So you have spent most of your working life (Hopefully) accumulating retirement savings. Now you need to turn this nest egg into a stream of income. You will need a budget (See post # 3 make a budget) so you can determine how much income you will need in retirement. You will also need to know how much you will receive monthly in Social Security and Pension income. Subtract the SSI and Pension total from your budget and that is your goal minimum. Ideally you would be able to meet that goal with an interest stream coming from your portfolio. I will discuss how to do this below. You may also have to withdraw some of the principle in your portfolio if you can not meet your monthly goal from SSI, pension, and investment interest alone.
The conventional wisdom says you should not withdraw more than 4% of your portfolio a year. 4% plus an annual adjustment for inflation should allow you to retire at a ripe old age and not run out of money. In my opinion 3% is a safer rate and it allows you some leeway if medical bills or emergency home repairs rear their ugly heads.
To maintain tax efficiency you want to tap your taxable accounts first.
This allows the tax sheltered accounts to grow unfettered. Next you should tap your traditional IRA/401k so your Roth has a greater chance for tax free growth. If you are retiring early keep in mind that 401k/403b's can be tapped at age 55 and Roth/IRA's at age 59.5. This is one of the only reasons not to consolidate your accounts to Roth/IRAs to get lower fees. If you are danger of being bumped into a higher tax bracket you may want to tap your Roth IRA to keep your income below that bracket.
Let's get into making adjustments so you can start living on your retirement portfolio.
Bond ladders - A bond ladder is a collection of bonds that mature at a regular pace. To make a ladder divide your money by 5 and put the first 5th in a bond that matures in 5 years . The second 5th in a 4 year bond. The third 5th in a 3 year and so on. When the 1 year bond comes due put that money in a new 5 year bond. When the 2 year bond comes due put that money in a new 5 year bond and so on. After 5 years of this you will have five 5 year bonds. This is a bit of an oversimplification. You will most likely buy a basket of bonds. You can also spread the ladder over ten years if the yields work out better. The interest from this ladder should dump into another account such as a checking or money market account.
CD ladders - You can apply the same laddering technique to CD's. A CD ladder would be a little safer. So I might mix the two types to manage risk.
Annuities - There are so many types of annuities out there. Most of them are way too expensive and are a bad fit for 99% of investors. That said there may be room in your portfolio for an Immediate Annuity. Basically you give an insurer a lump sum and they pay you a monthly income for life. The fees from annuities can range from 1.5-6% which breaks my 1% rule. Plus annuities are insurance products so they are not currently regulated. So you will probably never know how much you are actually paying. If the insurer goes out of business you will loose your monthly check and the lump sum you already parted with. Too many downsides for me.
You will want to change your reinvestment settings. When you are working you should have any dividends reinvested into the same stock, ETF, or mutual fund to help compound your growth. In retirement you can redirect this dividend stream to another account such as a checking or money market account. The key is liquidity or immediate access.
To wrap this up, your income in retirement will come from the following sources.
- Social Security
- Pensions
- Interest stream from investments and ladders
- 3% of your total portfolio
b. Traditional IRA/401k/403b
c. Roth IRA/401k/403b
In that order. If you do not need to tap #3 or #4a-c you will be able to retire comfortably and pass on your nest egg! But if you do you tap all of the above you still have very good chance of retiring comfortably.
Sources
http://www.investopedia.com/terms/f/four-percent-rule.asp#axzz1sp3P7gff
www.ssa.gov