Category: Personal Finance

  • Those pensions sure were nice…

    You may have detected a common theme in our posts so far: How do you transform financial assets into a return stream you can live on? Basically every retiree’s (and some non-retiree’s) problem.

    In essence, something resembling a pension, i.e., good for life and increasing with inflation.

    Click here for a discussion of the different options.

  • ‘Safe’ Withdrawal Rates

    • The starting point is the standard retirement problem: given a certain amount of financial assets, how much can you spend each year without running out in your lifetime?
    • The simplest type of solution takes the following form:
      • Start with x% of your assets, the ‘initial safe withdrawal rate’
      • Translate it to a dollar amount
      • Then, every year, grow that dollar amount with inflation
    • But what is the initial withdrawal rate x? The grandfather (or grandmother?) of answers is the famous 4% rule
    • Over the years, the financial advice industry has moved away from it, which is good – but where did they land?
    • I reviewed the major providers (Vanguard, Fidelity, Charles Schwab etc.) to see what they say and if there is a consensus within the industry
    • Only some providers answer the question directly (others want you to talk to them for a customized solution). Here is a summary

    Safe Withdrawal Rate in % by Time Horizon as of June ’25

    HorizonC. SchwabM.StarFidelityJ.P.Morgan
    1010.39.7
    157.16.7
    205.4-5.65.2
    254.4-4.74.3
    303.8-4.13.73.7
    353.43.43.0-4.0
    403.13.2
    453.0
    502.9

    Notes: C. Schwab = Charles Schwab as of April 2025. M.Star = Morningstar as of January 2025. Fidelity: using their Retirement Planning Tool in June 2025. J.P. Morgan: from their Guide to Retirement 2025

    • A few takeaways:
      • The major providers are more or less in agreement – that’s reassuring. MorningStar and Fidelity are very slightly more conservative than Charles Schwab
      • Note that for very long horizons, the safe withdrawal rate is closer to 3% than 4%. Those who think about early retirement should take this into account
      • Even at a 30-year horizon (a prudent number for many 65-year-olds), 4% is now considered too aggressive

    Important: Your ‘safe spending rate’ is not the same is your safe withdrawal rate. Also, don’t take ‘safe’ too literally. See here for important notes and caveats.

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