BiggerPockets Money Podcast - 84: Traditional Retirement: Social Security, Market Conditions & Managing Expectations with Kyle Mast
Episode Date: August 5, 2019Kyle Mast first visited us on Episode 41 of the BiggerPockets Money Podcast, and he BLEW US AWAY with his suggestions, ideas, tips and tricks for early retirement. Kyle is back again today to talk mor...e to traditional age retirees - those of us who are retiring at or near age 65. Retiring now can seem scary - the market is near all-time highs and has been so for a very long time. Markets are cyclical and unpredictable. Kyle shares how to ride out the storm with strategies to manage both behavior and emotions. He’s a big fan of Retirement Fund Dates - but not of putting all your retirement eggs into one fund-date basket. Kyle also looks at Social Security and covers several scenarios to help you decide when to start receiving your benefits. Kyle is a fee-only Certified Financial Planner - and this episode shows time and again just how valuable a consultation with a CFP can be. If you’re nearing traditional retirement age - and you’re not quite sure what’s next - THIS episode is especially for you. Topics: How to set up portfolio transitioning to traditional retirement age On managing behavior and emotion What a bucket strategy is Sequence of returns risk Delaying social security On claiming social security Income limitation for social security The importance of having an understanding of social security What people look for when finding a financial planner Designing lifestyle and expectation around spending How to plan your expenses on retirement What a long-term care insurance is On having a long-term cafe insurance with golden policy On target date funds Identifying your own risk tolerance Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Tax season is one of the only times all year when most people actually look at their full financial picture,
including income, spending, savings, investments, the whole thing. And if you're like most folks,
it can be a little eye-opening. That's why I like Monarch. It helps you see exactly where your money is going,
and more importantly, where your tax refund can make the biggest impact. Because the goal isn't
just to look backward, it's to actually make progress. Simplify your finances with Monarch.
Monarch is the all-in-one personal finance tool designed to make your life easier. It brings your
entire financial life, including budgeting, accounts and investments, net worth, and future planning,
together in one dashboard on your phone or your laptop.
Feel aware and in control of your finances this tax season and get 50% off your Monarch
subscription with the code Pockes.
What I personally like is that Monarch keeps you focused on achieving, not just tracking.
You can see your budgets, debt payoff, savings goals, and net worth all in one place.
So every decision actually moves in Edle.
Achieve your financial goals for good with Monarch, the all-in-one tool that makes money
management simple.
Use the code pockets at monarch.com for half off your first year.
That's 50% off at monarch.com code pockets.
I love that, said no one ever.
Nobody starts a business thinking, you know what would make this more fun?
Calculating quarterly estimated taxes.
But somehow, every small business owner ends up doing it.
Your dreams of creating, selling, and growing get replaced by late nights chasing receipts,
juggling invoices, and wondering if that bad sushi lunch with Scott counts as a right-off.
Change all that with Found.
Found is a business banking platform built to take the pain out of managing money.
It automatically tracks expenses, organizes invoices, and even preps you for tax season without you doing the heavy lifting.
You can set aside money for business goals, control spending with virtual cards, and find tax write-offs you didn't even know existed.
It saves time, money, and probably a few years of life expectancy.
Found has over 30,000 five-star reviews from owners who say, Sound makes everything easier, expenses, income, profits, taxes, invoices even.
So reclaim your time and your sanity.
Open a found account for free at found.com.
That's F-O-U-N-D-com.
Found is a financial technology company, not a bank.
Banking services are provided by lead bank member FDIC.
Don't put this one off.
Join thousands of small business owners who have streamlined their finances with Found.
Audible has been a core part of my routine for more than a decade.
I started listening years ago to make better use of drive time and workouts, and it stuck.
At this point, I've logged over 229 audiobook completions on Audible alone, and I still
regularly re-listen to the highest impact titles.
Lately, I've been listening to Bigger Liener Stronger for Fitness, the Anxious Generation for
parenting perspective and several Arthur Brooks' audiobooks that have been excellent for mental
well-being.
What makes Audible so powerful as its breadth.
Beyond audiobooks, you also get Audible Originals, podcasts, and a massive back catalog across
business, health, parenting, and more, all accessible in one app.
If you're looking to turn everyday moments into real progress, Audible has been indispensable
for me over over 10 years.
Kickstart your well-being journey with your first audiobook free when you sign up for a free
30-day trial at audible.com slash BP money.
Welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast show number 84 with certified financial planner
Kyle Mast.
If you don't understand it, keep asking questions.
And if you meet with someone and they won't explain it, you need to look for somebody
else because it is a big deal from taxes to timing to taking care of your spouse.
It's huge.
It's time for a new American dream, one that doesn't involve working in a cubicle for 40 years,
barely scraping by.
Whether you're looking to get your financial,
house in order, invest the money you already have, or discover new paths for wealth creation.
You're in the right place. This show is for anyone who has money or wants more. This is the
Bigger Pockets Money Podcast. How's it going to everybody? I'm Scott Trench here with my co-host,
Ms. Middy Jensen. How you doing today, Mindy? Scott, I am having a fantastic day. How are you today?
I am great. I really, really enjoyed our conversation with Kyle. He's just got a huge amount of
experience and, you know, a huge amount of intelligence that he applies to this stuff around
financial planning. And today's episode is going to cover something a little different. You know,
we typically talk about content and finance and investing and saving and earning as it pertains
to someone who is trying to retire early. But we haven't touched on what happens at retirement age
and how someone planning to enter traditional retirement could be thinking about how to make
things last. And I know that that's, you know, hopefully that applies directly to some of the
folks listening. And if it doesn't apply directly to some of the folks listening, maybe it applies
directly to parents of some of the folks listening or those types of things and could be a resource
in that area. You know, I really enjoy having Kyle on the show. He was on episode 41. Gosh,
that was like towards the end of last year. So it's been a while since we've had him on. And I love his
enthusiasm for the topic and his willingness to share so freely about information that he has and
feels that other people really need. You know, and I think the, you know, when we talk about money concepts,
investing and those types of things, I think we do it from a very aggressive lens on this podcast,
generally speaking, the Bigger Pockets Money podcast. And I think that that's appropriate, right? If you're in
20s, 30s or 40s, and you're looking to aggressively move toward financial freedom, you need to be
aggressive. You need to take what, quote unquote, more risk. You need to think about, can I change
my career, can I drastically reduce my expenses? How do I get large returns and things like real
estate or passive index fund investing, which can be very volatile? If a market downturn comes,
people will lose money pursuing those types of strategies, but there's a lot of room to recover,
and there's probably a better bet of building wealth over time doing some of those things.
You can't really do that when you're entering a traditional retirement age, because you can't
go back to work. Your favorite quote is from what episode?
That's from episode 11 from Joel from F-I-180.
And I was just thinking to myself, wow, my favorite quote, what's the worst that can happen?
I'll just go back and get a job.
My worst case scenario is everybody else's everyday life.
That really doesn't apply to people who are nearing traditional retirement age.
What's the worst that can happen?
I'll go back and get a job.
Well, that might not be an option for you.
While it is technically against the law to discriminate against people based on age,
let's be realistic. This happens sometimes in, you know, you quit your job at age 63 because you're going to retire. And then the market takes a dip. Going back and finding a job at age 64 or 65, oh, why did you leave your last job? Well, I retired. They're going to be thinking that that's going to happen again. So you need to really hedge your bets in the beginning so that when you do retire, it's permanent. Yeah. And there's big decisions to be made, right? How do I allocate a portfolio? Where am I going to get income from? When do I declare Social Security? Do I buy a
long-term care insurance. All these questions are things with no clear answer at all. And I think that's
where Kyle really brings a lot of his expertise to the table. And the fact of the matter is that the
emotional reaction to money, as again, another concept we're going to talk about, it's there for
everybody at every investing stage. No one likes to lose money. But there's a real, I think,
even more powerful emotional component to this when it comes around traditional retirement age.
Right.
versus early retirement or investing in your 20s, 30s, or 40s.
Right. And what I think that Kyle really excels at in this episode is showing you that there are
so many different options. It gives you something to start thinking about. But he also recommends
connecting with a fee-only certified financial planner who can help you with your specific situation
because this is great to get the conversation started. This is great to get the ideas rolling in
your head. But for more, he can't.
give everybody there's no one-size-fits-all approach. So he's, I just love all the different options and
the different ideas that he starts planting. So now I'm thinking to myself, okay, well, now I need to
contact a CFP. So like we mentioned, this is a great episode if you're new in retirement age,
or it could be a great episode to understand the things that your parents or other folks that
might be listening that you might care about, might be thinking about as they enter retirement age.
Should we bring Kyle in? Let's do it.
Kyle Mast, welcome to the Bigger Pockets. Oh, I'm sorry, Kyle Mast, welcome back to the Bigger Pockets Money
podcast. How's it going? Good. Thanks for having me back. It's good to be back. I am super excited
to have you. We had a great time with you on episode 41. I actually heard from a lot of people,
wow, that was so helpful. That Kyle gave me so much information that I could use, just starting off.
