Thinking and Talking About Retirement Risk with Clients Webinar - January 2022
Learn strategies to effectively communicate and address retirement risk with clients in our January 2022 webinar.
Last published on: September 29, 2025
Video: Thinking and Talking About Retirement Risk with Clients Webinar
Webinar Transcript
all right good morning everyone uh welcome to our webinar this morning uh we have some
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folks joining so we will give it a few minutes to let everyone get in here and then we'll kick it off
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coming in
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looks like we still have a few more folks coming in so i'll give it another 30 seconds
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perfect well hello everyone and welcome to our income lab webinar this morning
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uh we have our panelist justin fitzpatrick and derek tharp here
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to lead uh this discussion on thinking and talking about uh retirement risk with clients this is a topic that many
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of you have requested so we're super excited to put this on for you all um
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and just some housekeeping items before i turn it over to our panelist we will have a q a session at the end of
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the webinar and so you'll see in our zoom uh space here uh you'll see a q a
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um button on your toolbar uh feel free to put your questions in there um you
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can also view other folks questions um and like so to move the questions up in the queue and then after that we'll just
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work through um the questions for our panelists and uh you know after the webinar we will send the recording link
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out as well so um if you do want to go back and review uh we'll get that sent out tomorrow and um you know for some of
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our folks here who are new to income lab if you'd love to set up a demo or meeting with our team after as well you
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can reach out to us through our website or to info income laboratory.com and we're more than happy to set up a zoom
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to show you the software and get you in there as well perfect well all right guys that's my feel i will turn it over
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to justin and derek can you guys hear us okay sounds good
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thanks for joining everybody happy january um we're having a snowstorm here in uh in golden colorado so i don't know
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what it's like where you are but um yeah this is a topic i'm really passionate about um and kind of like our last user
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webinar there'll be some things here that are a little more for you know advisors thinking about risk and
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retirement but we really want to focus on also ideas and concepts that you can use
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in talking with clients about retirement risk and rolling those concepts into
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your planning process and your your monitoring and management process uh in that relationship with the clients
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um let me make sure this is yep okay okay so a quick outline for the webinar
Webinar Outline
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today um we're gonna spend a fair amount of time on um kind of what in retirement income and
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retirement income risk is really like um so we'll talk about metaphors we'll talk about um just some of these these uh
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you know continuums of risk uh then we'll dive into what sorts of things
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actually lead to retirement income risk and what don't so look at a bunch of data there and then we'll wrap up
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talking about client communication and kind of ways to keep things at the right level
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okay so first first to kind of what retirement risk is like i want to start by talking about
Metaphors
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metaphors because um you know it's really common for us to to speak in metaphors i mean really in all parts of
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our life but when talking about retirement risk we'll we'll see this a
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fair amount and i guess what i want to do is encourage everyone to take metaphors seriously
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because they they convey a lot of information and they can actually convey
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the wrong information if we're not careful so the metaphor of a plane crash is
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actually pretty common um to see in in discussions of retirement
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and retirement planning so you might see something like hey you know why should i be okay with a
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90 chance of success you know would you get on a plane that has a 10 chance of
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crashing right that you know just that first blush sounds
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fine right okay it's 90 10 so just pick something and and look at the failure of
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that thing but the failure involved in a plane crash is very different than you know other kinds of failures things like
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you know running into a traffic jam a detour a fender bender and so on it actually contains a lot of information
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so if we use that sort of metaphor with clients they're going to take a lot of information about um what
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what you're saying retirement is like from that and you know probably not going to be a surprise that
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i'm going to argue that is not a good metaphor for retirement and retirement risk
Statistics and Views
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however even if you're not using that kind of metaphor there's messaging
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everywhere if we're not careful and in particular common statistics and views um that you
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may see you know in the media or in um in research um
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in software programs um can communicate more than we'd hope so for
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example you know sort of the grand champion of retirement income statistics is probability of success or
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it's inverse probability of failure so you might see something like the the chart on the left you know
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we're estimating you have a 90 chance of success 10 chance of failure or you might see
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um you know a spaghetti chart like on the right um that's saying hey these are possible
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routes that your retirement portfolio could take over time you know notice some of them go to zero
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well whether we like it or not this actually communicates a lot of things like retirees either succeed or fail
