Hello, my name is Bruce, I am a self employed tax preparer (taxguy blog). I have just recently been getting more into writing about personal finance. Over the years I have picked up a lot more than I have practiced myself concerning ones finances. You may remember my interview here last month. Below I have put together a variety of thoughts from what I have picked up from others, both clients and other professionals (practicing Accountants and the like). I also want to think Living Almost Large for allowing me to spill this outlook here. I hope her vacation is well.
Recession and Retirement Thoughts:
As we enter an era of growing economic uncertainty, we could learn a lot from the last American generation to truly experience financial hardship. Those from the Great Depression.
When people my age – I’m 42 – or younger casually exchange words about worries of the recession or even this becoming a depression (and I’ve heard a lot of that talk lately), I think they might be playing parlor games. We have never lived through The Great Depression. Most of us probably have never even had an emotionally honest conversation with someone who did. I don’t think we’ve got the foggiest idea what we’re talking about when we talk about the global crash or jokingly recommend stockpiling food. I’m trying to find the experience of a critical generation, the last one in the United States to know what true economic hardship is like.
Why bother?
Because the future, the next 50 years or so, will be more uncertain than the past 50 years. Not as uncertain as the Great Depression, I believe (and hope), but unsettling enough. The promise of the United States has always been work hard, save hard and invest in education. In doing so, the future will be better for your children. The next 50 years could see that promise broken. The baby-boomer generation could mark a peak, at least an economic one, that members of the next generation/s won’t routinely surpass.
What we need is an emotional understanding of how it felt to live with uncertainty and still get on with life, and still trust that hard work had a point and still believe that the future will be a time worth living in. I think the experience of a generation that faced a greater degree of uncertainty can teach us something about how to face our own economic uncertainty.
Without that understanding, I believe we’re like the children so used to the sunlight that we tremble in scared delight at a passing cloud and yet fail to acknowledge the real power of the dark tornado on the horizon
With that said, these days the only sound that’s louder and more determined than the parade of this recession, is the shouts of know-it-alls spouting strategies that will supposedly safeguard your retirement in the face of the meltdown or downturn.
Some advocate waiting out the turbulence in cash equivalents like money funds or CDs. Others suggest investing in foreign markets, and still others recommend moving into market sectors that have historically held up well in recessions past.
This in the past has been called “paper-mache advice”. A term I enjoy. It looks solid at first glance, but doesn’t hold up to closer examination. The main problem is that these recommendations assume you can move your retirement money in and out of different assets with impeccable timing. In reality, you run the risk of selling at a low point and buying in at inflated prices. Throw in the cost of trading, and you can seriously eat away at your long-term returns.
So what can you do to prevent your nest egg from getting totally scrambled?
I offer some strategies for four different stages of retirement planning that will get you through a recession and a down market while still allowing you to prosper in the longer-term. I am not a financial adviser. What I mention here is only what I have picked up along the way.
But first I want to mention one thing that almost everyone should be doing in an iffy economic climate like this. While it’s always a good idea to have a cash reserve of three to six months’ living expenses to fall back on, it’s particularly crucial to have such a cushion now. Recessions dramatically heighten the risk of job loss. During the last recession of March to November 2001, for example, the United States lost 1.6 million jobs. Having an emergency reserve will reduce the chance that you’ll have to raid your IRA or other accounts and disrupt your nest egg’s growth if you’re laid off.
- Starting out
Your main focus at this point in your planning should be making sure you’re plowing enough money into your 401(k) and other retirement accounts, not following the ups and downs of the economy and the markets. CNN Money has a calculator were you can quickly tell whether you’re stashing away enough. Just plug in your age, annual salary and the amount you already have saved, and you’ll have it! You’ll get an estimate of the percentage of salary you need to put away to retire at age 67.
As for your investing strategy, your goal is to shoot almost exclusively for long-term capital growth. With retirement still 30 or 40 years away, you have plenty of time to recover from temporary losses, so there’s little sense in getting all worked up about them. Indeed, anyone who invested in a diversified portfolio of stocks at the market peak in January 1973 right before a bear market drove stock prices down nearly 50%, still earned an annualized 10.6% over the next 30 years.
I’m not saying you’ll see a repeat of those results. But stocks still offer your surest shot at long-term growth. So when you’re in your 20s and 30s, the best strategy is to devote about 90% of your retirement assets to solid low-cost mutual funds and, except to rebalance your portfolio annually, stick to that strategy whatever the market is doing. If you’re not up to creating your own portfolio, buy a target-date retirement fund with a date that roughly corresponds to the year you plan to retire, say, 2050 or 2060
2. Mid-career
After you’ve got a few years on the job, you probably have enough money sitting in 401(k)s and IRAs that a market downturn would trigger a big enough dollar loss to get your attention. Which means you could be even more prone to abandon your long-term strategy to avoid short-term pain. Resist that urge.
With 20 or more years to go until retirement, you still have lots of time to make up for any setbacks. So long-term growth of your savings is still your overriding investment goal, although with fewer years left in your career you’ll want to be slightly less aggressive than you were starting out. A mix of roughly 70% to 75% of your retirement savings in stocks and 25% to 30% bonds is generally appropriate if you’re in your 40s (this is where I am at) and early 50s.
