Systematic withdrawals leave your principal invested throughout the entirety of your retirement. You withdraw only the income your investments produce from interest or dividends.
The major benefit of this approach is that you cannot run out of money in your retirement account. Unfortunately, your nest egg needs to be quite large to provide enough income for you to live on. Your income will also vary from year to year, depending on market performance. This again makes it difficult to create a financial plan. And if your investment gains don’t keep pace with inflation, you could see your buying power fall.
When you implement a buckets strategy, you have three separate sources of retirement income:
- A savings account that holds approximately three to five years’ worth of living expenses in cash
- Fixed-income securities, including government and corporate bonds or certificates of deposit
- Equity investments
With this approach you draw from your savings account to cover your expenses and refill that “bucket” with money from the other two. This enables you to avoid selling assets at a loss. When you refill your savings account, you do so either by selling stocks if the market is up or selling your fixed income securities if they’ve performed well. If both stocks and bonds are down, you continue to draw from your savings.
The major benefit of this approach is that you have more control over when you sell investments and can potentially grow your investment account balance over time. However, it can quickly become time-consuming, and you still need to use another method to determine how much you can afford to spend each year.
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