You know, he gave me a great path, et cetera. So I'm super excited to have you back.
today. You know, we have covered a lot of early retiree topics. We've covered a lot of how to start
building your portfolio. But we've never really covered what happens after you're done. You hit your
financial independence number. You are a traditional retiree, you know, age 65. What do you do with
your portfolio then? So today we're going to cover how to kind of figure out what comes next.
Yeah, that sounds awesome. It's a big, big,
question to cover, but I'm sure we'll tackle it from different angles. Yeah, where do you want to get
started? Do you have kind of a place that people, specific questions you've gotten from listeners,
that might be something that we should kick it off with? Well, let's say this. Let's suppose that
you've been contributing to a 401K for a long period of time and you've done it right. You know,
you've kind of put that in, you've got along the career. And you're trying to think about,
okay, in the next couple of years, I'm going to think about retiring. How do I set up my portfolio or
what should I be expecting? How do I begin with distributing funds from it? Where will my sources
of income be? Social Security will come into play. How do I just kind of frame the transition
out of a job around maybe traditional retirement age? Okay. So one thing maybe to set the stage a little
bit, and it's probably something that you guys hear from your listeners, and I definitely hear it
from clients or people reaching out to me, is the current state of the market that we're in right now.
You know, a lot of people, especially if you're close to traditional retirement age, it's a lot different
then if you're a 35-year-old where you can retire and if the economy goes bad or your stock
market portfolio really tanks, you have the real option of going back and getting a high-paying
job or a reasonably paying job as opposed to maybe a 63-year-old who is later in the job scene
and maybe able to get to some consulting work, but it's a little bit different picture. So a lot of
people right now, because we've been in such a long bull market, are thinking, whole everything out.
I've accumulated my index funds in my 401K.
Let's just sell it and move it into cash.
So the first thing I would maybe say is that as we talk through this,
we want to make sure that we're talking about things that can hold up in any market stage
because you don't want to be timing the market.
So we'll talk about things that are going to be applicable no matter if you think the market's going to tank tomorrow
or if you think it's going to go by 25% in the next year.
So that being said, as you get closer to retirement, a lot of things stay.
the same and a few things change. Traditional retirement is longer and longer every year with life
expectancies increasing. A lot of people don't realize that a lot of people put their money into
one maybe target date fund at Vanguard and say the retirement date is 2025. So let's take that
five years from now. And a target date fund, if you're not familiar with it, is basically managed
by the mutual fund company, an index target date fund at Vanguard say. And over time, as you get close
So that target date, it reduces the risk as they define it in the portfolio down to carry
a little bit more bonds, a little more high value stocks, not as many growth stocks, not as
much international exposure, with the idea of reducing volatility when you're going to need the
money. The problem with that is if you live 30 years, you know, 20 years is the average life
expectancy for a 65-year-old across males and females. Males a little less, females a little bit more.
But if you're a couple and between the two of you, likely one of you is going to be around 30 years.
So you really have to plan for something, some sort of investment strategy that actually helps keep up with inflation over that amount of time.
You don't want to move everything to really basic, barely keeping up with inflation in the short term and not plan for a potentially long lifespan.
And it also depends on the goals that you have.
If you're someone that says, I'm going to spend everything I have, I'd have barely enough for me to live on.
And that's different than if you want to leave a big inheritance to somebody.
But those are some things that you want to think about right off the bat.
I like that because when we usually discuss this stuff, right,
like I can come in with my perspective, not even being 30 yet,
and say, okay, great, this plan long term,
I can ride a lot of things, I can build extra cushion,
I can go back, I can do all these types of things.
The stakes for designing your portfolio correctly in the position we're discussing right now
seem a lot higher and it's a lot more important to get that portfolio.
allocation correct than it does for maybe me or Mindy right now, looking at it from the perspective
of an early retiree. So what does that specifically look like or how would different people in
different circumstances handle that restructuring of a portfolio, which seems kind of monumental.
That's the life, some of your, that's the grand total of your life's accumulation right there.
And now you're going to redeploy it into a new asset class. How do you get comfortable with that?
Yeah. Okay. So here's where I throw in my disclosure.
where this is not specific advice for anyone's specific situation.
But so let's just think in a broad sense,
someone who has saved well,
they don't have a ton of money to blow,
but they'll have enough to,
with the 4% rule, say,
have a reasonable living expense through retirement.
And the 4% rule is research that's been done
that you can withdraw 4% from a certain portfolio over time
without it depleting over basically a 30-year time
frame. There's different studies that tweak that a little bit, but that's the general idea.
So someone who saved relatively well, usually what I do with clients and other financial
planners will do things a little bit differently. I'm all about keeping it simple. And I'm very
much about managing behavior and emotion because that's the biggest thing that I've seen that
just kills clients at this stage. Clients that went through the last recession close to retirement
and sold in March of 2009 just really got hurt. And usually it's because the emotional thing
got to them and they didn't set up a portfolio ahead of time to manage the emotion,
not just the investments, the behavior and the emotion.
So I'm a big fan of what's called a bucket strategy.
And if you want to be real simple about it, you can basically split your retirement portfolio
using target date funds, for example, at Vanguard.
You could set, so let's take the 2025 retiree, put 25% of your portfolio in the 2025 fund,
25% to 2030, 25% in the 2035, and then maybe 25% in the 2045 for kind of a longer term
help you fight inflation piece of the bucket. And what that does, and those allocations are
different over time as they adjust, but what that does is it basically lets you know in your mind
as a retiree, I have 25% of my income that in the year 2025 is going to be very boring.
It's not going to be earning much. You know, you're going to get 2% to 5% on that portfolio.
it's a retirement income portfolio, a lot of bonds which reduce volatility.
They go down too, but they won't go down 40% in the recession.
A portfolio went down probably 10%.
So you have that bucket for those first years of retirement to live off of and spend
through, and then you have the next bucket that's maybe a little bit more aggressive
for the next section of retirement.
And then you have the next bucket beyond that and the next bucket beyond that.
It's a way to mentally prepare yourself to know that I have enough in the short term,
if the market really tanks, but I also have enough invested more aggressively in the long term
to help fight inflations if health care costs increase, if things in life change, it really helps
play that out. If someone, you know, a lot of your listeners are very smart in the financial
independence community and they'll immediately call me out and say, well, actually, you still have
an overall allocation. You have these four different target date funds. What's that overall allocation?
You know, you actually have, you know, maybe it's 60% stocks, 40% bonds when you calculate
it depending on the year. But in my mind and what I've seen with clients, that's not the point.
The point is separating out the behavior from the investment so that you can manage yourself
when that dip does come. It's going to come. It might come next year. It might come five years from now.
I don't know. And I do this every day. So anything you can do to keep yourself on track for good
investing habits is a really good thing. So wait, you don't have a crystal ball. You can't tell us
when the market's going to fall? I wish. I would be on an island right now. I wouldn't be chatting again.
me and my son and my wife would be gone.
Yeah, I think that's one of the biggest problems right now is, you know, the market has been on such a tear for so long.
I keep thinking that it's going to crash today, tomorrow.
Like, I keep, like, obviously I have a job still, so it's not such a big deal.
But I'm assuming that the market is so, I mean, it's just, it's so high right now.
And I like this idea of putting 25% in a bunch of different target dates out.
I mean, 2040 is 21 years away.
You're still going to have some aggressive growth.
If the market tanks, you're going to have some tanking.
But I'm assuming that there would be some bonds in the 20 years out fund.
Yeah, there'd still be some in there.
You know, it depends on this week, maybe get into a risk tolerance preference
from the client standpoint.
You could go a little bit more aggressive.
And it also would depend on what your long-term goals are.
If you have a little bit more money than you think you're going to need
and you want to leave some to your kids in a Roth IRA
for example, and a tremendous vehicle to leave to the next generation,
maybe that portfolio you invest in a 2060 target date portfolio like a 20-year-old would,
even though you're 60, but you know that I may pull funds from that, probably not.
The other 75% of my target date funds are pretty much going to cover me.
I want to make sure that I'm being the best steward of this money and growing it in the long
term because I know that I could be 30 years alive and then my kid could have it for 30 or 40 years also.
So it ends up functioning almost like an endowment fund at that point where you just start thinking completely long term.
And it really, it depends on the person's specific situation.
So a couple other strategies people can think of too.
And this comes back to if you've heard of sequence of returns risk.
So the sequence of returns risk, that's something that you just need to keep in mind as maybe making or breaking retirement,
depending on how you react to it.
So if you retire at 65 and the market tanks in the first three years, it's really going to,
impact your long-term viability of your retirement portfolio. Another reason to have more save than
you think you're going to need. That's a good way to hedge against that. Another way to hedge against it,
there's a bunch of different ways you can do. But one of the easiest ways is to delay taking
Social Security as much as possible. Now, Social Security is something that for the younger generation
is going to look a lot different than it is today. It's going to need to be reforms to the system
to fund it. However, if you're 55 and older, I don't think any reforms that happen are not going to
impact you too much because the planning for your retirement has already been based so much on
social security. And in my opinion, the voting power was not going to be impacted that much.