You’ll also want to be sure you’re continuing to sock away enough bucks in your retirement accounts. By running a couple of different scenarios using different assumptions about your savings rate and investment strategy, you can get a much better handle on whether you’re on track and, if not, what you must do to make progress.
3. Late career
This is when you’re hitting the home stretch with about 10 or 15 years to go until retirement. Now that the kids are leaving the nest and you’re at or near your peak earning years, this is an excellent time to really rev up your savings effort – including making catch-up contributions to your 401(k) and IRA once you hit 50.
On the investment front, however, you face a delicate balancing act. You still need capital growth because you’re investing not just until you reach retirement, but for the years you’ll spend in retirement too. But you also need to protect the money you’ve accumulated so far. The way to balance those needs isn’t to try time moves in and out of cash, bonds or defensive sectors. Rather, it’s to settle on a mix of stocks and bonds that can give you a decent shot at long-term growth while providing enough shelter so that you’re not hammered when the market goes south. Generally, that means keeping roughly 60% to 65% of your portfolio in stocks and the rest in bonds.
You also need to begin thinking not just about growing and protecting your nest egg, but gauging how much retirement income it can realistically generate. By plugging in such information as your account balances, how much you’re saving, your estimated Social Security benefits and your investment mix, an online tool such as Fidelity’s Retirement Income Planner can help you estimate how much income you can reasonably count on in retirement. (The tool is free, although non-Fido customers must register.)
4. Retired
Now is the time when you really have to be careful about market slumps. That’s because the combination of investment losses and pulling money out of your retirement accounts for living expenses can so depress the value of your portfolio that it may not be able to recover sufficiently even when the market rebounds.
There are two ways to protect yourself against the risk of going through your money too soon. One is to scale back your stock holdings enough to allow for modest growth yet limit the damage from a slumping market. At age 65, a reasonable guide is to invest roughly half of your retirement accounts in stock funds and the remainder in bonds and cash. As you age, you should gradually scale back the amount devoted to equities, until it reaches 20% to 30% of your portfolio when you’re in your ’80s.
The second way to prevent a sinking market from sinking your retirement plans is to carefully manage withdrawals from your savings. If you want your nest egg to support you for 30 years to longer, you should draw no more than 4% to 4.5% or so of your account value initially and then increase the dollar amount of that withdrawal annually for inflation. This will roughly give you an 85% chance that your money will last you 30 years or more.
This is an estimate, though, not a guarantee. The odds will be lower if you’re hit with several years of subpar returns or a market downturn early in retirement. If the markets deliver solid gains, however, you could actually end up with a portfolio larger after 30 years than the one you started out with. But it could also mean that your desire for security prevented you from enjoying retirement as much as you might have.
So you need to be flexible. If the markets head south early in retirement, you might want to scale back your withdrawals a bit. On the other hand, if you see your portfolio’s value begin to balloon, you might be more generous to yourself. You can keep tabs on how long your portfolio might last by going to the T.Rowe Price Retirement Calculator.
My bottom line
The threat of a recession and a bear market wreaking havoc with your retirement plans can definitely be unnerving. But shifting assets around in a vain attempt to outguess the markets will likely create more problems than it will solve. A better approach is to create a sensible long-term plan along the lines I’ve outlined here and, aside from minor adjustments, stick to it. In the years after the crisis passes, you’ll be glad you did.
Keep in mind, this is just my opinion and I am not a financial adviser, I am just a tax preparer.
(thank you Bruce for outlining some strategies we can all use during these rough times. I think that sometimes panic sets in more than we’d like to admit and staying true on the course can be difficult.)





3 responses so far ↓
2 fengshui // Apr 5, 2009 at 12:53 am
This is all great advice, but it is hard to find advice for those of us who are new grads, who have minimal reserves, a pile of SLs waiting to be paid back, and few jobs on the horizon. I haven’t worked FT in 3 years. I’ve made enough while a student to pay my bills, and not save much. So, grauating during a recession is SCARY. I’ve had ONE job interview for an advanced practice nursing position. I have 2 more, and both are for jobs that I’m over qualified for, and don’t pay as much as I’d like. I’ll take what I can get, but it is depressing, I have to admit. So, I don’t have 6 months worth of savings, I don’t have a huge retirment to fall back on…. I can only hope to find a decent job.
It is hard to believe that new BS Nursing grads in my city are having to relocate. There are NO nursing jobs here. Not even in nursing homes. Despite what you hear, there is NOT a nursing shortage! Hospitals/ clinics are cutting positions due to lost revenue, and older nurses are waiting to retire because their retirement accounts are in the toilet.
My DH has been laid off from his family’s business for 3 months. No job bids. Milk prices are half of what they were last summer, so farmers are broke, and no one needs a new free stall barn, which is what the family business is.
3 LAL // Apr 21, 2009 at 10:37 am
I agree that right now it’s hard to be graduating. People are looking for jobs over a year, but working at minimum wage jobs to do something
Merry Christmas | taxguy - Dec 24, 2008
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