@SFBayDuck have we talked about Stephen Cassaday in here and his research that leads him to recommend 80-20 portfolio to most of his clients going into retirement? I saw his name and research referenced in another book I was reading and I can't really find it. I did find the following study (haven't read it all yet) that makes reference to Cassaday many times. The Executive Summary settles on a 60-40.
My portfolio is 75-25 and with cash that I don't really count (though I should) I'm probably closer to 70-30 heading into retirement. I think I will be able to stomach greater swings that most people and I want to take advantage of higher returns.
I don't think so, thanks for sharing! I just read the exec summary, but look forward to reading the whole study later.
This part jumped out at me:
The absolute differences in the probability of failure among glide paths for shorter distribution periods and lower real withdrawal rates (less aggressive scenarios) were minor. The absolute differences for longer distribution periods and higher real withdrawal rates (more aggressive scenarios) were considerable.
Well, yeah! If you don't spend any money then it doesn't matter what you do. If you want to be aggressive with your withdrawal rate, then portfolio construction becomes much more important.
Go to firecalc and change the portfolio assumptions. $1M with an aggressive 6% wr with spending $60K per year, 30 year timeframe:
- With their standard "Total Market" 75/25 - 54% success rate.
- Tweak it to 40% S&P, 35% SCV, and 25% treasuries (so still 75/25) - 69% success rate
I'm not saying that's even optimized, just a quick example.
I was listening to Kitces' podcast today with an RIA talking about using a 70% bonds/30% stocks portfolio for most of his clients, and essentially not selling equities and relying primarily on the bond income for retirement spending. Kitces kept asking him how it works, and about 25 minutes in he casually mentions most of his clients have withdrawal rates at 2% or below. Kind of important information to know! I'd stop listening (only half way through), but they're going to talk about closed end bond funds being used to generate higher yields, and I'd like to learn more about that.