So if you delay social security, as long as possible, you get an increase in monthly income
every year. And by doing that, you now have a potentially extra piece of income that you can
turn on at some point if the market tank. So say you retire at 16,
you have one good year in the market,
and then the market goes down 30%.
And even within all your buckets that you're using to manage behavior,
you feel like I don't want to be drawing from them at this point.
Let's turn on Social Security now and draw from that and less from my portfolio.
And then maybe later on supplement it with your portfolio when the market comes back up.
But that's assuming that you have built enough in your portfolio to also sustain you.
a lot of this assumes that you've built a good chunk in there
to be able to live off of and be a little bit flexible during those time frames.
But the delaying Social Security is something that I see clients just quit
and they want that free income or that they've paid for over the years
and they want it right away.
And it's one of the worst decisions you can make unless you sink it through.
Sometimes it makes sense to take it early.
But there's a lot of specific claiming strategies,
especially between spouses that you can do.
and it can really impact the tax that you're paying
and the viability of your portfolio long-term,
especially with long life expectancies,
waiting until the max age of age 70 to take it,
especially for the highest earner between the two spouses,
is just a big deal.
Yeah, so that's a huge tip.
Can we dive a little, let's dive into that specifically
for a minute or two here.
What does that mean?
Like, I know nothing about this.
I can admit complete ignorance around Social Security
and that kind of stuff.
How do I think about that?
what's an example without name and names or anything that we could walk through?
So I just met with someone last month.
And oftentimes between couples, between married people,
there is one that has had higher income for most of their life.
So their social security is going to be significantly higher.
Maybe one was a stay-at-home parent,
so there's is definitely significantly lower.
So the lower of the two spouses has the option to take half of the higher spouse of Social Security
when they start claiming or take their own, whichever is higher.
Basic question here. What age do you claim at?
Yes. Okay. So thank you. Stop me if I assume too much. Yeah, keep asking the question.
So the earliest you can claim is 62 and you get effectively penalized or reduced amount at 62 to keep it simple.
66-ish is the normal, quote, normal retirement age for most people. It adjusts a little bit.
They made some adjustments in the law. So it's anywhere from there to 67.
someone there between those ages. And then age 70 is the latest that you can claim. So every year that
you wait from 62 to 70, you get a bump. From 62 to 66-ish, you get about a 5 to 6% increase in the
monthly amount that you would get each year. From 66 to 70, you get about an 8% increase in the
amount that you'd get monthly each year. And if you think about it, every year that you wait,
you're losing a year of Social Security income that you could have had. So it basically
pushes out the break-even date that you would be able to say, I need to live till 84 now
to make it worth me waiting two more years to take Social Security is kind of the way to think about
it. There's a few things you can sometimes widows or widowers can take it as early as age 60.
There's some rules there that you can do it. This is the realm of, man, it's worth paying for
an hour or two of a financial planner's time to make sure you don't make a big $10,000, $100,000
mistake over your retirement income timeframe. So,
these are getting to the weeds a little bit. But yeah, 62 to 70 is basically the range that you can go.
Age 70 is where with my clients, I usually try to get the higher income spouse to wait until then.
And the reason for that is that that higher income spouse, the higher of the two social
securities is the one that is retained when one spouse passes away. So if you can at least delay
somehow, even if it means taking a little bit more out of your portfolios in those early years,
to get that higher Social Security benefit for the higher income spouse to wait until 70.
Once that starts at 70, you now have a higher base.
Every year that government comes out with cost of living increases on your Social Security.
So if you can imagine if at 62 you'd receive a $750 benefit and at age 70,
you'd receive a $2,700 benefit, a cost of living increase of 3% difference between those amounts
compounded over 20 years of the rest of your life is a big deal.
especially for the surviving spouse.
And this is usually, I use this to really focus on the emotion in a client meeting
because a lot of times it's hard to get people to not take it early.
But when I frame it as this is how you can take care of the spouse that will be left,
this is what you need to do.
And that really makes a big difference.
And that's something that people should really think about.
A lot of people think, well, I'm going to take it now.
Social Security is going to be dead.
You know, I'm not going to get any money.
So I'm going to take it at 62.
Again, it could happen.
but the odds are not for that, especially if you're in the 10 or less years to retirement age,
quote, normal retirement age of 65.
Okay, so if I, as the former stay-at-home mom, lower-income spouse, started taking my social security,
does that affect what the amount that my spouse takes?
Like, if I started right at 62 and he doesn't take it till 70, does me taking it early,
affect him and his payout.
Payout's not the right word.
I don't like that phrase, but whatever.
Yeah. Social Security income.
No, it doesn't to answer your question.
Okay, so if you take it early, if you choose to take your Social Security early at age 62,
if you're a spouse and the other spouse is a higher income, they have a higher one.
If you take it early, there's no penalty, if you take your own Social Security income early,
I should specify that, there's no penalty for your spouse.
regarding that. You actually can't take the half of your spouse's higher Social Security income at that point.
They have to first claim their own Social Security before you can do that. There used to be other rules where you could do fancy stuff.
They could file and then suspend so not really take it. And then you could take yours early. And then theirs could grow to 70.
It was like this awesome thing. But if you, those are basically, there are very few people that are left able to do that.
I have a few clients that we've done it with. But it was cut off at a certain age.
age a few years ago. So it's gotten a lot simpler. So if you take it 62, you get a reduced benefit
at that age. You also have what's called an income limitation where they'll penalize you on the
amount that you can receive if you make other income above a certain amount. And it's a really
low amount, like $17,000. It adjusts for inflation every year. You don't lose that amount entirely.
When you hit full retirement age of 66, it gets recalculated into your Social Security income.
but usually I try to get people to at least wait till age 66, their full retirement age,
to take Social Security income. Mindy to your question, it's not a terrible thing.
If there's between the two of you, one person's lifetime income is significantly higher
so that their Social Security is quite a bit higher.
And the other one would say stay at home is a really good example that it may be lower.
It might make sense to just take it at 62 and have that reduced benefit.
and just for the extra cash flow,
that means that you have to take a little bit less
out of your investment accounts
or your real estate portfolio,
you can let that continue to grow over time
and then let the higher earning spouse,
let theirs grow till age 70
to make sure that you have that higher survivor benefit.
Okay. And you said that your benefit is lowered
if you still have income.
Is that job income or does that include
like a retirement portfolio that you're starting to pull money out of?
Yeah, it includes both.
It's kind of a calculation that goes into it.
And the other thing I should say there, too, and this is to keep in mind as you begin
retirement, Social Security, we're talking about there's two different things.
If you take it early, you can get penalized, but you're also taxed on your Social Security, too.
So depending on your income, yeah, they'll get you.
Depending on your income, they may tax it up to 50% of your Social Security may be taxable
or up to 85% of your Social Security income may be taxable.
And I'm talking about on the federal level, not state.
Different states have different rules.
Some states don't tax social security at all.
Some tax them differently.
Oregon, where a lot of my clients are, I'm all over the country,
but a lot of them here, social security is not taxed at all on the state level.
So I oftentimes try to have that be the bulk of a client's income
and then orchestrate other income around that
because we can really do some really cost-effective things there,
especially if you take into account,
maybe people moving in retirement,
there's things you can do there.
But you just have to really be careful around this.
I guess maybe the moral of this story,
as I'm talking through this,
this is getting really into the weeds.
And I think that the best thing would be
that you just really need to understand
the Social Security stuff.
And you really need to,
if you don't understand it
and you don't dive into it
on your own to a level of where I completely get this,
it's worth a meeting with a CPA
maybe even a tax professional, they might be able to at least give you the direct impact of what
it would be for you. But a financial planner who can say, this is going to be the best long-term
strategy to claim you and your spouse's social security between 62 and 70. And we have financial
planning software that runs it, but off the top of their head, after looking at your situation,
a financial planner can usually say this is going to be the best fit. I'm hesitant to give
too much information to try to give people. I don't want to give them the idea that it's an easy
thing to do, and I want people to be really careful around it. It's a benefit that is often the
largest one for a lot of people, even though we always hear the Social Security system is broken or
it's underfunded. But for most people, that pension income, which is effectively what it is,
is the most stable part of their retirement income. Okay, so a couple questions here. Just on a very high
level, what is the difference, like, let's use two extremes. Someone's in the highest tax bracket.
I know that Social Security, you stop paying tax on it after a certain income level, right?
Someone in that bracket or above and someone who earned effectively no income over the duration
of a career. What is the difference at 62 and 70 in terms of monthly pay or each of those
people? Do we have a very simple kind of range there? Is that?
So a high Social Security income could be around 3,000.
to 3,500 somewhere in there.
