Motley Fool Money - Learning From the Happiest Retirees
Episode Date: August 9, 2025For more than a decade, financial advisor and author Wes Moss has surveyed people near and in retirement. In Part 1 of this two-part discussion with Robert Brokamp, Wes shares the financial and non-fi...nancial metrics and habits of the happiest retirees. Also in this episode: - How the current bull market compares to those of the past - Estimates for the future returns from stocks - How to make more on your cash Tickers discussed: SGOV Host: Robert Brokamp Guest: Wes Moss Engineer: Dan Boyd Disclosure: Advertisements are sponsored content and provided for informational purposes only. The Motley Fool and its affiliates (collectively, “TMF”) do not endorse, recommend, or verify the accuracy or completeness of the statements made within advertisements. TMF is not involved in the offer, sale, or solicitation of any securities advertised herein and makes no representations regarding the suitability, or risks associated with any investment opportunity presented. Investors should conduct their own due diligence and consult with legal, tax, and financial advisors before making any investment decisions. TMF assumes no responsibility for any losses or damages arising from this advertisement. We’re committed to transparency: All personal opinions in advertisements from Fools are their own. The product advertised in this episode was loaned to TMF and was returned after a test period or the product advertised in this episode was purchased by TMF. Advertiser has paid for the sponsorship of this episode. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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How does the current bull market compare to those of the past?
And what can we learn from the happiest retirees?
You're listening to the Saturday Personal Finance Edition of Motley Full Money.
I'm Robert Brokamp, and this week is part one of my discussion with financial advisor
and author Wes Moss about his research on the financial and non-financial characteristics
of a fulfilling retirement. But first, let's start with last week in money.
Now, our first item comes from Jurian Timmer, director of Global Macro at Fidelity Investments,
who puts out an interesting report each week, and his recent edition pointed out that the current
bull market in U.S. stocks that began in October of 2022 is now 33 months old and has produced an
84% gain. No, the tariff tantrum from this past spring didn't technically end the bull market,
though it came pretty close. According to Timmer, since 1960, the median bull market lasts 30 months
and produces gains of 90%. So the current run is right about at the median,
in terms of length and gains.
However, what's somewhat different this time is breadth.
Not all stocks are posting extraordinary gains,
and Timmer wrote that only 35% of stocks
are outperforming the index.
He found that only two bull markets
had similarly low breadth figures,
and they were the 1970 to 1973 rise
of the so-called 50-50 and the 1998 to 2000 tech boom.
Both of those bull markets were followed by bear markets
that cut the S&P 500's value,
and half. The skirt ball market has been driven primarily by tech-oriented growth stocks with a heavy
emphasis on AI-related companies, which brings us to our next item, and it comes from Renaissance macro
research, also known as RenMAC, which calculated that investment in AI, including both equipment
and software, has added more to GDP growth this year than consumer spending. And that's really
remarkable, because consumer spending usually drives 70% of the economy. So there are two main
takeaways here, at least in my opinion. One is that investment in AI has been massive, but also
that consumer spending and demand is sluggish. To quote a recent Wall Street Journal article,
consumer spending stagnated in the first half of this year, according to federal data issued last
week, and the CEOs of Chipotle, Kroger, and Procter & Gamble, among others, who are telling
investors that their customers are more strapped or appear to feel that way. End of quote.
The bottom line here is that if it were not for capital expenditures related to AI, both the stock
market and the economy would not be looking nearly as rosy.
And now we come to the number of the week, or actually numbers, and they are 3.3% to 5.3%.
That is the range of annualized returns that Vanguard expects from U.S. equities over the next
decade, according to a recent report.
And that, of course, is well below the historical long-term average of 10% and below the 15.1.5.
3% the S&P 500 has returned on average over the last five years. The reason for Vanguard's
lower expectations, while U.S. stocks trade well above the firm's estimate of the market's fair value.
However, they do expect returns that are around two percentage points higher from value stocks,
small cap stocks, and non-U.S. developed stocks. Now, Vanguard isn't alone with their muted expectations.
