Los Angeles Times

Retired? Shift from saving to spending

That advice may sound appealing, but it’s hard to end decades of sacrifice.

- By Suzanne Woolley Woolley writes for Bloomberg.

With so much advice out there about saving money, being encouraged to spend could sound a little weird. But that’s what some financial services firms are telling retirees to do — to make a New Year’s resolution to use more of those dollars they’ve been socking away.

With about 10,000 baby boomers turning 65 every day, more attention is being paid to “decumulati­on” strategies — the process of systematic­ally drawing down all that money you’ve saved over the years.

In theory, that should be a pleasant prospect. In reality, it’s hard to flip a mental switch after decades of sacrifice. Moreover, spending more money when less is coming in can be stressful.

“When we speak about spending resolution­s, we usually speak about how to encourage people to spend less,” said Meir Statman, a behavioral finance professor at Santa Clara University. “This is right for most young people. But with many older people, the problem is too little spending because of a reluctance to dip into capital.”

A good chunk of retired Americans are financiall­y situated to live it up a bit more. Research by the Employee Benefit Research Institute and BlackRock Retirement Institute found that, on average, a significan­t portion of retirees at all levels of wealth weren’t spending down much of their non-housing assets even well into retirement.

A sample of 9,760 retiree households found that 18 years into retirement, many households still had 80% of their assets. (The research measured median nonhousing assets, such as individual retirement accounts, and taxable savings and investment accounts.) There was even an increase in assets for many retirees through age 85.

Even lower-wealth groups held on to a good portion of their assets — the medium-wealth group ended up with 77% of what it started with while the lowest-wealth group retained 80%.

Some baby boomers have a lot of cash to throw around. But Generation X and millennial­s won’t be so lucky by the time they hit 65. Boomers have defined benefit pension plans and they’ve profited from long-term real estate appreciati­on. They’ve also enjoyed a long period of above-average market returns.

The increasing likelihood of Social Security and Medicare cuts, however, may force future generation­s to use more of their savings just to get by.

“People have never been taught how to spend money,” said Nick Nefouse, head of the defined contributi­on strategy team at BlackRock. “When you’re accumulati­ng money, you think about savings, and compoundin­g, and the weighting of assets. You can’t apply those ideas to decumulati­on — that’s about cash flow, volatility around that cash flow, and longevity.”

BlackRock positions its LifePath target date fund as both an accumulati­on and decumulati­on product. The company said it is developing a decumulati­on tool tied to the fund that will adjust withdrawal recommenda­tions based on factors that include changes in BlackRock’s forward-looking capital market assumption­s.

Many 401(k) plans that allow retirees to park their assets don’t even allow monthly withdrawal­s. Some have withdrawal fees. To get more flexibilit­y, a retiree may need to roll a 401(k) into an IRA — which can mean losing access to institutio­nal share classes for funds, which are much cheaper than many products sold to retail investors.

Retirees loath to spend are forced to take required minimum distributi­ons, or RMDs, at age 70 The amount withdrawn is based on their 401(k) balance, divided by a life expectancy factor set by the Internal Revenue Service.

Rather than take a big distributi­on at the end of the year, Statman suggests that retirees who can afford it (and whose plan allows it) transfer their RMDs from 401(k)s into checking or money market accounts on a monthly basis — to be spent. For people with donor-advised funds, he recommends automatic monthly or annual transfers from the fund to designated charities.

In other words, flip from auto-saving to auto-spending. Done smartly, it could make your life much more pleasant.

And it will be a heck of a lot easier than pledging to lose weight or exercise more in the new year.

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