I would say a normal one for like a medium income household would be 2,000 to 2,500 in the,
and it really depends on when you take it.
But, you know, from a full retirement age right in the middle at age 66 or 67,
those are probably some good numbers to go off of.
But if you're depending on what your income was over your career,
if it's lower, then you're going to see, you know, $1,100 a month at that main full retirement age.
And you can see as low as, you know, if you didn't work,
that much, it can be $200 at age 62. It can be really low. But the interesting thing about it is the way
the system is kind of built, you get more benefit for what you paid in if you were on the lower end of
the scale. So you may be getting more, but in relation to the amount that you worked over your career,
you're getting a higher benefit, if that makes sense. Yeah, I was a stay-at-home mom for eight years.
And every once in a while, it doesn't seem like it even comes out all that regularly. But every once in a
while I'd get this letter in the mail from Social Security, this is your benefit.
And I'm looking at them like, $300, what's the point?
Like, why would I even bother taking that?
I mean, you know, $300.
I'll take $300 anytime somebody wants to give it to me.
But it seems so low.
And this was, you know, because I had such, I had a lower income and then I had a period of
time with no income.
So I would definitely want to be taking my spouses.
But I'm also not planning on Social Security because I don't want to plan on it and then
have it not be there.
If I don't plan on it and then it's still there, well, look, here's a bonus of $300 a month or whatever, you know, tiny little pittance I'm going to get.
But this overall just in general sounds like really complicated and definitely specific to every individual person's specific situation.
What do I say when I'm calling up a financial planner?
What do I say to make sure that they can help me?
Because I'm assuming that not every financial planner is going to be a whiz at Social Security.
what are people looking for when they're finding a financial planner?
Yeah. So when you call them up, make sure that they, let's see, specific questions to ask,
do you understand the tax implications of taking Social Security early? You could even preface it as saying,
I'm considering taking my Social Security early. Do you think that's a good idea? And they really should
respond. I don't have enough information to think that's a good idea or not. But they should be able to
explain some of the things and the variables that I was just talking about, you know, the benefits
of waiting, especially for the surviving spouse. Mindy, in your case, I'm going to use you as an
example a little bit with the $200 a month, say that's at age 62, you'd get $200 a month.
In your case, it may make sense to take it early because it's such a small amount, might not be a
big deal. However, and then let your husbands grow till age 70 if you want just a little bit of extra
cash flow. However, depending on what your husband's looks like, it really might make sense for you to wait
until he starts taking his and then you take half of yours so that you both, what's the age
difference between you and your husband? You don't have to tell me your ages. Is he older or younger in
how many years? He's a year younger. Okay. Okay. So that wouldn't, it wouldn't work as well.
Because sometimes say you were four years younger, you could wait until he's 70 and then he starts his,
which is at the maximum benefit. There's no reason for him to wait any longer. And then you could take
half of his at age 66. If you're older, it makes less sense because you'll be 71 when he's 70.
So it may make sense for you to just take it early if it's not going to be a huge benefit
anyways. Again, this is not advice because there's other variables here. If you, it might make
sense for you to both wait till 70 and 71 to take it because then you have his full increased amount
plus half of that amount. And okay, I'm going to get into the weeds a little bit more here.
the spousal one is only half of the full retirement age amount. And the full retirement
age amount is the age 66-ish. So even if you wait till 70 for your husband, you only get
half of what he would have got at age 66. So that's another reason for you to not wait.
It might make sense for your husband to wait until age 70 and you to take yours at 62 just
to have some extra cash flow. If yours was a larger amount and a bigger part of your portfolio,
it might change things a little bit.
And again, you know, meet with someone that has the view of everything to be able to figure
that out.
And the difference, you mentioned that you're not counting on Social Security.
You know, you're planning and investing and saving well beyond Social Security.
That's like the cherry on the top.
Because of that, that's a different situation than what we're talking about, someone
who's five, 10 years away from this retirement age and maybe they don't have the luxury of
saving beyond it anymore.
Now they're at the point where this is going to be a part of their retirement regardless.
and you need to think about where in retirement you started to maximize the income you have and
reduce your risk.
Yeah, no, I think that's really helpful to give an example of something based on me and my situation
because, yeah, I didn't know that it was, I only get half of his 60, age 66 benefits,
but only if he waits until 70.
But that's very interesting.
And his will be significantly more.
He made significantly more money than I did.
And then, you know, when I was making zero as a stay-at-home mom, he was still earning income.
So, yeah, no, that's really helpful.
And like you said, you're getting into the weeds in this and, you know, everybody's situation is different.
But definitely call up a fee-only financial planner.
Yes.
F-only.
And if you don't know of one, you can, didn't you recommended the, I believe it was the XY
planning network last time you were on.
Is that where you can still find a fee-only financial planner?
Yeah.
I recommended the XY planning network.
Yes.
On the previous episode, yeah.
And you guys asked really good questions on that last episode of vetting a CFP and finding
someone.
I would, if anyone's really, this is blowing their mind or they want to find someone, just
listen to that episode.
Mindy and Scott asked really good questions on what to be asking, what to look for.
There's some really good fee-only financial planners out there that aren't going to sell
you junk.
They're going to charge you because the advice is worth it.
But that's what you want.
You want some of them, you're going to pay them for their time,
and they're going to show you the options and help you make the choice.
They're not going to make it for you, but help you make a good choice for your situation.
Okay, and that episode is episode 41.
You can find that on wherever you find podcasts or at biggerpockets.com slash
money show 41.
And I think if I'm in this position, right, this is overwhelming.
We just spent 20 minutes on Social Security.
And I still couldn't claim to be really comfortable at all.
with how I would think about an approach if I were in the situation.
So it seemed to me that you need to meet with a financial planner that amount
and then you keep hammering away at this decision until you fully understand everything.
Don't walk away and make a decision until you're very clear on all of the alternatives
because it seems like there are huge stakes for this, getting this right,
in terms of your retirement.
Yes, definitely. That's probably the best takeaway.
Yeah.
If you don't understand it, keep asking questions.
And if you meet with someone and they won't explain it, you need to look for somebody else.
Because it is a big deal from taxes to timing to taking care of your spouse.
It's huge.
Yeah.
You know, that's really important.
There's a lot of people out there that can teach you what you need to know about this particular topic.
But there's equally a lot of people out there who will just confuse you completely.
And, you know, if you feel stupid when you're talking to your CFP, that's not the right CFP for you.
You need to find somebody who will explain it to you and continue to explain it to you and not make you feel dumb because I will sit here and ask you a thousand questions and, you know, I don't care if people think I'm an idiot.
I want to know the answer.
But there's a lot of people who feel like, oh, I should just really know this and I don't.
I'm not going to continue to ask.
Ask and ask and ask until you understand.
Tax season is one of the only times all year when most people actually look at their full financial picture, including income, spending, savings, investments, the whole thing.
And if you're like most folks, it can be a little eye opening.
That's why I like Monarch.
It helps you see exactly where your money is going, and more importantly, where your taxed refund can make the biggest impact.
Because the goal isn't just to look backward. It's to actually make progress.
Simplify your finances with Monarch.
Monarch is the all-in-one personal finance tool designed to make your life easier.
It brings your entire financial life, including budgeting, accounts and investments, net worth, and future planning, together in one dashboard on your phone or your laptop.
Feel aware and in control of your finances this tax season and get 50% off your Monarch subscription with the code pockets.
What I personally like is that Monarch keeps you focused on achieving,
just tracking. You can see your budgets, debt payoff, savings goals, and net worth all in one place.
So every decision actually moves in a needle. Achieve your financial goals for good with Monarch,
the all in one tool that makes money management simple. Use the code pockets at Monarch.com
for half off your first year. That's 50% off at Monarch.com code pockets.
You just realized your business needed to hire someone yesterday. How can you find amazing candidates fast?
Easy. Just use Indeed. When it comes to hiring, Indeed is all you need. That means you can stop
struggling to get your job notice on other job sites.
Indeed's sponsored jobs helps you stand out and hire the right people quickly.
Your job post jumps straight to the top of the page where your ideal candidates are looking.
And it works.
Sponsored jobs on Indeed get 45% more applications than non-sponsored posts.
The best part?
No monthly subscriptions or long-term contracts.
You only pay for results.
And speaking of results, in the minute I've been talking to you, 23 people just got hired
through Indeed worldwide.
There's no need to wait any longer.
Speed up your hiring right now with Indeed.
And listeners of this show will get a $75
sponsored job credit to get your jobs more visibility
at Indeed.com slash bigger pockets.
Just go to Indeed.com slash bigger pockets right now
and support our show by saying you heard about Indeed on this podcast.
Indeed.com slash bigger pockets.
Terms and conditions apply.
Hiring, Indeed is all you need.
When you want more, start your business with Northwest registered agent
and get access to thousands of free guides, tools, and legal forms
to help you launch and protect your business all in one place.
Build your complete business identity with Northwest
Today. Northwest registered agent has been helping small business owners and entrepreneurs
launch and grow businesses for nearly 30 years.