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right that's what the the the graph on the left encourages clients to think right okay
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there's going to be two possible outcomes success or failure this also
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implies that retirement risk is catastrophic because we're using this term failure or even the chart on the on
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the right those lines going to zero that that sure seems catastrophic um or that the magnitude is very high right if risk
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materializes we're looking at total loss total financial ruin and the chart on the the right in
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particular but but both in a way also imply that retirement is static that you've got to make the perfect decision
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now um or else things could go terribly wrong and i'll be arguing against all of
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these as um as actual characteristics of retirement
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um but before getting to that i i want to return to something i've talked about before which is um
Risk Perception
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the way that we perceive risk as human beings so this is you know advisors clients everyone
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is not just as kind of dispassionate statisticians
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so peter sandman who's a an expert in in risk communication
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particularly in the industrial world but i think it applies very well to financial planning as well talks about
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risk and full you know risk perception being a combination of what he calls hazard which you could think of as the
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objective you know that dispassionate statistical thing and what he calls outrage which is
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a little bit more of an emotional reaction that doesn't mean it's not real though this is not something that we can we can get away from
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and he sets up all these oppositions between more outrageous and less outrageous things things that are perceived as
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riskier or less risky and you'll notice all the characteristics i just argued
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are communicated with kind of standard status quo language or statistics are on
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the more outrageous side so catastrophic you know unresponsive or static you know dreaded uh so that would be you
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know high high uh magnitude of failure you know total financial ruin those are all on the
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outrageous side here so so um we could be heightening client perception of risk
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in using that kind of terminology and that kind of framing
Retirement Income
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instead retirement is is actually there's a lot of characteristics of
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retirement income you know how it works that really give advisors and clients a huge
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advantage um over these more dire sorts of ways of of painting things so
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retirees don't either succeed or fail in fact the experiences they will have
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will be somewhere on a spectrum of possibilities some might be a little bit better some might be a little bit worse
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if managed well at least historically we know that that does not include financial ruin
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it because really risk and retirement unfolds slowly
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retirement is a long-term thing we'll dive into that a little bit soon but because of that we we have the
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opportunity to adjust rather than have this sort of static wiley coyote run off a cliff sort of behavior that's implied
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by you know those spaghetti graphs um and in practice um
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at least in studies magnitude of adjustment is often low for for reasonable plans so a way to kind of understand
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how retirement risk really works might be to compare it to a highly leveraged hedge fund because
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those metaphors of things like a plane crash um it really feels like that's
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that's more like a highly leveraged hedge fund people are thinking of examples um right whether it's long-term
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capital management or you know pick your pick your example of a hedge fund that um that goes down in flames maybe it was
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doing fine but because liabilities there can be concentrated in time so maybe you
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know there's a a a derivative position um and it's mark to market suddenly there's
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basically a margin call hedge fund can't afford it and it has to close right so it's sudden
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huge liabilities um that can't be undone once the risk has arisen right so we
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have the derivative position you know i can't go back in time and undo that before the risk actually materializes and so we do see you know
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hedge funds go out of business in comparison retirement income is completely different
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so liabilities here are spread out over time so think about you know your monthly utility bill um
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you know insurance bills going to the grocery store even larger items are spread out over time maybe you're doing
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you know some more expensive vacations or a home renovation but those are often in the future or over time
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um because of that because it's this series of small liabilities that that lay
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themselves out through time and often over many decades risk also develops over time
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and maybe most importantly those liabilities are flexible so unlike
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the case of a derivative position mark to market margin call type situation
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you can change your plan for liabilities so you can you know the example i often
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use is you can go out for burgers instead of steaks you know you can buy a cheaper bottle of wine you can um
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you know shop at safeway instead of whole foods and
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that flexibility gives retirees an incredible amount of power of course
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people would prefer to you know meet all their their dreams uh in in in terms of
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spending but failure to hit every single one of them is is not best compared to a plane crash
