We're aware that some users are experiencing technical issues which the team are working to resolve. Thank you for your patience.
📨 Have you signed up to the Forum's new Email Digest yet? Get a selection of trending threads sent straight to your inbox daily, weekly or monthly!

4% SWR rule….well, rules are there to be broken!

Options
1235

Comments

  • FIREDreamer
    FIREDreamer Posts: 978 Forumite
    500 Posts Second Anniversary Name Dropper Photogenic
    Ibrahim5 said:
    Must make a big difference if you have an IFA living off your investments too. Porsches and golf clubs don't come cheap.
    😴😴😴😴😴😴😴

    💤💤💤💤💤💤💤
  • Hoenir
    Hoenir Posts: 7,410 Forumite
    1,000 Posts First Anniversary Name Dropper
    Ibrahim5 said:
    Must make a big difference if you have an IFA living off your investments too. Porsches and golf clubs don't come cheap.
    US management teams do far far better with their own executive share schemes. 
  • Cobbler_tone
    Cobbler_tone Posts: 977 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 500 Posts Name Dropper Combo Breaker
    edited 23 January at 4:57PM
    Ibrahim5 said:
    Must make a big difference if you have an IFA living off your investments too. Porsches and golf clubs don't come cheap.
    The last IFA I used (way back) had a Porsche, fancy gaff and reminded me of Saul Goodman. I reckon he had a lot of life policies signed up taking a few quid a month...before most of us self served on the internet. Good old boy, liked the sound of his own voice but a character.
    Just checked and (the firm) is still going strong. Looks like his son (who looks in his 50's) has taken over the mantle using his name with just an office manager.
    I don't resent anyone who knows their area of expertise and makes a good living. 
  • Albermarle
    Albermarle Posts: 27,606 Forumite
    10,000 Posts Seventh Anniversary Name Dropper
    Systematic methods of drawdown from a portfolio can possibly be split into three broad categories

    1) Constant inflation adjusted withdrawals ('SWR'): The amount withdrawn is known (the infamous '4%'), but the length of time over which it can be sustained is unknown and unknowable.
    2) Percentage of portfolio withdrawals (constant percentage, VPW, ABW): The amount withdrawn is unknown in advance, but it will never go to zero.
    3) Hybrid approaches (Guyton-Klinger, Vanguard dynamic, and many of the ones tested in McClung's book - referred to upthread). These have properties somewhere between the two - the variability of withdrawals is less and there is a reduced chance of portfolio exhaustion.

    I've posted the following figure before. In the top panel the real (i.e, inflation adjusted) portfolio value* and in the lower panel the real withdrawal rate are plotted as a function of time for 5 different withdrawal strategies (CIAW=constant inflation adjusted withdrawals, GK=Guyton-Klinger, VG=vanguard dynamic, CP=constant percentage of portfolio, and MX is a 50/50 mix of CIAW and CP) for a single UK historical retirement case starting in 1937 (one of the worst for UK retirees).



    The constant inflation adjusted strategy provided a constant inflation adjusted income until the portfolio ran out of money just under 20 years into retirement. The constant percentage of portfolio strategy delivered a highly variable income (ranging from 4% at the start to a minimum of 1.4% after about 20 years) but never ran out of money (in real terms, after 35 years, the portfolio was still worth about 50% of the initial value), while the hybrid methods (GK, VG, and MX) fell somewhere between CIAW and CP both in terms of the income delivered and the portfolio remaining after 35 years.

    From a psychological point of view, the retiree following the SWR (CIAW) approach would have needed strong nerves to continue to take a constant real amount as the value of the portfolio declined (in real terms) to 50% after four years (resulting in a withdrawal of 8% of the remaining portfolio) and to 20% after 13 years (resulting in a withdrawal of 20% of the remaining portfolio). The retirement wouldn't have been nice for the other strategies, but at least withdrawals would have been cut in response to the drops in portfolio value over the first 20 years or so.

    Which of these strategies is 'best' rather depends on the consequences of either variable income or complete portfolio exhaustion. My own preference has been to secure enough income floor in guaranteed income (DB pension and, eventually, SP - I haven't needed to add a RPI annuity) not to have to worry about variability in portfolio income, so I have ended up using ABW (which is a percentage of portfolio approach where the percentage increases with time, see https://www.bogleheads.org/wiki/Amortization_based_withdrawal of which, VPW is a better known case, see https://www.bogleheads.org/wiki/Variable_percentage_withdrawal ).



    * A portfolio of 60% UK stocks, 20% UK long bonds, and 20% UK cash was used as an illustration. Asset returns and UK inflation from macrohistory.net. While the details would be different for a different portfolio, the broad conclusions would not.