They're the largest registered agent and LLC service in the U.S.
With over 1,500 corporate guides who are real people who know your local laws
and can help you and your business every step of the way.
Northwest makes life easy for business owners.
They don't just help you form your business.
They give you the free tools you need after you form it,
like operating agreements, meeting minutes,
and thousands of how-to guides that explain the complicated
ins and outs of running a business. And with Northwest, privacy is automatic. They never sell your data.
And all services are handled in-house because privacy by default is their pledge to all customers.
Visit Northwest Registeredagent.com slash money-free and start building something amazing.
Get more with Northwest Registered Agent at Northwest Registeredagent.com slash money-free.
Okay. So I think we've covered Social Security and the need for a financial planner.
We've also talked about portfolio. We had a very high level.
brief discussion on how to think about a potential portfolio allocation on that. What about
in terms of designing lifestyle and expectations around spending? Because frankly, one easy way
to make sure that this all goes better is to just need to realize less income. That's how you make
everything much easier on this. What are kind of spending patterns or behaviors that you've seen
as people go through this transition in terms of their household expenditures? And what are things
that people could be planning out better there without necessarily saying, hey, stop us buying
your morning latte or whatever at Starbucks. Yeah. Oh, it's a good question. So I like this one.
So I really like working with clients that are in this time frame. It's just a, you know,
they're really excited about moving to the next stage. A lot of them haven't traveled much during
their lifetime. Their kids are out of the house. So they, they're looking forward to a lot of
things. So one thing that I see oftentimes as people are getting close to retirement is both spouses are
working oftentimes and sometimes one, or maybe just one is working, but there's the highest income
that you have in your life, basically, right at the end of your career. And a lot of times people think,
I want to make sure I get things done before retirement, things like we're going to get a different
car, we'll maybe move, we'll make some big purchases, maybe do some sort of change around the house,
or remodel, something like that. And the idea is a good one from the standpoint that you're going
to get it done so the retirement you do. Like if you don't enjoy doing,
these remodels, if you don't enjoy moving somewhere else, and you want to say when I retire,
I want all this done, it feels really good. I think that's definitely a route that people can go.
One thing to keep in mind in doing something like that, that should play into your decision.
And you can decide whatever you want when it comes to this.
Anytime you get financial advice, you're going to get the tradeoffs to it.
And it's your decision on what's most important to you.
But what I see a lot of times is that it would make sense for people to wait until they retire
and they stop having their high-income jobs or highest-income jobs.
And that may be 100,000 a year, 50,000 a year, 250,000 a year.
It may make sense to put some of that money for those large life transitions
into your retirement accounts to try to reduce the tax that you're paying on them.
And then as soon as you retire, pull them out and use some of the time that you
have to do some of these things that you have put off for so many years.
Maybe it's upgrading a car or doing something around the house, things like that.
But oftentimes you'll save some things.
tax by doing that post-retirement rather than pre-retirement. Again, you don't have to do it. And if you
run the numbers and you say the simplicity of life in retirement, you want to be done with those
repairs and have that all set up to do some major traveling or something, depend on your retirement
goals, that's fine. Just make sure you know that the, know about the tax. Okay. So to kind of put
it in the terms that I would think about it, if I need to spend 50 grand, right, then it's better to do that
after I stopped earning income and I'm now withdrawing because my taxable income is lower
and therefore I'm going to take less of a hit from having realized that income. So I'll be pulling
money on my 401k at a lower tax bracket than I do in the years before I retire. Now, does that logic
still apply if you are already maxing out your 401k and all that kind of stuff? And this is all after
tax liquidity anyways? Is that, is that advice change or is that the same? Yeah, no, that's a good point.
It would change a little bit because it's not as significant of a tax penalty for doing it earlier.
If you're already maxing out a lot of those things, there's not a whole lot that you can significantly do once you've maxed those out unless you're self-employed and you have access to a solo 401k or something where you can do 50 plus grand a year,
you know, some major pre-tax stuff.
But once you've done that, then yeah, I think what I see a lot of times is people that aren't maxing those 401ks out right up until retirement and using that money instead.
right at that point in time where it would make more sense, just like you said, to move that into a
year when you're no longer working and your taxable income is lower. The concept still applies in the
fact that sometimes you need something to do in retirement and projects are a really good thing
and can be a lot more enjoyable when you're not working full-time jobs. You can monitor contractors better
if it's a remodel. You know, you can spend more time looking for a vehicle. If you've never bought a new
car in your life and you have a portfolio that now allows you to do that and you, despite the
depreciation hit, you don't care and you're able to spend on that and you want to spend three
months looking for a car that's going to last you for 20 years for the rest of your life. You know,
you can do that instead of being rushed in those last years of retirement. But yeah, the tax penalty
is not as big of a deal once, if you're already maxing those things out and you just want to kind
to prepare retirement to be a lot more low key and have these things completely done. It's a good point.
So aside from just kind of monitoring the large expenses and kind of figuring out how to shift,
make sure that you're at least maximizing your 401k.
And then from there you can make all these different types of decisions about when to realize
income and make large expenditures.
What about like ongoing lifestyle expenses generally?
You know, we know that typically it sounds like those expenses drop considerably once
people exit the workforce.
How do you plan around that?
Because that's probably, that seems like a bold assumption to me.
If, hey, I'm going to plan on spending less afterwards. Is that a sacrifice? How do I wrap my
head around that? Yeah, that is a bold assumption. You just have to be careful. The research does
show that in retirement you actually end up spending less. However, it's still very individually based.
You know, like, just because there's an average out there doesn't mean that you're average.
So you still need to watch your spending just like you would. And I would say in the years leading up to
retirement, those are just really prime time when you have the surplus in your budget or you have
income to start training yourself to really track your monthly expenses and think about what
you're going to have in retirement. One thing to keep in mind is that oftentimes the first 10-ish
years of traditional retirement are really the best years for doing larger things like travel,
large vacations, remodels, things that you're still physically able and capable and wanting to do,
at age 75, you might still be physically able and capable to do that. But what we're finding is that
people at that point want to just move close to family. They want to have potlucks with family.
They have the income. The expenses go down significantly at that point. At that point,
people really realize the most important things in life are these relationships and being around
the people that are important to them. So we find that they just really settle into the habits and
the things that they enjoy on a very simple basis. So in planning for expenses in those first years,
it might make sense to plan for slightly higher expenses in the first 10 years for travel and
such and count on reducing those a little bit later after that. You know, you throw into the mix,
though higher health costs at some point later. That does go up, but there's other ways around that.
You know, Medicare covers some things there. Insurance policy.
say long-term care insurance is something we haven't even touched on. We can jump into that in a little bit.
Maybe there might be something to cover at least briefly. But yeah, and I would say it doesn't change
when you retire the responsibility that you have to track your expenses and manage your expenses.
Money just doesn't start growing on trees. You can really hurt your portfolio if you go off the wall.
You still need to be a responsible person, I guess. It's a way to say it.
Well, let's dive into that long-term care and insurance and those types of things that to be thinking about around this time as well.
So long-term care insurance is kind of a big question that a lot of retirees have because more and more people are living longer.
And with the medical advances we have, we're able to be kept living longer, I guess, in facilities or in good care places where people can really spend the last years of their lives and really prolong it and live well.
but it comes at a high cost oftentimes.
And what's happened is probably 10, 15 years ago,
long-term care insurance policies,
even a little bit longer than that now,
maybe 15, 20 years ago,
they were being sold at a ridiculously low price.
They just didn't have the numbers
and the research to show what it would truly cost.
So I have clients that have these phenomenal policies
that they bought 20 years ago
that will pay a ridiculous amount of money
for their entire life.
And they're done paying for them.
They've paid premiums.
There's like a 10-year pay-up policy.
It's done.
Nowadays, the secret is out and the insurance companies have increased premium substantially.
So long-term care insurance, I should explain what it is, it basically helps cover living
expenses in a facility that is high care, like a nursing facility, end-of-life type of things,
continuing care facility. The insurance policy covers what a certain amount per month, basically,
but now insurance companies have realized how costly it is. And in order to make up for the really cheap policies,
they sold too long ago, they've increased the premium substantially on new policies. So for most people,
it's just a really high cost. And it's really, it's one of the toughest things for me to help clients
decide on whether or not to go the route of a long-term care insurance policy, because it can cost
10 grand a year, it can cost 20 grand a year, depending on the price. You can get some for five grand a
year, but it may not be what you're looking for. And that really hurts your cash flow. And you might
never use it. There's some hybrid policies that are life insurance policies too and they'll pay out
to your airs. I won't go down in the weeds on that. That's a whole other. These are insurance products
also that have commissions when they're sold. So you need to keep that in mind when you're looking
into products like this. Whereas if you meet with a fee only financial planner and you're talking this
through and you're paying them hourly, if you decide that one of these policies is best for you, they're going
to refer you to someone else. You're not going to get sold by that financial planner or it shouldn't be
because it's just removing that conflict of interest.