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it's not a life or death death situation and again for reasonable plans for
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people who have reasonable range of behavior financial ruin is not a part of
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doesn't have to be a part of this picture so what sorts of things can lead to
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retirement risk and what can't well again focusing on the catastrophic um
What Causes Retirement Risk
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you know when people think about risk they often think about catastrophic things right they're the easiest ones to to bring to mind um in fact that's on
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sandvin's list so things that are kind of you know more easily visualizable are
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are the risks that we think of but it turns out for retirement
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you know the most spectacular historical market crashes um didn't have what it took to to be
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retirement killers so here we have five of the steepest quickest
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market crashes in history and what would have happened to a retirement
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portfolio if someone were taking 50 000 a year out of a million dollar 60 40 portfolio adjusting that for inflation
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over time um this is obviously a very simplistic uh example most people would have social
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security and lots of other lots of other things but uh serving as a as as an example you'll see
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that in in no case did people you know run out of money because of this and we're taking you know five percent here
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right this isn't the four percent rule um in in every case they would have ended up with clo this is inflation-adjusted
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dollars with close to what they began with or more by the end of retirement or for those situations like
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um the recent coveted crash a couple years ago almost exactly two years ago now
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or the financial crisis um so far uh things have have not um
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have they haven't been retirement killers now in particular for the covet crash that is very much a work in
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progress but you'll see these folks are almost up at 1.2 million dollars for the financial crisis it took quite a bit
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longer but they are now about in the same position
The Great Depression
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um just dipping into client communication quickly we often hear that clients are
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asking about kind of the more memorable um or maybe in this case not memory but um
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visualizable things in history like the great depression and it turns out if someone's asking
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well you know what if we go through the great depression we can actually answer that question we can we can illustrate
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what it would have been like um to live through great depression type um
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experiences of course you know today's world's very different from the great depression we have social security we
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have um you know just a lot of different things going on but if if they were to experience the
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same sorts of sequence of returns we can actually illustrate for them what that would be like and so you'll see
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here um this is a graph um from our software but um for these folks um their proposed income
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is let's call it sixteen thousand you can see for most of the great depression people actually could have afforded
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quite a bit more than that doesn't mean the future will be exactly the same as the great depression but um
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instead of allowing clients to kind of let their imaginations run wild about how horrible it might have been
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you know we actually we have data about how things behaved in the great depression
Historical inflation spikes
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what about inflation this is a particular you know headline type thing right now
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again actually historical short inflation spikes so we're talking four or fewer years
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are not retirement killers and in fact the correlation between short-term inflation rates so just year-over-year
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inflation right cpi today versus a year ago and what you can do with your
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portfolio withdrawals is basically zero so there's just no predictive power here
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and in fact it's easy to find examples historically of inflation spikes where
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the portfolio withdrawal is that we know someone could have afforded now with hindsight
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were actually quite high um compared to history um so the last time we we saw such an inflation spike was was in the
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in 1990 and that was among the highest uh the the best periods to retire in a sense
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in history so you see some other examples here from the 50s and 40s that doesn't mean that there's no such
What is retirement risk
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thing as risk so but what we tend to need going back to
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what is retirement risk like what we tend to need is long-term
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low real returns so any way that you can you know that you can produce that situation
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will result in lower retirement income in comparison to
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other historical periods so um here i have uh the growth of a dollar invested in in
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the dow in blue using the right axis you can see that so
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it's a log scale and then in the red and green you have inflation and deflation
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and there really been two periods in the last 150 years that were worst for portfolio
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withdrawals one was leading up to the 19 teens i'll pretty much ignore that today
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it's just people don't have including myself don't have as much kind of mastery of what was going on in those
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periods but let's call it leading up to and including world war one um but maybe more
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um you know closer in time certainly is the the 60s and 70s so the kind of stagflation period and you can see here
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um that the blue line is kind of going sideways going up and down a little bit but bouncing between
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values and the red line was entering a period of higher inflation and this combination
