Delay Period Funding Strategy: EDU #2620
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Chris’s Summary:
Jim and I discuss a listener’s strategy for funding the delay period in this dialog show. A 59-year-old chemical engineer shares his plan to transition from 100% equities by purchasing TIPS only when his portfolio reaches new market highs. We cover his Social Security claiming strategy, concerns about CPI-based inflation adjustments relative to Minimum Dignity Floor expenses, and the potential role of a QLAC for late-in-life secure income.
Jim’s “Pithy” Summary:
Chris and I dig into a listener’s email in this dialog show, examining the retirement strategy of a self-described Vanguardian and chemical engineer who is three years out from retirement. His approach is built around what he calls “pedal to the metal” accumulation – 100% equities for his working years – and now he is figuring out how to transition his assets to a decumulation model. The centerpiece of his plan is a TIPS ladder covering his eight-year delay period, funded by selling from his all-stock portfolio only when it reaches a new market high. Most of his rungs are already purchased, and the approach has worked – the market has been kind. But Chris and I both flag the same concern: it works until it doesn’t. If markets go sideways or drop and stay there, he could find himself heading straight into sequence of returns risk without the rungs he needs, still waiting on new highs that may not come.
Beyond those mechanics, we get into some of the things he may be underweighting. The five expense categories that anchor his retirement spending — food, utilities, transportation, housing, and health care — tend to rise faster than headline CPI, which is what TIPS are tied to. His year-over-year projections are clean and consistent, but real-world spending in those categories is variable, not a steady march. We also touch on his Social Security claiming plan and his note that he still needs to fine-tune his Fun Number once that funding is complete.
The episode wraps with his mention of QLACs for late-in-life secure income – something Chris and I agree can make sense, and buying sooner rather than later may give more income dollar for dollar given how deferral and mortality credits compound inside these contracts.
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