Houston Chronicle Sunday

Here’s what to do to put your nest egg back together again

- By Barry Ritholtz

You have been diligently working, saving and investing for retirement. You put in 40 or even 60 hours a week for almost 50 years. At long last, you get to kick back, play bridge, golf, fish — whatever pastimes you enjoy. You no longer have to trudge to the office or answer to the boss.

Then the pandemic hit. The economy starts tanking, a plunging stock market wipes out as much as a third of the value of your stock holdings, and bond yields disappear. Now what?

The good news is you have options. Start with these five things and your odds go up for a secure retirement.

1. Develop situationa­l awareness: This phrase comes from the early days of military aviation and was defined as “the perception of environmen­tal elements and events with respect to time and space, the comprehens­ion of their meaning, and the projection of their future status.” It was considered essential for pilots if they were to survive their encounters with enemy aircraft.

For investors, it means objectivel­y assessing the risks around you. Understand the range of potential outcomes for your investment­s. Learn what has happened historical­ly. Prioritize the most important inputs. Remove the nonsense in your informatio­n diet and focus on helpful, informativ­e and accurate sources. Steer clear of recession hysteria. Perhaps most important, recognize what is — and is not — within your control.

2. Have a “decumulati­on” strategy: How much of your assets will you draw down each year? This is a tough question that depends on many unknowns, including inflation, interest rates and bond yields, financial needs, even longevity. William Sharpe, winner of the 1990 Nobel prize for his work on a model that’s critical in making investment decisions, called the use of savings in retirement “the nastiest, hardest problem in finance.”

The key to successful­ly managing this is having a financial plan that recognizes the unknowns, then focusing on your goals.

Every plan should help you understand exactly what you can spend comfortabl­y each year. Without this kind of a strategy, you risk either failing to spend what you want and can, or worse, outliving your money. Working from a position of detailed knowledge instead of guesswork is the best way to have a stress-free retirement.

3. Understand risks of fixed income: The spread between the highest and lowest quality bonds always seems to tempt some investors. Don’t forgot the lesson of the 2008-09 financial crisis: Chasing yield is an expensive and foolish propositio­n. And just because the Federal Reserve now is buying low-quality bonds doesn’t mean you should.

Here’s how to think about debt. Bonds serve as ballast against your equities. They also produce income. But most important, they promise a return of — not on — capital.

Because fixed income should be part of any diversifie­d portfolio, it’s best to stick with investment-grade bonds. One can never go wrong with high quality corporate debt. I also like the Treasury’s inflation-protected securities, known as TIPS, as a modest hedge against inflation. Look for opportunit­ies in the municipal-bond markets, especially general obligation bonds — but only from entities that are not overly indebted. We probably won’t see too many state defaults, but you can expect some scary moments from places such as New Jersey and Illinois. If you’re near retirement, those are best avoided.

High-yield, or junk, debt can look appealing. But be careful. Look at what happened to the biggest high-yield exchangetr­aded funds the past few weeks: iShares iBoxx High Yield Corporate Bond ETF fell 22 percent and the SPDR Bloomberg Barclays High Yield Bond ETF fell 23 percent last month; both are still down more than 10 percent. Anyone who wanted to cash out or to rebalance their holdings was disappoint­ed. Is that little bit of extra return worth all the extra risk?

4. Reduce risk, cost and concentrat­ion in equities: The obvious trade-off with equities is that they provide higher expected returns than bonds because they carry more risk. That means not only the possibilit­y of not generating the returns you hoped for but stomach-churning volatility along the way. But because of generally rising longevity, you can’t afford to be without them.

The solution is simplicity: Replace all your individual stock holdings, expensive actively managed funds and alternativ­e investment­s with broadly diversifie­d, cheap index funds.

For those in or near retirement, the risk of holding any single stock is simply too high. As fabulous as Apple and Google and Amazon have been, they have had declines of as much as 80 percent at various times. Like those junk bonds, you do not want to have to tap into these when they have fallen that much.

5. Pivot from saving to spending: This is trickier than it sounds, especially during times of turmoil in the markets. The key to this is managing your mindset as well as your money.

We have seen recent retirees become paralyzed when it comes to spending their savings. Surprising­ly, underspend­ing can be a larger issue for retirees than living beyond their means.

Software programs can help. Every financial adviser uses these to determine how much can comfortabl­y be spent each year. You can also find retirement calculator­s online that do something very similar. Use them.

You traded decades of your life on the job in return for the chance to enjoy your retirement. Do it right and the trade-off will have been well worth it.

 ?? Dreamstime / TNS ?? You traded decades of your life on the job in return for the chance to enjoy your retirement. Do it right.
Dreamstime / TNS You traded decades of your life on the job in return for the chance to enjoy your retirement. Do it right.

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