I am looking at a 30 year horizon and the difference between 6% and 10% is just wild. What return would you use for a 30 year horizon and why?
He doesn't understand what a geometric mean is.aggiefan2002 said:
Ha. Horrible. His calculator online still says 10-12%.
He states on his show that it is a long-term gain. A quick google shows that the average annual return of the DJIA is 10.97% since inception.aggiefan2002 said:
Ha. Horrible. His calculator online still says 10-12%.
So your advice to retirees is to be 100% in equities and therefore they can sustain a safe rate of withdraw of 8%?Dill-Ag13 said:He states on his show that it is a long-term gain. A quick google shows that the average annual return of the DJIA is 10.97% since inception.aggiefan2002 said:
Ha. Horrible. His calculator online still says 10-12%.
He gets a lot of smack but his average clientele comes to him with negative net worth. His rules and ideas are simple and easy to understand.
P.H. Dexippus said:So your advice to retirees is to be 100% in equities and therefore they can sustain a safe rate of withdraw of 8%?Dill-Ag13 said:He states on his show that it is a long-term gain. A quick google shows that the average annual return of the DJIA is 10.97% since inception.aggiefan2002 said:
Ha. Horrible. His calculator online still says 10-12%.
He gets a lot of smack but his average clientele comes to him with negative net worth. His rules and ideas are simple and easy to understand.
I love Dave for his good advice of being disciplined about not living beyond your means and getting people out of crippling debt. I think he undeservedly gets a bad rap for that sometimes. But he deserves the "smack" he received for giving reckless retirement planning advice.
https://www.thinkadvisor.com/2023/11/13/supernerds-unite-against-dave-ramseys-8-safe-withdrawal-rate-guidance/
billydean05 said:
With a 30 year horizon, the worst thirty year time frame since 1926 of S&P 500 is right at 8.0% that seems plenty conservative return to use when attempting to calculate goals.
permabull said:
If you go into retirement with 100% S&P 500 and it drops 30% your first year in retirement you would be forced to sell some of it to live on for that first year and miss the recovery on those funds. If instead you had 30 treasuries/CD and 70% s&p 500 you could live off the treasuries during a down year and rebalance into the dip.
I.e. if you had $1.5 mill going into retirement planning to spend $50k a year and the market drops 30% you would be down to $1.0 mill after that drop and selling 50k to live on. Then if the market immediately recovers 43% you would be sitting at 1.43 million going into year two. So your first year of retirement set your portfolio back 70k even though you only spent 50k.
pretty sure that most financial planners go with 4% to 5% annual return,1Aggie99 said:
Depends but assuming this is for retirement? I always go conservative with 6-7% because if I'm going to be surprised I'd rather it be on the 10% side than the 6% side if you follow. Can never have too much but would suck to run out.
LMCane said:pretty sure that most financial planners go with 4% to 5% annual return,1Aggie99 said:
Depends but assuming this is for retirement? I always go conservative with 6-7% because if I'm going to be surprised I'd rather it be on the 10% side than the 6% side if you follow. Can never have too much but would suck to run out.
which then means when you are a millionaire you take out 40K each year to ensure you never run out of money
this strategy is all over the internet, podcasts, and financial planning books.
The 4% rule came from Bill Bengen back in 1994. The rule is not 4% per year, but it is 4% for the first year and then adjust that amount by inflation for subsequent years. If I remember correctly he adjusted it to 4.7% a couple of years ago.txaggie_08 said:LMCane said:pretty sure that most financial planners go with 4% to 5% annual return,1Aggie99 said:
Depends but assuming this is for retirement? I always go conservative with 6-7% because if I'm going to be surprised I'd rather it be on the 10% side than the 6% side if you follow. Can never have too much but would suck to run out.
which then means when you are a millionaire you take out 40K each year to ensure you never run out of money
this strategy is all over the internet, podcasts, and financial planning books.
You're confusing two different things. This thread is about annual growth of your portfolio pre-retirement.
You're talking about the withdrawal rate in retirement; which a lot of advisors say you could withdraw 4% every year from your retirement savings to last you throughout retirement.
Dirt 05 said:
Disagree with getting conservative as you get closer to retirement. That implies moving away from equities into fixed income, bonds, or dogs of the Dow that pay dividends- and all of those get destroyed by rising interest rates.
Stay in the market.
~4% is the magic withdrawal rate that generates something around a 99% probability of not running out money in retirement based on historical market returns. It does means your income will vary year to year. But living on fixed income just about guarantees loss of purchasing power as you age.
You'll get tired of re-explaining it to LMCane. We have explained it to him about a half dozen times on this board, and he still sticks to his faulty guns.txaggie_08 said:LMCane said:pretty sure that most financial planners go with 4% to 5% annual return,1Aggie99 said:
Depends but assuming this is for retirement? I always go conservative with 6-7% because if I'm going to be surprised I'd rather it be on the 10% side than the 6% side if you follow. Can never have too much but would suck to run out.
which then means when you are a millionaire you take out 40K each year to ensure you never run out of money
this strategy is all over the internet, podcasts, and financial planning books.
You're confusing two different things. This thread is about annual growth of your portfolio pre-retirement.
You're talking about the withdrawal rate in retirement; which a lot of advisors say you could withdraw 4% every year from your retirement savings to last you throughout retirement.