for a 70-year-old to live on in retirement so that you can align your budget accordingly.

How much money does the average retiree have in the bank? ›

Average retirement savings balance by age
Age groupAverage retirement savings balance amount
45-54$313,220.
55-64$537,560.
65-74$609,230.
75 and older$462,4100.
2 more rows
May 7, 2024

Should a 70 year old be in the stock market? ›

Conventional wisdom holds that when you hit your 70s, you should adjust your investment portfolio so it leans heavily toward low-risk bonds and cash accounts and away from higher-risk stocks and mutual funds. That strategy still has merit, according to many financial advisors.

What is the best portfolio balance by age? ›

For example, if you're 30, you should keep 70% of your portfolio in stocks. If you're 70, you should keep 30% of your portfolio in stocks. However, with Americans living longer and longer, many financial planners are now recommending that the rule should be closer to 110 or 120 minus your age.

Should retirees get out of the stock market? ›

Yes, and Here's How. You might have switched to the spending phase of your retirement plan, but that doesn't mean you shouldn't invest any longer, or plan for market volatility. Investing is a smart financial move to make regardless of what stage you're at in life.

What is the three bucket rule? ›

Divide your assets into buckets for the short, medium, and long term. Each bucket has a risk/reward profile to match the time horizon. Periodically weigh the contents of your buckets versus your upcoming needs and “pour” your money from bucket to bucket.

What is the three bucket model? ›

The three buckets model is a useful tool that supports you to identify potential for something to go wrong, enabling you to enhance safe practice. The potential for a clinical situation to become 'risky' is influenced by what the model calls 'the three buckets' - self, context and task.

What are the three tax buckets? ›

Introduction. Most taxes can be divided into three buckets: taxes on what you earn, taxes on what you buy, and taxes on what you own. It's important to remember that every dollar you pay in taxes starts as a dollar earned as income.

What is the 3 bucket budget? ›

The three budgeting buckets we focus on are the primary checking account, savings and investments, and discretionary funds. Let's take a closer look at each bucket.

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