Daily Maverick

What can you do?

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fell by about 10%. If you had picked your investment portfolios badly, then you could be in trouble.

For example, if you took out a living annuity for R4.8-million with a 5% drawdown (which would give you R20,000 each month) and the stock market fell by 10% over the course of the year, the capital in your living annuity would drop to just under R4-million after a year.

In order to keep the same income of R20,000 a month, you would have to increase your drawdown percentage to 6.1%.

If you wanted to increase your monthly income by 6% to keep up with inflation, your drawdown rate would have to increase to 6.5%. You are rapidly moving into the zone where you are living off your capital rather than your investment income.

There are a few things you can do to improve the situation:

yInvest in portfolios with downside protection

There are portfolios that use financial structures to limit any downwards market movement. These include guaranteed funds, funds with high watermark guarantees, absolute return funds and real return funds.

There is an additional cost to these but under the current circumstan­ces they are worth considerin­g.

yyStructur­e your living annuity portfolio with care

I like to keep two years’ income in a low-risk portfolio and draw the monthly income from it. This will ensure that you do not have to sell equities when the market is doing badly. Keep the rest of your funds in longer-term growth assets.

Use some of your retirement savings to buy a life annuity

A recent change in legislatio­n allows you to buy both a life and a living annuity with the proceeds of your retirement savings. Life annuity rates are good at the moment and by using a portion of your investment to buy a life annuity you can significan­tly reduce your living annuity drawdown rate.

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