They'll refer you out to someone that they trust to sell it.
So one thing that I try to get clients to do as early as possible
when it comes to long-term care is to partition off a part of your portfolio
that is specifically designed to hedge against those long-term care expenses.
So if you're, say, age 50, and you've been saving well,
and we were talking about that bucket strategy at the beginning of the podcast,
I would suggest slicing off a portion of your overall portfolio and doing a very long-term
target date fund of like target date 2050 or 2060.
When you're going to be age 85 or 90, just calculate it out and look at the target date
fund for that and do a quick calculation and see what you'd need to invest in it today
with like a 7% growth rate for it to be 200,000 at that point in time.
You know, you've still got a 40 years if you're a 50-year-old.
So you could really slice off a portion of your portfolio and you just stick it in there
and you say, I'm not going to use this.
This is not part of my retirement income.
This is me self-insuring for potential long-term care.
Worst case scenario, you don't use it.
Your heirs get it.
Your charities get it.
That's the best way to do it.
Just as with any insurance, if you can self-insure, it's cheaper.
That's what insurance is.
If you're able to do it yourself instead of offloading it,
However, later in life, if you haven't saved for that, it might be a risk that due to the high
premiums, you might not have enough in your portfolio to really portion off a piece of that.
I would still encourage people to do even a small portion, even if you stick 20,000 into a really
long-term bucket of your portfolio that you know you're not going to miss and just invest it for
that kind of idea down the road. But sometimes that might be a risk that you have to live with.
You know, if you take out a long-term care insurance policy, the premiums might just be too high
and might break your retirement income portfolio and you might just need to live with that risk.
Worst case scenario, there's spend down rules. You have to spend through your assets when you go into a facility like that.
Your spouse can keep a certain amount of assets depending on the state you live in and the Medicaid rules in that state.
I've done it with a couple of clients, but there's some things around that.
you still are taking care of the government steps in and takes over paying some of those things.
But there's rules on they then have a claim to your house eventually.
They can't kick your spouse out of the house.
There's different things like that you need to think about.
It's not the end of the world.
But long-term care is just, it's a really sticky issue that you need to at least think about
and then just make a decision on whether you're going to really try to insure it or just live with the risk.
But make a decision.
Don't just put it off.
Okay.
So let's say that I need long-term care insurance.
I'm not going to feel comfortable without having some sort of policy in place.
It sounds like this is a set amount of time that you pay and then the policy is good forever.
And then so what time?
Yeah.
Oh, oh, okay.
So let's clear that up.
Yes, definitely.
So that's a client that I have that has just a golden policy.
So they used to make these paid up policies where you would pay for a certain number of years.
And then it was just this benefit that was done.
They had a 10-year pay-up policy and it's now they have a long-term care policy that just
is sitting there waiting for them and it accrues like compound interest every year. But the way they
work now, those policies are pretty much, I don't think there's even one in existence anymore.
The way they work now is you pay a premium for the rest of your life, kind of like a car insurance
premium similar because it can go up over time if they have to go through a process of submitting
to the state showing that their costs are high and that they need to increase the premiums to keep
the program viable. So there's potential for that. But a lot of times people can get it as early
is age 50. A lot of people will get it around 60. I think Dave Ramsey, if I can remember right,
he always tells people to get it around age 60-ish. Don't quote me on that, but somewhere around
there is probably the time to really be looking at it. The earlier, the better. The problem is
earlier than you're paying premiums for longer. The best route, in my opinion, in this day and age,
with long-term care insurance is to self-insure if you can somehow. To use a part of your portfolio,
sticking in the index target date fund and just put it for when you're going to be age 85
or you and your spouse somewhere in there and have it in a retirement account.
Don't do that with qualified money.
Have it be a section of your IRA that you do that with because that money, you can take it out
and you pay tax on it, but it's going to be mostly for medical expenses.
So you'll get to deduct most of it on your taxes.
So you might as well have that hedge be inside of one of your retirement accounts
so that it grows really as much as possible long-term
and then can be taken out effectively tax-free on some level.
Okay.
So I think this is a great discussion around long-term care insurance.
We've covered Social Security.
We've covered some spending and those types of things.
We touched on portfolio at the beginning of the episode.
I want to touch on that real quick before we get to any closing kind of concerns and thoughts.
One of the things you posited was a potential target date.
hey, but 25% in one target date, 25% in the next one that's five years farther there,
and so on and so forth.
One of the issues that comes to my mind that we've been talking about a lot on this show
is the fees associated with mutual funds like a target date fund.
So what would those look like?
And if you wanted to do it yourself and reconstruct a similar portfolio using index funds
with very low fees, what would that difference be?
and would there be advantages to kind of reconstructing it in that manner?
Yes.
Okay.
So I knew you were going to ask this question, Scott.
So I have the Vanguard target portfolio pulled up so that we could dive into that.
It's a really good question.
So when it comes to the Target date funds, at least at Vanguard, I use Vanguard.
It's not the only route you can go.
There's a lot of other good companies out there.
I just, for my clients, I know Vanguard very well.
I know the company.
I love John Bogle, who,
founded the thing. So that's just a route I go. But you can do this with any other company.
Fidelity, Schwab, there's a lot of good companies out there. So their target date portfolio,
2035 fund, for example, has an expense ratio of 0.09, which is very, very minimal.
You know, if you go into their total stock market fund or some of these other funds,
you're looking at 0.03, 0.02.
Internationally, you're looking a little bit higher. Like, you're not paying that much more.
So they basically just build it up of if you pull up,
online their target date portfolio and you just scroll down and see what they put in it you can
build it yourself to save you know five basis points which is 0.05 percent so they have the total stock
market index total international total bond and total international bond those are the four things that
build up their target date portfolio and they basically tack on a little bit extra expense ratio
to that. In my opinion, for the do-it-yourselfer that really values their time, and you really need
to think about the value of your time, if you love going in there and trading and rebalancing,
then go ahead and build it yourself. But if you have four buckets with four things in each bucket,
you're going to need to rebalance each bucket with those four things on a regular basis
and not be emotional about it when the market changes. My opinion is that you set yourself up for
potential error at some point or not as well as you could if you just pay the extra point.
05%, which really is not going to have a significant impact in your portfolio over the long run
and just use a target date fund.
But you do need to be careful because a lot of times, if you look at your 401K statements,
a lot of times the target date funds there are very expensive.
So they're not all created equally.
Some of them are 0.6% higher.
Some of them are in 1% range.
Vanguards are an index target date fund portfolio.
So that's why they're so low, but you do need to be careful of that.
So if I'm thinking about this and I want to do something along the lines of that 25% in each portfolio,
suppose that I've worked a long career at a company that did not offer Vanguard with the 401K.
One of my first moves upon retirement would be to liquidate that 401k and move all of those assets
into a such target date fund within Vanguard system.
Is that kind of the way you'd be thinking about that?
So that would be, you know, maybe that's too specific in terms of we,
We're not recommending to do any of that.
But that would be one way, that would be one way to go about it if that was a goal.
Right.
If that's your goal, that would be the way to implement it, you know, that you have to decide
whether that's right for you or not.
And you want to make sure we use the right terminology.
You don't want to necessarily, when Scott's saying liquidate it, we want to roll it over,
roll it over into the IRA non-taxable event.
So, but yeah, that's definitely a route you can go.
And I would highly recommend that, you know, getting your old employer plans into your own
IRA, there's a lot more flexibility around things that you can do with IRAs that you can't do with
401Ks. That being said, if you're in a really good 401k plan, they might have some of these
available at institutional pricing that's a little bit less. And you might be able to just build it
right there inside that employer account. And that would be totally fine. But yeah, that's a good
route to go. I mean, it just, I think this goes yet again to say it's so important it seems like
to just meet with a fee-only financial planner, CFB, that can help.
you time these decisions about, hey, how do I manage my 401k and get that into an optimal state?
When do I take Social Security?
Should I be doing long-term care insurance?
Should I be doing all these things?
And like you mentioned, some of those products are commissioned-based to sales products,
which is why it's so important to get a fee-only financial advisor.
It's a couple hundred dollars for X amount of hours that you want to go with that.
and it might save tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, or millions over the course of retirement.
Yeah, that's a really good summary. I definitely think so. And yeah, depending on the financial planner,
it might be like for me, and this is definitely not a plug. And the last one, I said the same thing.
I'm at capacity. So, you know, just, but to give you an idea on pricing, I charge a minimum of $750.
And that includes an hour of prep, an hour meeting, and about a half hour to an hour of follow-up with any questions.
if you want someone to do a really good job,
they're probably going to be charging in the range of $300 an hour or so.
Someone who's been in the industry 10 years,
who's doing this day in and day out,
they're going to charge for their time.
Well, you might be able to find someone that's like $150 an hour or something like that.
And not that they're not doing a good job,
but they're probably newer in the industry.