    Interesting that of the Hybrid approaches, the simplest one 'MX- a 50:50 split of CIPW and CP' performs better overall taking into account both graphs, than the supposedly more sophisticated GK and VD approaches.
    Of course over a different period the result could be different, but just going 50:50 could be enough to largely cover all bases and easier to work out !
  • Hoenir
    Hoenir Posts: 7,410 Forumite
    1,000 Posts First Anniversary Name Dropper
    edited 23 January at 5:15PM

    Of course over a different period the result could be different, but just going 50:50 could be enough to largely cover all bases and easier to work out !
    Foundation of Lars Kroijer's book over a decade ago

    Investing Demystified: How to Invest Without Speculation and Sleepless Nights


    Funny how conversations go full circle.  
    Lars Kroijer being a hedge fund manager that failed in the GFC and effectively said why bother.  
  • Bostonerimus1
    Bostonerimus1 Posts: 1,381 Forumite
    1,000 Posts First Anniversary Name Dropper
    edited 23 January at 5:25PM
    michaels said:
    Systematic methods of drawdown from a portfolio can possibly be split into three broad categories



    * A portfolio of 60% UK stocks, 20% UK long bonds, and 20% UK cash was used as an illustration. Asset returns and UK inflation from macrohistory.net. While the details would be different for a different portfolio, the broad conclusions would not.

    Do you know what the SWR was for this dataset?  It is worth fully considering that even the least variable withdrawal method required a halving of real income (that £1m pot and retirement at 60 quickly becomes a real income of 20k pa rather than the expected 40k) for large parts of the retirement journey - and this was for a 4% swr which many are saying is too conservative!
    The 30 year MSWR (i.e., zero failures) was about 3.0% (about 3.3% for a 10% failure rate). It certainly fits with the idea of a ballpark 3.0 to 3.5% for the UK.

    Either the complete failure (if the actual SWR turns out to be lower than the initial guess) or a 50% drop in real income with variable strategies is why I think flooring is so important. For example, taking your example of a £1m portfolio. With two state pensions (a total of about £20k for simplicity), the income from the portfolio dropping from £40k to £20k with a variable strategy means the overall income drops from £60k to £40k which would unpleasant for those expecting a lifestyle needing £60k per year, but not completely disastrous.

    An RPI annuity (currently about 4% payout for joint life, 100% benefits, 65yo - edit: about 3.4% at 60yo) bought with half the portfolio would, together with the SP, give a floor of about £40k, with the remaining half of the portfolio providing an initial £20k dropping to £10k, i.e., the overall income of £60k dropping to £50k with is far more manageable. Of course in a good retirement, the purchase of the annuity will reduce the upside potential, but (again in my view), good retirements can look after themselves!


    Soon after my divorce I started running retirement scenarios as the financial upheaval made me reassess everything. Up to that point I/we had just been ploughing money into a 60/40 index fund portfolio, so I/we were doing lots of the stuff required, but with little long term planning. I was uncomfortable with the probability distributions produced by the various simulations and wanted to guarantee my basic retirement income. This worry became acute after the 2007-2008 crash. So I set myself the goal of never needing to use any DC accumulations. I had both US social security and UK SP coming, but wanted something that would allow me to retire early and so I bought a rental property and took a job with a DB pension that could start at age 55 and continued to invest in DC and general accounts using low cost index funds; I believe that keeping things cheap and simple and not paying for advice from financial advisors has been the backbone of my success. Now that I'm retired I live off my DB pension and rental income and have the US and UK state pensions still to come. Because my DC drawdown is 0% I leave it mostly in index equity funds and simply don't worry about it at all because drawdown is only of academic interest. 

    So I have used a fairly extreme hybrid approach to retirement income and it's why I advocate a mix of things like annuities for safety and stocks and bonds for growth and income. Also a long term horizon is useful so you can do things like paying off mortgages that reduce your need for income in retirement and take pressure off your drawdown investments. You need to solve the retirement income puzzle from both the spending and income generation perspectives.
    And so we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.
  • michaels
    michaels Posts: 29,083 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Photogenic Name Dropper
    michaels said:
    Systematic methods of drawdown from a portfolio can possibly be split into three broad categories



    * A portfolio of 60% UK stocks, 20% UK long bonds, and 20% UK cash was used as an illustration. Asset returns and UK inflation from macrohistory.net. While the details would be different for a different portfolio, the broad conclusions would not.

    Do you know what the SWR was for this dataset?  It is worth fully considering that even the least variable withdrawal method required a halving of real income (that £1m pot and retirement at 60 quickly becomes a real income of 20k pa rather than the expected 40k) for large parts of the retirement journey - and this was for a 4% swr which many are saying is too conservative!
    The 30 year MSWR (i.e., zero failures) was about 3.0% (about 3.3% for a 10% failure rate). It certainly fits with the idea of a ballpark 3.0 to 3.5% for the UK.