Just about any firm that estimates the future returns from stocks expects that they will be below
average. And that includes some of my colleagues here at the Motley Fool, specifically the analysts
in our Hidden Gem service. In a recent article, they provided their estimate for returns from the
S&P 500 for the next five years, and their range is 7.8% to 8.2%. So, more optimistic than
Vankar's expectations for the next decade, but below average, nonetheless, for various reasons,
including that U.S. equities account for 60% of the value of all equities worldwide. That is more
than 10 percentage points above the historical norm. The S&P 500's PE ratio is more than 30% above the
historical average. And then there's the Buffett indicator, which is the ratio of the entire
value of the stock market to GDP. It's sort of like a price to sales ratio for the market.
The current reading is 210%, which is more than twice the historical norm. So what should you do
with all these prognostications? Well, there's no guarantee they'll be right. It's very
difficult to predict what the market will do, and many firms have expected sub-average returns
from U.S. stocks for the past several years, and frankly, they've been proven wrong.
Here's why I think these estimates matter. Over the last couple of Saturday episodes, I've
encouraged you to use online tools to calculate whether you're on track to reach your financial
goals. And I named a couple of specific tools to consider. But whatever tool you use, you generally
have to input a project return on your investments. And at current valuations, I think it's
likely too optimistic to assume you'll earn 10% a year over the next 5 to 10 years. When I run my
numbers, I assume my investments will earn 5 to 6% while I'm still working, and then around 5% in
retirement, and then I adjust my monthly savings requirements accordingly. I hope my portfolio has
higher returns, but I don't want my retirement or other goals relying on double-digit annual gains.
Next up, my discussion with West Moss when Motleyful Bunny returns.
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We all want a happy, healthy, and wealthy retirement. But what does a research
say about what it takes to achieve those goals. Well, here to tell us is Wes Moss, a certified
financial planner practitioner, the host of the Retire Sooner podcast, and the author of
What the Happiest Retirees Know. Wes, welcome to Motley Full Money. Robert, so good to be here.
Very good. Excited. Well, I'm glad to hear that. And I'm excited for you to share a lot of what
you've learned, because you've been working on this for years. You've been doing multiple surveys
of retirees and near retirees for many years. Plus,
You've been an actual financial advisor for more than two decades.
And you've determined that the happiest retirees tend to have certain habits,
have certain characteristics.
But let's start with what inspired you to start doing this research?
When I was a new dad, I remember there was a popular book.
And it was called It Happiest Baby on the Block.
And it supposedly that book helped you soothe your baby and make everything easier.
Did it work for you?
No, it didn't work.
because first of all, you can't, I thought of the, when I first heard this, I thought,
well, how do they know if the baby's happy?
There didn't, you can't ask a baby.
You can't talk to a baby.
And I guess, of course, the parent can determine, yeah, my kid was happy.
They cried less than they maybe otherwise would.
But it just reminded me or made me think, well, why wouldn't somebody write a book called what the,
the happiest retiree on the block?
And we could go, and what if we were to be able to go talk to 1,000 or 2,000 retirees,
divide them up into two camps, happy versus unhappy, and then study the habits between those two
groups.
And that was the original idea.
It came from a baby book.
It morphed into a long, really, journey.
It's been 15 plus years now of researching the financial habits, the consumer habits, the lifestyle
habits, the social habits, all together that tips folks, if we look at America as a population.
And my most recent research study, again, is mapped to the U.S. Census.
So it's statistically significant differences between these two very different groups.
And we all want to end up in the happy, not the unhappy retiree group.
So I've continued that research.
And I think it's really, it's a powerful guide to,
have the financial side of retirement, which you do such an amazing job of simplifying and having
people be able to digest it and understand it, but then pairing all the lifestyle social community
side and putting those two together so that we have this fruitful free retirement.
Let's start with the topic that probably first comes to mind for most people, which of course
is money. So how much in terms of just liquid investable assets, not net worth, but the liquid
investable assets, do the happiest retirees tend to have?