Don't know how valuable their advice is yet.
But that's, you know,
a reasonable expectation would probably be around $500 to $750 for some sort of
good broad consultation. And you could do it, if you're a very good, do it yourself,
or you can do that once every three years. You don't have to do it all that often.
If you wanted to do it really in-depth one time and have someone spend more hours on it,
they may say that's going to take more hours to do that. Just make sure you understand the hours
that it's going to take. If your situation is complicated, you have a couple of businesses,
some real estate. It takes hours to do. And if you want them to do a good job,
you might have to pay for that. But again, you made a good point on the fee only.
they can recommend the commission products that you should buy from someone else.
And this is not in my opinion.
There's a lot of areas to be price sensitive in life, right?
And this is not one of them, right?
It just like it seems like we have a saying on bigger pockets how, you know,
you think a $100 an hour electrician is expensive.
Try hiring a $10 an hour electrician.
You know, if you'll see how cheap that $100 electrician was.
You know, it seems like that logic applies directly to this discussion based on
we've discussed here in today's show.
Yeah, definitely.
If you think about your return on investment and anything you do,
you always want to be thinking about your time
and the investment you're putting into it.
And the potential impact that some of these decisions have
on your life, your heir's life, your spouse's life,
this is a big deal.
You know, you really want to make sure that you're, yeah,
not skimping on it and that you're finding the right professional,
you know, someone that's on the up and up
and not going to try to sell you something.
because you're, I'm just going to say right now, someone who's at traditional retirement
is a very hot commodity for a commission-based salesperson.
You have a lot of liquid cash.
You now have access to retirement accounts.
You now have kids out of the house.
You have a lot of equity in your home if it's not paid off.
You're someone that people want to get a hold of oftentimes.
So just be aware of that when you're making these decisions and talking with people.
They may be seeking some value there.
Not that they always are, and most people are very, very high integrity, but that's something to be aware of.
Well, and I think that it's important to note. You just said you could do this, you know, once every three years. You could do this. Even if you're doing this once a year, it's not once a month. You're not spending $750 to $1,000 a month. It's a once a year, once every two years, once every three years. Investment in the direction of your financial portfolio going forward. I think that, you know, it's going to cost money.
who's going to do this for free, people who are getting paid by somebody else.
I think it's better for you to pay the money up front and get unbiased advice,
which is what you get from a fee-only financial planner.
And yeah, I love that.
You think it's expensive hiring a professional.
Try hiring an amateur.
That's just one of my favorite quotes.
It's really funny.
Well, great.
Is there anything else that we should be asking or considering around this discussion?
I know we've spent a lot of time, but if there's anything else, let's dive into that as well
before we close out here.
I think maybe the only thing we haven't touched on as much as we probably should have is identifying your own risk tolerance.
And this is something that comes out in our industry all the time.
We throw this word around risk tolerance.
It's like we don't even really explain what that means a lot of times.
But it just basically is how you will react if something bad happens.
You know, what is your tolerance for the risk of something like a downturn in the market happening?
and this is something that you really need to be aware of in your own situation.
And this is a reason that I really like the bucket strategy for planning out retirement
investing is because really overall you have a portfolio allocation.
When you set up these buckets, you have one big allocation that you can look at if you add
it all together.
However, to separate in your mind, these separate timeframes really helps.
But you need to understand that Mindy mentioned this early on.
And I'm glad you pulled it out is that those later buckets,
if we have a recession like we did in 0809,
those buckets are down 35 to 45%
and you need to be able to stomach that.
But the way you can stomach that is that you have these earlier buckets
that are going to be down 9% or something like that,
you know, that are going to be a lot less volatile.
But you have to take some of that risk, quote, risk in the long run
to reduce your risk of running out of money or losing your money to inflation.
That's why the term risk in my mind is just really hard
to define well because there's risk that people talk about as just the volatility in the market.
But I often try to think, what's your risk of not investing well for the long term?
You're going to lose to inflation.
If inflation really takes off at some point, those long-term buckets are going to hedge you against that.
Other things won't as much.
If you have more in cash, you're going to get eaten alive by inflation.
So things to think about, especially people that are 10 years or less from retirement,
at this point, you experienced the great recession in the middle of your working career or even later in your
working career. How did you react? Don't think that you're going to react differently now. That's a
pretty good indicator. If you really panicked, you might panic again. How can you set yourself up for
success if that happens again? Not saying that it will, I have no idea, but you need to make sure that
you understand yourself well to know that, to see if you can put things in place. Vanguard did a study.
this is one reason to work with a financial planner.
And it's totally from a behavioral psychology standpoint.
They did an alpha of an advisor study
and what an advisor adds,
just from a behavioral coaching standpoint,
that keeps you in the game when you want to jump out when you shouldn't.
Not to say you can't do that on your own,
but you just need to be very self-aware in that case.
And then jumping to the early retirees
or people that are earlier in the game,
a lot of us, a lot of you have only experienced
the biggest bull market in the history of the U.S.
So you really don't know what it feels like
to see your $200,000 portfolio go to $100,000
and be thinking in your mind, man, it could go to $50,
I need to get out.
Whereas that's what the bottom of 09 would have been
and that $100,000 has now become $300,000.
You need to be thinking through those things
ahead of time and set systems in place
and strategies in place that are going to take your emotion out of it
and help you stay the course.
And that's really difficult.
I mean, when the market drops so significantly, your first thought is, I've already lost so much money.
Now I have to pull it out so I don't lose anymore.
And you actually haven't lost any money.
You still have, you know, let's say you bought Facebook at $10.
It was never $10.
But you bought Facebook at $10.
It went up to $100.
And now it's down to $90.
You didn't lose that $10.
You gained the $10 to $90 that it grew.
I think that humans are just wired to view that as, no, I lost $10.
No, no, you still gained.
Well, I guess it's $80, not 90.
I'm not even doing math, right?
But you gained the $80 that you, you know, and you only lose it when you sell.
But, you know, that's really easy for me to sit here with the job and, you know.
Yeah, there's some studies that talk about loss is three times more painful than gain.
So if you keep that in mind, when things are going bad, you're so much more likely to jump ship than when they're going well.
is something that I've seen a lot of clients that I took on after the recession that really hurt
themselves to the recession. And what happens is it's really hard to get back in then too because you
psychologically hurt yourself and you say, okay, I pulled out at the bottom. It's going up,
but should I get back in? Is it going to crash again? That's why to have a strategy ahead of time
and you just stick to it long term. And that's, you know, the earlier you can start in this stuff,
the greater margin you have, the longer term time frame you have. But even as you're approaching retirement,
you still have a decently long time frame and just try to keep that in mind and use those buckets
to your advantage.
Well, let's go to the famous four and we'll mix it up a little bit today because we already
did the famous four with you.
Oh, boy.
Oh, great.
I had thought of things ahead of time because I had gotten other ones, but yeah, mix it up on me.
Oh, okay.
Well, Mindy, you can go ahead and start if you like.
Okay, these are the same four questions we ask everybody.
Like Scott said, we already asked you about your favorite finance book,
back on episode 41. Do you have another finance book to recommend?
So I kind of went a different route here. I said the rich dad, poor dad and set for life on the
last one. But I, every quarter I do a business retreat and essentialism by Greg McEwen and
the one thing by Gary Keller and Jay Papasan are just phenomenal books. If anyone, and they're
not strictly finance. They're more business or even life in general, but they're heavily focused on
kind of the taking the 80, 20 rule to the extreme and just really focusing on the most important
things that you can do, especially both of them. The one thing and essentialism, they are just,
I probably read both of them 10 times. I cannot highly recommend them enough. So when you hear
a conversation like we had today, a lot of information at you, like what is the one thing that
you can do? And in that book, his phrasing, what's the one thing you can do such that by doing
it, everything else becomes easier or unnecessary? And that is just an awesome phrase. So what's
the one thing from the podcast today that such that by doing it, everything else becomes easier.
What's the most important thing? I don't know what that is for you, but I'm sure someone listening
to this can think of something. Meet with us. The only financial planner is my one thing. And I'm
going to plug the one thing on top of you. Josh Dorkin, who founded Bigger Pockets, read that book
and loved it so much, he bought a copy for every single person in the office. And now whenever we get a new
employee. That is one of the things that they get in their new employee packet. They get this
spiffy bigger pockets t-shirt. They get a copy of the one thing. And that is required reading.
It's such a good book. It's such a good book. Yeah, definitely. My one thing is to get that
CFP conversation happening. What about a book or resource for self-education on retirement planning?
Do you have one of those to recommend? You know, there's actually a book called Buckets of Money that
runs this concept pretty well. It's an older book, but it's a good, a good classic book. A good
blog to follow if people want to get into the weeds a little bit more. Michael Kitsis.kitsis.com.
It's K-I-T-C-E-S. I don't know if you guys have heard him or not, but he's basically a superstar
in the financial advising and financial planning realm. The guy is just genius on many levels and
puts out some tremendous material. And you can literally find everything from Social Security planning
all that stuff really boiled down well on his blog.