    Either the complete failure (if the actual SWR turns out to be lower than the initial guess) or a 50% drop in real income with variable strategies is why I think flooring is so important. For example, taking your example of a £1m portfolio. With two state pensions (a total of about £20k for simplicity), the income from the portfolio dropping from £40k to £20k with a variable strategy means the overall income drops from £60k to £40k which would unpleasant for those expecting a lifestyle needing £60k per year, but not completely disastrous.

    An RPI annuity (currently about 4% payout for joint life, 100% benefits, 65yo - edit: about 3.4% at 60yo) bought with half the portfolio would, together with the SP, give a floor of about £40k, with the remaining half of the portfolio providing an initial £20k dropping to £10k, i.e., the overall income of £60k dropping to £50k with is far more manageable. Of course in a good retirement, the purchase of the annuity will reduce the upside potential, but (again in my view), good retirements can look after themselves!


    So basically an annuity currently gives a higher certain income than a 100% historic success SWR so is definitely a no brainer for an income floor
    I think....
  • Bostonerimus1
    Bostonerimus1 Posts: 1,381 Forumite
    1,000 Posts First Anniversary Name Dropper
    edited 23 January at 8:14PM
    michaels said:
    michaels said:
    Systematic methods of drawdown from a portfolio can possibly be split into three broad categories



    * A portfolio of 60% UK stocks, 20% UK long bonds, and 20% UK cash was used as an illustration. Asset returns and UK inflation from macrohistory.net. While the details would be different for a different portfolio, the broad conclusions would not.

    Do you know what the SWR was for this dataset?  It is worth fully considering that even the least variable withdrawal method required a halving of real income (that £1m pot and retirement at 60 quickly becomes a real income of 20k pa rather than the expected 40k) for large parts of the retirement journey - and this was for a 4% swr which many are saying is too conservative!
    The 30 year MSWR (i.e., zero failures) was about 3.0% (about 3.3% for a 10% failure rate). It certainly fits with the idea of a ballpark 3.0 to 3.5% for the UK.

    Either the complete failure (if the actual SWR turns out to be lower than the initial guess) or a 50% drop in real income with variable strategies is why I think flooring is so important. For example, taking your example of a £1m portfolio. With two state pensions (a total of about £20k for simplicity), the income from the portfolio dropping from £40k to £20k with a variable strategy means the overall income drops from £60k to £40k which would unpleasant for those expecting a lifestyle needing £60k per year, but not completely disastrous.

    An RPI annuity (currently about 4% payout for joint life, 100% benefits, 65yo - edit: about 3.4% at 60yo) bought with half the portfolio would, together with the SP, give a floor of about £40k, with the remaining half of the portfolio providing an initial £20k dropping to £10k, i.e., the overall income of £60k dropping to £50k with is far more manageable. Of course in a good retirement, the purchase of the annuity will reduce the upside potential, but (again in my view), good retirements can look after themselves!


    So basically an annuity currently gives a higher certain income than a 100% historic success SWR so is definitely a no brainer for an income floor
    Not necessarily as many of those 100% success scenarios will give you and your heirs access to significant capital as well as income.
    And so we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.
  • DT2001
    DT2001 Posts: 819 Forumite
    Sixth Anniversary 500 Posts Name Dropper
    michaels said:
    michaels said:
    Systematic methods of drawdown from a portfolio can possibly be split into three broad categories



    * A portfolio of 60% UK stocks, 20% UK long bonds, and 20% UK cash was used as an illustration. Asset returns and UK inflation from macrohistory.net. While the details would be different for a different portfolio, the broad conclusions would not.

    Do you know what the SWR was for this dataset?  It is worth fully considering that even the least variable withdrawal method required a halving of real income (that £1m pot and retirement at 60 quickly becomes a real income of 20k pa rather than the expected 40k) for large parts of the retirement journey - and this was for a 4% swr which many are saying is too conservative!
    The 30 year MSWR (i.e., zero failures) was about 3.0% (about 3.3% for a 10% failure rate). It certainly fits with the idea of a ballpark 3.0 to 3.5% for the UK.

    Either the complete failure (if the actual SWR turns out to be lower than the initial guess) or a 50% drop in real income with variable strategies is why I think flooring is so important. For example, taking your example of a £1m portfolio. With two state pensions (a total of about £20k for simplicity), the income from the portfolio dropping from £40k to £20k with a variable strategy means the overall income drops from £60k to £40k which would unpleasant for those expecting a lifestyle needing £60k per year, but not completely disastrous.

    An RPI annuity (currently about 4% payout for joint life, 100% benefits, 65yo - edit: about 3.4% at 60yo) bought with half the portfolio would, together with the SP, give a floor of about £40k, with the remaining half of the portfolio providing an initial £20k dropping to £10k, i.e., the overall income of £60k dropping to £50k with is far more manageable. Of course in a good retirement, the purchase of the annuity will reduce the upside potential, but (again in my view), good retirements can look after themselves!


