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There’s A Little Bit of Good News for Americans Close to RetirementThere’s A Little Bit of Good News for Americans Close to Retirement

A new Morningstar report finds the outlook for stock and bond returns is improving.

Suzanne Woolley

December 13, 2022

2 Min Read
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(Bloomberg) -- Things are looking up for people who are close to retirement, according to a Morningstar report published Monday.

With the outlook improving for stocks and bonds next year, the percentage of a nest egg that retirees can safely start withdrawing from savings has increased to 3.8%, up from 3.3% in 2021, the report said. That may seem strange with inflation still high, recession fears growing, and many portfolios down double-digits this year. But with the market battered, there are better odds that future asset returns will improve, feeding into the rationale for a higher withdrawal rate.

Morningstar Investment Management’s 30-year return forecast for US large-cap growth stocks is now 9.65%, up from 6.25% in 2021. US investment-grade bonds are now expected to return about 4.5%, up from less than 3% in 2021’s return assumptions. The long-term inflation forecast has also risen, to 2.84% from 2.21% in 2021.

“The biggest lift to our withdrawal rate came from higher fixed-income yields and cash yields,” said Christine Benz, Morningstar’s director of personal finance.

The safe withdrawal rate may be higher, but there’s a rub. Rising interest rates pummeled both stocks and bonds in 2022, so while the new rate is higher, the dollar amount taken from savings is likely to be lower.

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The report uses the example of a retiree with an $800,000 portfolio split evenly between bonds and stocks. If that person used the 3.3% starting withdrawal rate recommended in 2021, she would have taken out $26,400 in her first year of retirement.

If the retiree waited until Oct. 1 to retire, however, her balance would have shrunk to $640,000. As a result, a starting 3.8% withdrawal would be $24,320. 

Morningstar’s outlook indicates that boosting the percentage of stocks in a portfolio above 50% won't have much impact on a retiree’s starting safe withdrawal rate. This is a shift from recent years, when equities have significantly outperformed bonds.

“Boosting equity allocations doesn’t get you a whole lot other than more volatility,” said Benz. In fact, the equity allocation could drop to 30% and the retiree could still spend the same amount, she said.

Revamped Rule

A longstanding personal finance rule of thumb set the starting percentage of assets a retiree could safely take from a portfolio at 4%. In subsequent years, that amount would be adjusted for inflation.

In reality, spending in retirement doesn’t follow a straight line. Generally, spending is higher in earlier retirement years and drops as people move into their mid-70s and 80s, putting aside what can be high end-of-life costs.

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Many financial advisers recommend using dynamic approaches that involve pulling more or less from savings depending on whether a portfolio had a good or bad year.

As well, most retirees don’t increase their spending in line with inflation, and dialing back cost-of-living adjustments can make a big difference. 

“If you don’t take the full inflation adjustment each year, you can get a higher payday early on,” said Benz. When Morningstar looked at what a safe starting rate would be if a retiree took out one percentage point less than inflation, it boosted the starting rate to 4.3%.

To contact the author of this story:
Suzanne Woolley in New York at [email protected]