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is what gave us the period that you know bill bengan pointed out as
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having a four percent withdrawal rate in in his study um what's interesting here though is um
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what really matters is i know this sounds obvious but what matters is what's going to come in the
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future not what we're experiencing today or what we have experienced in the past so actually um you know the periods from
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the early and mid 60s which in retrospect had low withdrawal rates
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also had low inflation it was that it inflation was going to be high and high for longer
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periods um the other interesting thing is toward the end of or really even in
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the middle of this high inflation period we know in retrospect that uh portfolio withdrawals could have been quite high
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it wouldn't have felt like that at the time but because we were going to go into the 1980s with
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inflation going down and really amazing stock returns for for quite a long period of time again it wouldn't have
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mattered what you had just experienced in a sense or what you're experiencing at that
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point what matters was what was going to come a really important thing for planning though here is
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you you wouldn't have felt good recommending high um
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portfolio withdrawals at this point and that's okay because we can't know what's going to come in
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the future the solution to that is not to you know make guesses set those in stone
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and just hope you're right the solution is to have a plan to adjust over time so maybe in 1982 which we know
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in retrospect was a time that would have supported incredibly high withdrawals you wouldn't necessarily have counseled
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high withdrawals but by keeping track of the plan the world would have been telling you
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really year over year maybe even month over month at times hey you can take more you can spend more you can you can
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increase your standard of living um if you want to so again there's a lot of power in this
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adjustability i was just talking earlier about how you can reduce liabilities you can also loosen the belt right maybe
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you've been being frugal you've been you know kind of keeping things in check because you're trying to manage risk
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well again there can be signals that risk is coming off as well
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so that gets us to client communication um and i want to just spend a little
Risk in financial planning
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time in wrapping up here before questions and derek's comments on
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kind of uh two ways that we talk about risk in financial planning um
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one is what you know i was talking about the metaphor of of plane crashes and that sort of catastrophic framing and
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how that's not really accurate when compared to retirement income but actually we when
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talking with clients about asset allocation and investing already have a lot of tools
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for working in reasonable ways with uncertainty for working in reasonable ways with with risk um so when talking
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about asset allocation um i'm not sure i've ever heard a financial advisor focus only on the kind
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of the left tail outcomes what are the worst possible things that could happen here instead there's often a focus on
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averages and variances right acknowledging that things could could be a little better or worse or maybe even a
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lot better or worse than than the averages and focusing more on risk management than total risk avoidance
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um often that's because the alternative is not better right so putting money in the mattress um actually your long-term
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returns in inflation-adjusted terms are could be quite bad um and so um in in
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some sense it's instead of seeking perfection which can't can't be found um
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we we just manage risk um and there's also good usually good discussion of the upside right why are we doing this what
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what's the potential um upside of investing for those where it's appropriate
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what i'm talking about here is really applying those sorts of concepts to retirement income it actually turns out
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historically you know a 60 40 portfolio in terms in inflation-adjusted terms
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there's a reasonably high chance of negative real returns over a 10-year period uh in in just a balanced
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portfolio again inflation-adjusted returns famously there aren't that many uh where you have negative um
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nominal returns um so but we don't go to clients and say well i think you know
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there's a there's a 10 chance we'll have um no returns over the next 10 years so that's what we should expect right
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that's not kind of the the common way that we communicate with clients and i think rightly so
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so um how can we do this um it's
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avoiding things like metaphors that that are not accurate
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reflections of how retirement works right so talking about adjustments and
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laying out those expectations as much as possible early on this is you know this
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is how risk unfolds in retirement and really bringing the blood pressure down
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um often by showing something like this where we've actually quantified kind of an
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adjustment plan in dollar terms that helps bring the blood pressure down
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right so we're not allowing uh clients to just kind of imagine risk you know
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where our imaginations can go wild but we're saying and this is just an example let's say someone had a plan where it
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was going to take a 20 loss in their portfolio for them to to adjust downward and if they adjust it downward it
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wouldn't be a huge adjustment that goes a long way to to really specifying to filling in the picture of
