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Home / Finance / Financial Planning

A New Mindset For Income Distribution

By:Robert Valentine


In terms of your finances, your preretirement earning years focus on accumulation and growth of your money. You earn money from your job or business to pay for your current living expenses. You set some aside for emergencies and for future needs like college and retirement. Your goal is to accumulate as much as possible by earning it and investing it.

After retirement, you typically no longer have money earned from your job or business to pay for your living expenses. You need safety and liquidity to ensure available funds for day-to-day costs of living along with growth to help ensure your funds last your lifetime. The growth-oriented portfolio structure of your earning years may no longer apply, and you may have to change the way you evaluate your portfolio's performance.

In fact, in an effort to help reduce risk and protect principal, many retirees alter their asset mix to a more conservative, income-based allocation. The result is a portfolio designed to provide higher rates of current income and less volatility. Put another way, your need to preserve what you have now typically outweighs your need to grow your money at a benchmark rate, although you still need enough growth to ensure inflation doesn't reduce your purchasing power during retirement.

Depending on your age, your investment tendencies may lean too far toward growth or too far toward conservative income. If you're at the leading edge of the Boomer generation, you may have experienced years of significantly high market returns, skewing your expectations for your own portfolio toward the high end.

If you're in the senior or "veteran" age group, however, you may harbor some distrust of stocks and over-confidence in bonds. Investors in this group also tend to underestimate their life expectancy, based on how long their parents lived. By overweighting your portfolio in the relative safety of fixed income and income investments, you increase the potential of outliving your money.

A retirement distribution plan seeks to find that middle ground between reduced risk and greater return, taking into consideration all income streams (i.e., Social Security, wages, pensions, investment income, annuity income), assets, inflation risk, investment risk and tax exposure. Numerous variables can come into play, so each factor must be evaluated based on the individual situation.

Generally, a retirement distribution model will allocate a larger portion of assets to fixed income and income segments, followed by growth and income, growth, aggressive growth and most aggressive segments in progressively lesser percentages. The intended result is an inflation-adjusted income that lasts your lifetime by minimizing emotional investment decisions, maintaining purchasing power, minimizing risk, preserving principal and maintaining an appropriate amount of long-term asset growth.

As a reminder, asset allocation seeks to maximize the performance of your investment portfolio using diversification and disciplined investing. However, using an asset allocation methodology does not guarantee greater or more consistent returns or lower risk when diversifying among different asset classes.

Creating a retirement distribution plan can be complex and requires a thorough understanding of investment products and strategies and their associated risks. Your financial professional will help you determine the asset allocation model and products that best meet your needs.

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Article keywords: Retirment planning, Income, distribution, 401k, IRA, Preservation

Article Source: http://www.articles2k.com

Robert Valentine is a well-known expert in the matters concerning investors. His popular 1031 exchange
articles have been published by several publications throughout the United States. Please visit his website, http://www.themoneyalert.com to view his column.




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