I would highly recommend it if you're into the self-education portion of it.
Perfect. We'll link to that in the should not. That's a wonderful resource for people that are looking to think more about this.
Yeah, he's got a great blog. And it's not jargon filled. It's pretty easy to understand.
It is. And he'll do, he dove into the new SEC ruling on fiduciary. He'll get into some deep stuff and just skip over, just skip to the stuff that you like.
If it doesn't apply to you, don't read it.
Just read the stuff that he puts out.
But he did really good stuff on the new tax law that went in that summarizes things.
Small businesses, there's a qualified business deduction.
He went into that really well.
Just go read his blog.
He's got good stuff on there.
You probably will find it almost as enjoyable as Kyle finds it.
What is the biggest money mistake that you fear retirees might be making going into retirement?
Oh, my goodness.
That's a good one.
I think it's the emotional reactions to the market.
I'm really afraid for people right now thinking that the market is really high and that it's
going to crash and that they want to do something about it right now to try to time that.
You can do things like the bucket strategy or creating some other streams of income that
can help hedge against that for sure.
But anytime you think you're smarter than the hedge fund managers that do this day in
and day out with five screens and they get it wrong all the time, that's just a slippery
slope. And I just worry, when I think about the 67-year-old widow who does not know what to do with
her portfolio other than what she's hearing on the news and calls a broker up and says, I need to
sell everything, that just breaks my heart. So those would be things, emotional reactions to the market.
If I could just wipe that out of people's minds, that would be awesome. Got it. Okay. What is your
best advice for people who are nearing retirement? Oh man, you guys are.
switching it up on me. Yeah. Well, we already know what your best advice is for people who are just
starting out. You can find that at episode 41. Yeah. So nearing retirement, and this is, I try to make this
not a shameless plug for financial planners, but please meet with a financial planner. I just think
you spend the money for a one hour session and if you hate it, in the grand scheme of things,
at least you checked it out. You know, I think it's a very low barrier to entry and you,
could miss so much. You don't have the long time frame to recover that a 20-year-old does,
and you just need to take that really seriously. So I think that would be the number one thing,
but make sure it is a fee-only financial planner that you know what they're getting paid.
They're a CFP. They've gone through the courses past the cumulative exam. Again, XY planning
Network is a great resource to go on there. They have virtual planners. You have planners
in your geographic area. You can find planners specific that will focus on your niche. You know,
if you're a doctor or if you're a self-employed, a contractor, you know, whatever it is,
there's very specific niches that that's one of the things that XY Planning Network does is
they have advisors that focus very specifically on certain professions or certain types of lifestyles,
full-time travelers, different things like that. So a very good resource. But I would definitely,
as you approach retirement, get some expert advice.
and pay for it. You know, you do get what you pay for.
So your best piece of advice is to get advice.
I love it.
Yes.
I think it's very appropriate given the conversation.
And there's not a single, like that is the one thing,
if you haven't done it already from this show,
that you should be taking away,
is you need to go and meet someone like Kyle
that can help you figure this stuff out and make good decisions.
So what is your favorite joke to tell at retirement parties?
I don't go to retirement.
parties. When my clients retire, I don't see them anymore. They send me pictures of them pulling their
RV to Florida. So this is so funny. You guys asked me last time, I told you my only joke from my
little sister last time. I literally don't have any other jokes. And I was thinking about with my wife,
the reason is because we don't go to parties. Parties are like after 7.30 p.m. And our kid goes about
at 7.30 p.m. And we are in bed at 7.35, falling asleep at 8.30. So we don't, that's my excuse for not
having any jokes at all. Don't let Scott in on the fact that parenting is exhausting. How are we going to
get him to have kids if we let him know that you're exhausted for 18 years? It's worth it. It's not
that bad. I get up early. I just make sure I get good sleep. Yeah. Did you hear about the kidnapping
at school? No. It's fine. He woke up. Nice.
Ha ha ha ha ha.
I know it's terrible.
Did I tell them what is red and bad for your teeth joke?
Okay.
What's red and bad for your teeth?
A brick.
Oh, I do remember that you did tell me.
Okay.
My daughter goes through fits and spurts while she will learn.
I know I laughed out loud at that one.
I can just imagine somebody like whacking somebody in the face with a brick, which is bad for your teeth.
Yeah.
But she'll tell me all these jokes.
like, oh, I forgot to write them down and then you're here at the office. And oh, I guess I didn't
remember any of them. So there you are. Great jokes. Always never had killed joy.
Okay, Kyle, where can people find out more about you?
You're welcome to just jump on my website. It's just Kylemask.com. My financial planning firm
info is on there, but I have about an eight-month waiting list until another CFP comes on.
He's studying through his coursework right now. But you'll be a little.
free to reach out to me on there. I also have a couple blogs I read on there. A true hourly wage
where I talk about financial independence and just tracking your real hourly wage and what that means.
And then letters to Rand and I write some letters to my son on financial independence and
just living intentionally in general or Twitter at Financial Kyle if you want to see what I'm up to.
But yeah, I appreciate you guys having me on. You guys just ask really good questions.
Yeah, we appreciate having you on. This was a fantastic discussion. You had a lot of concepts that I had never
even touched upon or thought about how deep they go, like with the Social Security
decision. I think I definitely underestimate from my perspective in life how emotionally powerful
these market forces and things can be for someone that's nearing retirement age.
Yeah. Well, even when you're not nearing retirement age, to watch the market go down at all,
you're like, oh, I just lost money. Even though you didn't really lose money, it feels like.
So, you know, yeah, I never want to lose money.
Definitely. I think, you know, if you could, for people that have more time,
if you just think about try to build as much margin as you can,
it makes a lot of these decisions as you get to retirement a lot easier.
If you're not too tight on really having to make sure you maximize stuff,
you can still maximize things.
But the more margin that you can have in your saving and your investing,
it just makes a lot easier and a lot less stressful when you no longer have the,
as much of an opportunity to continue working or getting income from some other source.
Yep. Perfect.
Well, thank you again. This was wonderful.
And I'm sure we'll have you back at some point in the future.
Sounds good.
I know we'll have you back.
Because you have such a lengthy waiting period, you're not here trying to just plug stuff.
Nobody wants to listen to a one-hour commercial.
No, I'd be really bad at a one-hour commercial, too.
I'd turn it off real quick.
Okay, great.
Kyle, thank you so much for your time today.
We really appreciate it as always.
and have a what looks like a beautiful day behind you, have a lovely rest of your day.
Awesome. Thanks, guys. Good talking to you. Bye-bye. Bye.
All right, big thanks to Kyle Masked. Mindy, what do you think?
You know, Scott, I think this episode covered a lot of information that isn't really covered
frequently. I read a lot of personal finance blogs. I listen to a lot of personal finance podcasts.
And what I see overwhelmingly is here's what you should be doing to grow to retirement.
But there is a real lack of information for what you do after retirement.
After you've decided, I have enough money and I'm not going to work anymore.
And I think that Kyle gives a lot of really great advice, not advice.
He gives a lot of really great examples of things that could happen and then points you to a CFP to have a conversation based on your specific situation.
And I think that's really, really going to be helpful for a lot of people.
Yeah, I thought it was a great episode.
I thought there was, again, outstanding perspective and information.
And I think there's a lot of things like I think it will leave you as a listener if you're in this position with a lot of actions and a lot of, you know, hey, this is the starting point.
There's a tremendous amount to understand and a lot of detail that you need to dive into in order to make the best decisions on many different fronts and insulate yourself against some of the risks that he talked about.
Yeah, well, I hope that that was encouraging and enlightening.
I hope that you go out and are able to connect with that professional who can help you
and enjoy a wonderful retirement if that's where you're at.
Yes, all of these links can be found at the show notes for this episode,
which is found at biggerpockets.com slash money show 84.
From episode 84 of the Bigger Pockets Money podcast, I am Mindy Jensen and he is Scott Trench,
and we are retiring.
That makes it sound like we're quitting.
We're not quitting.
We are retiring for the day.
We're retiring for the day, yes.
Yes, we'll be back next week with more information from another guest.
Who isn't scheduled guest?
So I don't even know who it is yet.
I think to retire back home with my scotch or something like that.
Oh, do you drink scotch?
No, I'm trying to become financially free.
Listen, you can have a little tipple.
It's delicious.
I like J-R-A-B-S-E-R-B-S-E-S-E-U-R-A.
And I hate Lefroid. Oh, my goodness. Do you know the mad scientist? I was over visiting him. He's like, oh, try this. He doesn't even tell me what it is. He pours me this little tiny bit. And I'm like, oh, God, this is horrible. Lafroid is very, very, very, you either love it or hate it. It's very polarizing.
I know nothing about scotch. So I'm completely left in the dark of this conversation.
Just say no to Lefroid. Unless you like drinking dirt.
Okay, from episode 84 for real, we're leaving. Goodbye.