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risk for the client so that they can have a better understanding of the geography that they're really traveling through
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right so you're mapping mapping this out for them um in a way that they can they can understand how to
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follow the map also painting a big net that was more of a short-term picture painting a broader
Painting a broader picture
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picture of that geography right so here's the whole map you know this is kind of our a planned route but
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if we encounter obstacles on the way we will adjust right we just saw part of that adjustment plan well
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what's the range of you know paths that we might take through this landscape
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we can actually paint paint that for them and again hopefully bring the blood pressure down you know
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by showing hey even if things you know we talked about that continuum of possible experiences even if things are
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on the lower end of that continuum we're not talking about you know total financial ruin
Research
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um derek has talked about this before and i think um you know his his research with
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with michael kisses on this is really illuminating um because you know don't just take my word
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for it um research survey research um with clients
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uh has shown that this kind of framing so getting away from the catastrophic
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framing um is associated with greater positive emotion optimism preparedness
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confidence and a downturn which is which is huge and less negative emotion less stress um
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greater understanding of the plan i think is is is a big one right if we're using kind of overly complex statistics
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um not everyone necessarily would take the things we want to from those and greater advisor trust
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which what we found is retirement planning is really about being on a journey with with the client
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right it's not something that we're just going to set them off in a rocket ship and gee i
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hope they land in the right place right we're with them along the way and so that advisor trust um
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is is really important um so with that i think we can
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um open things up the questions and actually i if you want to go back one slide for a
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second i can touch on this a little bit um further as well and um with this study what we were doing
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was we were experimentally actually showing people different plan results so
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one set of participants were receiving basically monte carlo type plan results
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to try and make this you know is least there is most kind of realistic we did
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tell people to assume they were reviewing a plan um for a neighbor right so they were kind of the neighbor needed
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help they were trying to help them go through what had been provided by their financial advisor make an assessment and try and understand
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what was going on and um we showed them at different points in
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time and then asked them things like you know how how optimistic do you think this person should feel about their retirement how prepared do they seem to
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be should um you know how how well would they weather a downturn you know in the market those those types
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of questions um and then one of the things we did was we took them through one time period um and
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i think one thing that's really not appreciated about monte carlo is how fast those numbers can change
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and so we gave one set of clients was looking at my current result one was looking at a guard rails result now the guardrails
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participants were much more aware that adjustment could be possible that it would need to happen
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um but what happened when we simulated basically a market downturn kind of a standard type of downturn and ran actual
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numbers so what would happen to the probability of success if you're running a monte carlo plan what would happen um
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in terms of adjustments if you're using a guardrails plan uh and then the client saw or the you
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know the participant reviewing the neighbors results saw those updated plans and a lot of people were you know i mean we
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didn't necessarily measure it this way but i think they were really kind of shocked right by the the difference with
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the monte carlo plan the plan looked there was no indication a downward adjustment was even something to think about um you know that it
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started out with a high probability of success i actually ran multiple scenarios but um one of the scenarios did start out with
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a high probability of success fell to kind of a 50 probability of success um and that actually deteriorated kind of
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the advisor trust right people reported seeing the professionals
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less competent um less trustworthy uh because of that change and i think you
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know getting back to not only communicating all this because it's the right thing to do for clients and helping them and just
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helping them understand but realize that there's also our own reputation kind of on the line in terms of uh when
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we're giving that advice to a client and if they don't understand it and then reality turns out differently
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um you know that could shake you know their their confidence and their trust in us as an advisor and i think that is
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uh kind of an important uh insight from this research and um we can hop into the
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the the questions but one other general note that i think um you know when i when i first started working with income
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lab um and justin and johnny reached out to me i was really blown away and impressed by the technical kind of side of
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income lab and what it can do um modeling all sorts of different types of things and just the power behind it
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um so that's kind of what really drew me in where i think i've been surprised in how my own thinking and my own work with