    So basically an annuity currently gives a higher certain income than a 100% historic success SWR so is definitely a no brainer for an income floor
    Not necessarily as many of those 100% success scenarios will give you and your heirs access to significant capital as well as income.
    Is the purpose of your pension fund to provide for YOUR retirement or part of a combined retirement/inheritance plan? If it is the former then an annuity can give you certainty and you have, as another regular wise poster says, won the game and there is no need to continue to ‘play’.
  • DT2001
    DT2001 Posts: 819 Forumite
    Sixth Anniversary 500 Posts Name Dropper
    michaels said:
    Systematic methods of drawdown from a portfolio can possibly be split into three broad categories



    * A portfolio of 60% UK stocks, 20% UK long bonds, and 20% UK cash was used as an illustration. Asset returns and UK inflation from macrohistory.net. While the details would be different for a different portfolio, the broad conclusions would not.

    Do you know what the SWR was for this dataset?  It is worth fully considering that even the least variable withdrawal method required a halving of real income (that £1m pot and retirement at 60 quickly becomes a real income of 20k pa rather than the expected 40k) for large parts of the retirement journey - and this was for a 4% swr which many are saying is too conservative!
    The 30 year MSWR (i.e., zero failures) was about 3.0% (about 3.3% for a 10% failure rate). It certainly fits with the idea of a ballpark 3.0 to 3.5% for the UK.

    Either the complete failure (if the actual SWR turns out to be lower than the initial guess) or a 50% drop in real income with variable strategies is why I think flooring is so important. For example, taking your example of a £1m portfolio. With two state pensions (a total of about £20k for simplicity), the income from the portfolio dropping from £40k to £20k with a variable strategy means the overall income drops from £60k to £40k which would unpleasant for those expecting a lifestyle needing £60k per year, but not completely disastrous.

    An RPI annuity (currently about 4% payout for joint life, 100% benefits, 65yo - edit: about 3.4% at 60yo) bought with half the portfolio would, together with the SP, give a floor of about £40k, with the remaining half of the portfolio providing an initial £20k dropping to £10k, i.e., the overall income of £60k dropping to £50k with is far more manageable. Of course in a good retirement, the purchase of the annuity will reduce the upside potential, but (again in my view), good retirements can look after themselves!


    Soon after my divorce I started running retirement scenarios as the financial upheaval made me reassess everything. Up to that point I/we had just been ploughing money into a 60/40 index fund portfolio, so I/we were doing lots of the stuff required, but with little long term planning. I was uncomfortable with the probability distributions produced by the various simulations and wanted to guarantee my basic retirement income. This worry became acute after the 2007-2008 crash. So I set myself the goal of never needing to use any DC accumulations. I had both US social security and UK SP coming, but wanted something that would allow me to retire early and so I bought a rental property and took a job with a DB pension that could start at age 55 and continued to invest in DC and general accounts using low cost index funds; I believe that keeping things cheap and simple and not paying for advice from financial advisors has been the backbone of my success. Now that I'm retired I live off my DB pension and rental income and have the US and UK state pensions still to come. Because my DC drawdown is 0% I leave it mostly in index equity funds and simply don't worry about it at all because drawdown is only of academic interest. 

    So I have used a fairly extreme hybrid approach to retirement income and it's why I advocate a mix of things like annuities for safety and stocks and bonds for growth and income. Also a long term horizon is useful so you can do things like paying off mortgages that reduce your need for income in retirement and take pressure off your drawdown investments. You need to solve the retirement income puzzle from both the spending and income generation perspectives.
    With hindsight how would you have changed your approach to retirement? You have US and U.K. state pensions to come and a DC pension which you do not use so could you have retired even earlier with a bond/gilt/deposit ladder to avoid market fluctuations?
    I like your guaranteed income base and am in the fortunate position to have at least matched ‘necessary’ expenditure with guaranteed income from a relatively early point in my plan but was aiming to draw variably from our investments for ‘desired/luxury’ spend 
Meet your Ambassadors

🚀 Getting Started

Hi new member!

Our Getting Started Guide will help you get the most out of the Forum

Categories

  • All Categories
  • 350.6K Banking & Borrowing
  • 253K Reduce Debt & Boost Income
  • 453.4K Spending & Discounts
  • 243.6K Work, Benefits & Business
  • 598.4K Mortgages, Homes & Bills
  • 176.8K Life & Family
  • 256.8K Travel & Transport
  • 1.5M Hobbies & Leisure
  • 16.1K Discuss & Feedback
  • 37.6K Read-Only Boards

Is this how you want to be seen?

We see you are using a default avatar. It takes only a few seconds to pick a picture.