When I first did this, again, let's go back approximately 15 years.
The way I looked at it in the very first book I did about this called,
You Can Retire Sooner Than You Think, Five Money Secrets of the Happiest Retirees.
There was this inflection point that I found, and if you looked, and you can look at the
data a million different ways, but you can look at the average, you can look at the median.
And I found that the median at that time, this is.
This is, again, a long time ago, the median to cross over from the unhappy to the happy group on at, well, the median was $500,000.
Now, that's not net worth.
That's liquid retirement assets.
And that was the number I used for a very long time.
And that was controversial in a couple ways.
One, I remember getting feedback with that's so much money.
That's for rich people.
It takes forever to get to that.
And then on the other side of the equation was that's not nearly enough.
Well, 500K, that's not going to do it.
So the number, nobody, I don't know if some people didn't like the number.
Some people liked the number.
And that was where I stood for a long period of time.
If you look at going, if you go back to, let's say, 2013 and you'd been in a balanced fund,
let's call it a 60-40 allocation, 60-stock, 40 bond.
And you withdrew funds from that.
So you started with 500.
You took out 4% rule.
So you started with 20K and ratcheted up.
for inflation. That would be approximately, depending on where you are, but I'm generalizing
here, you'd still have, you not only, you wouldn't have 500, you would have taken out about
300 and you'd still have about a million dollars left. Wow. So as low as that sounded back then,
it very likely worked if somebody had taken that approach. Again, there's lots of variation there,
but it's very, it's very realistic that that could have worked out, right?
Today, I look at it in a more nuanced way.
The way the research now in the most recent study is a little more nuanced, and I think of it in three zones.
And here it's the red, red, yellow and green zone.
We want to get to the happy retirees want to get to the green zone.
When it comes to liquid net worth, those numbers, I look at them a little differently today.
You're in the red zone, meaning that you're well below the happiness baseline in America.
So it's like the opposite of alpha.
You're way under the happiness base zone if you have less than 100K.
That makes sense.
The yellow zone from 100K to just under a million, happiness levels are around the U.S.
baseline, slightly above, but just let's call it right, normal happiness in America.
But once you cross into the green zone, which is the million dollar category and up,
$3 million category, that's where you see happiness levels well above the U.S.
happiness baseline. And that is the zone we want, I want people to really focus in on. So today,
that number is a million dollars plus. It used to be 500, but we all know we've gone through
massive inflation. So it makes sense that those numbers would be bigger or more significant,
but that's where we stand today. I also look at income data, again, getting into that green zone
for American families. And this is for all income combined, social security pension, whether you
of rental income, et cetera, plus investment income, we want to get to the 100K and above.
That's what gets us to the green zone.
So there's a lot of other financial habits, but those are two of the big ones that get us
from red to yellow and eventually to green.
And that's where we want to be.
So those are investable assets.
What else did you learn about other ways that the happiest retirees manage their money
apart from just their portfolios?
So there's a couple of things.
One, I've always been interested in mortgage data because we have this weight.
Americans have a weight.
And it's really our biggest bill.
You could argue that health care can be similar or higher now.
But really, for most of our lives, a mortgage and paying for our shelter is the number one big bill.
And what I found in the most recent data is that either a paid off mortgage or a mortgage that's going to be paid off.
scheduled to be paid off within nine years or less, which is still a fair amount of time.
That's what gets people into that happiness green zone.
So there's something very powerful about seeing the light at the end of the tunnel.
Multiple and diversified income streams.
So happy retirees tend to have more and different streams of income so that they have
diversification of how they're getting paid.
Those are two financial habits beyond a portfolio that really, really tip the scales
towards financial peace and feeling confident in financial decisions?
I think one underappreciated aspect of having the mortgage paid off by the time you retire
is that it lowers your expenses.
And in retirement, the more your expenses, the more you have to take out of your portfolio,
the more that you have to take from your traditional IRA, which increases your taxes, right?
