It’s safe to invest entire life savings in stocks. But it can be safer!!! (3)
Read? It’s safe to invest entire life savings in stocks. But it can be safer!!! (2)
Read? I pay. I pay ...
What this woman said is true!
Let me pay.
Let me spend my money.
I don't want to leave too much money for my children!
May be some of us may have read it somewhere in the Web
"When we are in heaven, our money will still be in the bank."
"We don't seem to have enough money to spend; but, when we are gone; there's still lots of money not spent.
So how much is enough for us to last till our last day on Earth?
One way to find out whether we have enough assets and future cash flow to last us till the last day on Earth is to use The Balance Sheet method:
The Balance Sheet
A
more sophisticated way to measure the success of a retirement portfolio
is the one used by large pension plans. You compare what's called the
actuarial present value of your assets and liabilities. The twist:
Instead of looking at current assets and liabilities, you look at the
value of all your expenses in retirement as a lump sum as compared with
the value of all your assets as a lump sum.
Take
a married couple where the husband, 69, and the wife, 68, have an
after-tax portfolio of $1 million, an annual Social Security benefit of
$25,000 with a 2.5% cost-of-living adjustment, and a pension of $10,000 a
year with a 75% survivorship benefit and no inflation adjustment. That
income stream's present value would be $588,686. Add that to the value
of their portfolio ($1 million), and you get $1,588,686 in total assets,
in today's dollars.
On the liability
side, if the couple wants to spend $60,000 a year in retirement, after
taxes, with a 2.5% cost-of-living adjustment, they would need $1,402,156
in today's dollars to fund their living expenses.
In
essence, investors with a surplus are in good shape, while those with a
deficit don't have enough to pay their expenses in retirement. The
latter likely would have to adjust their savings, investments or
projected expenses.
Few advisers—just
15% in Russell's survey—use this method, but Mr. Greenshields suggests
that it works the best. A balance sheet uses today's market information
and today's interest rates as a starting point, he says.
"Our
take on this approach relies on using current interest-rate curves,
specifically Treasury yield curves to reflect a 'risk-free' rate. Those
are about the most robust predictions of the future you can get."
Uncle8888's Retirement Balance Sheet (Revised version)
this will not work out well primarily because discount rate is so subjective.
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