Building Retirement Income Requires More Than Monte Carlo Wizardry

Analysis March 17, 2023 at 03:32 PM
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Financial advisors who focus on helping clients prepare for retirement are well aware of the role of Monte Carlo simulations and breakeven calculations, but many continue to underestimate the psychological and emotional factors that can disrupt even the best-laid income plans.

Particularly during times of market turmoil, retirees can have trouble seeing the bigger picture and accurately assessing the way different risks can affect their ability to achieve a stable "retirement paycheck." This is especially true with respect to the related risks of high persistent inflation and growing longevity.

That warning was shared by financial writer and certified financial planner Robert Powell on the latest episode of Morningstar's The Long View podcast, hosted by Christine Benz and Jeff Ptak. In addition to writing for the financial press, Powell is the director of retirement education at Sensible Money and is editor-in-chief of the Investments & Wealth Institute's Retirement Management Journal.

In Powell's extensive experience, successfully solving the retirement income puzzle demands all the various skills a good financial advisor should possess — mathematical prowess, emotional intelligence, clear communication skills and more. As Powell told Benz and Ptak, today's powerful financial planning software can help advisors and their clients create a framework for discussing income and making investment and withdrawal decisions, but that's only part of the job.

Also crucial to good long-term outcomes is the proactive management of expectations and the commitment to the plan, Powell says. Without these psychological elements, even the best mathematical modeling will fail to help retirees achieve and maintain the lifestyle they envision.

Confronting Fear Is a Central Part of Retirement Planning

Powell says financial advisors often tend to underestimate the degree of fear that their clients have when they are on the cusp of retirement. Even clients with substantial assets, which from a mathematical perspective should easily cover their retirement needs, still face significant degrees of discomfort and uncertainty as they contemplate life after work.

"People just have to get used to moving away from the saving stage of their life to the spending down phase," Powell says. "It's a psychological hurdle that one has to go over, because having a paycheck from working is nice, as is seeing your net worth grow."

Powell encourages advisors to start this conversation as early as possible with their clients — to get them thinking well in advance about the fact that retirement assets are meant to be spent. Yes, legacy goals are important, but so is enjoying the fruits of one's lifelong labor.

"It strikes me that today's advisors maybe rely too much on Monte Carlo, and they think it's enough to just tell a client that they have a 70%, 80% or 90% chance that their portfolio will survive to the end of their life," Powell says. "When a lot of clients get such information, what they actually think is that they would rather have a 100% chance."

In this sense, Powell agrees with fellow industry analysts who argue Monte Carlo simulations should be constantly revisited and put in a more informative context by financial advisors.

"What most people need to feel comfortable in retirement is a year-over-year reassessment," Powell says. "They need to be revisiting the question of whether they are still in good shape, or if they need to make adjustments in some form or fashion to their lifestyle. Oftentimes, they might even learn they can spend more, because things are turning out better than they thought."

On Building the Income Plan Amid High Inflation

When it comes to the actual income planning process, Powell says he is a fan of bond ladders and other forms of income laddering — and of bucket strategies and asset-liability matching. However, the current inflationary environment means advisors have to update their playbook.

"For many who are worried about inflation, it might be a case of where you shorten the first bucket, the safety bucket," Powell suggests. "Instead of maybe it being three or five years of income, maybe it's more like one to three years, so that you're putting less of your money in instruments that would suffer the most from higher inflation."

Should inflation remain elevated in the years ahead, Powell says, the second bucket might be tilted towards a mix of stocks and bonds that have inflation-hedging characteristics, and its time horizon might also be shortened. Finally, the third bucket meant to address long-term expenses may need to take on an added level of risk.

"Something else to consider is that spending, real spending, actually tends to decline in retirement," Powell says. "I think people sometimes fail to put inflation in the context of what their actual spending will be in retirement."

While inflation may be high today, Powell explains, it will likely moderate in the future. He says it is reasonable to forecast inflation returning to the ballpark of 3% over the course of the next several decades.

"So, income planning requires us to be mindful of the fact that this 3% inflation might not bite quite as much as we expect if people naturally reduce their spending as retirement progresses," Powell says. "We can all read the headlines, but we also need to think about how the bigger picture applies to a person's specific income plans."

The Potential Role of Annuities

Powell says the matter of whether American retirees are underutilizing annuities and other forms of income insurance is a "interesting question."

"My answer to the question is, they may be, especially in certain segments of the population," Powell says. "I once had the luxury of interviewing Bob Merton, a Nobel Prize winner, who said that for the vast majority of middle Americans, annuities and reverse mortgages will be the two products that allow them to have a standard of living that they desire in retirement."

To be more specific, Powell says, there are strong arguments to be made that middle-income Americans could benefit from greater use of guaranteed income annuities.

"For the highest-income, highest-net-worth folks in the world, they may not be utilized at all, but they may not need to be, because folks who are in the upper-income quintiles and the upper-net-worth quintiles have probably more than enough assets to fund their desired standard of living," Powell says. "They can also probably handle more sequence of return risk, perhaps."

For people who might be in the lowest-income quintiles, Powell adds, Social Security is their annuity.

"The research tends to suggest that, for this group, Social Security tends to replace up to 80% or so of their preretirement income," Powell says. "So, there's no big need for an annuity there."

Powell says a big part of the issue is that many Americans preparing for retirement lack a solid understanding of these products and how they are used — and how they're sold.

"As you know, people tend not to buy annuities if someone isn't in front of them proactively trying to sell them an annuity," Powell says. "And so, people still have a distrust of people who are selling these annuities, because there is often a commission associated with the sale of those products. It's also really hard to understand whether what you might need is a fixed annuity or a single-premium annuity, for example, or maybe you need a variable annuity. It goes on and on."

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