If you have a $2,000 mortgage, paying $24,000 a year, you take $24,000 out of your traditional IRA,
you've just bumped up your tax bill by over $5,000 if you're in the 22% tax bracket.
So you did that this year.
The following year, you have to pay that tax bill.
Where is that money going to come from?
You have to take more money out of your traditional IRA, which will affect your tax bill the following year.
Exactly.
The real value to going into retirement with lower expenses, because you can leave more of your money alone.
keeping your tax bracket as low as possible.
The other thing, Robert, that I think is,
it really impacts almost all of us
and was really eye-opening from the last research study I did,
is that people are very afraid of running out of money in America.
And I see it at every asset level.
Now, it naturally, as you would expect,
the percentage of people worried about, quote,
running out of money goes down as asset levels go up.
but it's still really prevalent even in the million dollar category.
So almost 50% of Americans that have a million dollars or more are worried about running out of money.
Even in the $3 million category, the $3 million plus category, still one in four people worried,
one of their top financial fears is running out of money.
So there's obviously, it's not just about having a larger nest egg and lots of cushion,
There's more to it than that.
And that's what was so eye-opening by the most recent research I did, is that that doesn't,
$3 million plus doesn't necessarily solve that fear and anxiety of running out for, it doesn't,
it doesn't solve it for everybody.
So there's more to the story.
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It's time for our get-it-done segment.
Now, you surely heard the phrase, cold, hard cash.
Harkens back to the days when cash came mostly in the form of coins.
In fact, the roots of the phrase go back as far as the 1600s.
But as far as I'm concerned, cash is warm and cozy, like a comfortable bed at the end of a long day.
Now, I know that cash isn't very exciting.
Perhaps it might help to reframe it in terms of the many benefits it provides.
You think of it as dry powder, a means to buy stocks when the market is down.
Portfolio flotation device, because it holds up your portfolio when most investments are sinking.
It could be a family protection plan, a source of funds in case of income disruption or expense
eruption, or you can just think of it as a heated blanket because it can help you sleep at night.
All that said, there's a lot of cash out there not earning very much.
According to the FDIC, here are the average interest rates on typical bank products.
So for checking account, the average rate is 0.07%.
Savings account is 0.38%, 1-year CD, 1.63%, and 3-year Cs.
D 1.34%.
Dear listener, you can do much better.
With a little effort, you should be able to earn close to or above 4% on many banking products.
Several websites highlight higher yielding options.
We have one here at the Motley Fool, which you can visit by going to Fool.com forward
slash money, forward slash banks.
Then there's the cash in your brokerage account.
The default cash option may be paying you little to nothing.
Check with your broker to see if you have access to a higher yielding sweep.
account. Other options to consider on money market funds, individual treasury bills or
ETFs that invest in treasury bills, such as the I shares zero to three month treasury bond
ETF with the ticker SGOV. Just keep in mind that funds, ETFs, T bills, bonds in general,
they might not be quite as liquid as cash, so it might take a day or two for a sell order to settle.
Also, they aren't backed by the FDIC as most cash products are that you get from a bank.
Now, as you may have read, there's a lot of drama these days about if and when the Federal Reserve
will cut rates. The futures market currently predicts that a 0.75% reduction in the Fed funds rate is the
likeliest scenario by the end of 2025. If that happens, rates on cash accounts with variable rates,
such as savings accounts, money markets, those are going to head lower. So it might make sense
to lock in current rates with some of your cash allocation by buying CDs or individual treasuries.
Plus, keep in mind that treasuries have the added benefit of being free of state income taxes.
And that's the show.
Make sure you tune in next Saturday for part two of my discussion with West Moss.
Thanks to Dan Boyd, who's the engineer for this episode.
And as always, people on the show may have interest in the stocks or funds they talk about.
And the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against.
We don't buy or sell investments based solely on what you hear.
All personal finance content follows Motley Fool editorial skills.
standards and is not approved by advertisers.
Advertisements are sponsored content
and provided for informational purposes only.
To see our full advertising disclosure, please check out our show notes.
I'm Robert Brokamp.
Fool on, everybody.