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clients has changed so much since getting started is really on the communication side um that wasn't
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necessarily something that i anticipated but you know having these conversations thinking about how things
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are presented to clients and then just having the actual ability to communicate about these long-term
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income experience that's something that um when i'm using standard monte carlo tool right i can't talk about what those
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outcomes would actually be now i can actually guide my clients through a conversation about you know are these
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the right guardrails and um you know i still i still am doing my plan presentations
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to clients where i kind of show results both ways particularly for clients that maybe i originally did a monte carlo plan and
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now i'm trying to shift them over to a guardrails kind of mindset and the result has always been okay we like
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the guardrails way much more that's always been the feedback i get from my clients and um i do think it's for the reasons
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justin touched on um and particularly just that peace of mind of knowing how
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far does the market need to fall right before somebody needs to make an adjustment and then what would that adjustment be
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right i mean when you're running a monte carlo type plan that's just all unknown it's not stated anywhere
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it's not something that's brought forward with guardrails people get peace of mind and a lot of times it's all okay
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my you know particularly if it's somebody's well prepared for retirement uh it might be their portfolio needs to
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fall 30 or 40 before they would need to make an adjustment and then even then the adjustment is so tiny um and a lot of
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times what i'm finding is that people could actually take more spending than they even want to or are taking
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and so you know if i'm saying okay it says you can spend 6 500 a month
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you're only spending 4 000 a month um you know we can bump that up but even under this bad case scenario where the
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market falls you might be calling to cut your spending down to say six thousand a
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month or 5 500 a month which is still higher than you're actually spending right now so just having that conversation i've i've
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had it's been a really big shift in how i'm communicating with clients i'd say the
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response has been very positive
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you're saying that derek um perfect so we have a few questions but
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uh anyone on the webinar this is the time to start putting your questions in the q a section and we'll start uh
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getting some answers out um so justin derek first one here is based on a
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client's planning data is there a way to start a client at the higher income level of the guard rails so for example
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we would recommend you know x monthly income but the client wants to know you know what's the most they could take
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without breaking the plan immediately
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yeah there is um and it sounds like the the person asking the question would know that would make
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a downward adjustment pretty likely if you're very if you're starting income very close to uh to what the guard rail
33:36
um is so um you can go to the advanced settings for a plan and in the income uh
33:43
in fact i think i have a plan open here let me see if i can get an example for you but you can you
Income Target
33:50
can set the income target to be very high um so you know derek was talking
33:56
about guard rails and and total risk guardrails so take everything into account for
34:01
um for this household you know their social security timing their investments just everything um
34:08
and the guard rails are based on holistic risk right so what's the what's
34:13
the chance that um that this uh that this plan will need to be adjusted downward in the future and
34:21
typically we don't wait until that chance is a hundred percent right um we would wait until the estimated risk is
34:27
um you know maybe it's 60 or 70 or 80. but okay well it's enough now that i
34:32
have high confidence that an adjustment is worthwhile so um you can go and set
34:38
the adjustment or set the target to be very high the outcome of that plan will
34:44
definitely be uh you know where there are many more downward adjustments than you had then you then a lot of people would want
34:51
but you go into the advanced settings income settings
34:58
and um you know right here so my income decrease is at 75
35:05
you know i could zoom is making my computer very slow
35:10
right now but i could you know put this target up at 60 or 70 or something and
35:17
and that would work and um next question is what's the best way to
35:23
convey the income adjustment plan section to a client
35:36
um i'm typically having this conversation and it can depend whether i'm working with somebody in
35:41
retirement who's already basically working on the guardrail strategy or if i'm working or if i'm running for someone to use pre-retirement um then i
35:48
might be framing are we talking about what they're spending on retirement versus now um but i i like to keep it pretty simple
35:55
and just talk through basically what you see here so i you know talk about somebody you know we're setting
36:01
some cargrills based on their current portfolio balance of 2.2 million in this example
36:06
uh that would indicate they could spend about 13 700 after taxes personally for me that's that's the
36:12
number i tend to key in on is the after tax number and communicate that um and then communicate you know the
36:19
portfolio what the results are showing here is if the portfolio goes up to 2.3 million
36:25
uh they could take about another 700 in income and if it fell to 1.75 million uh then
36:32
they would need to cut back about 700 and one thing i do also like to usually
36:38
point out is the kind of asymmetry here a lot of times that adjustment is coming here only another
36:44
100 000 of growth get that full 700 increase versus more sizable decline
36:51
to get the 700 decrease but that's kind of how i'm communicating and often i am kind of
36:58
rounding some of these numbers just giving them um nice and clean kind of guardrails to be shooting
37:05
for but that's that's how i'm talk walking somebody through this thanks here
37:11
um did you have anything to add to that at all well i was just going to say that asymmetry is really important um and
37:16
that's by design so this plan was just built to have that asymmetry to try to match
37:22
a typical household's risk aversion um if you had someone who really wanted to
37:28
be more 50 50 chance that you know kind of shoot shoot in between the uprights then you could
37:33
build a plane like that next question is you know this approach
37:39
is clearly easier to get clients to understand you spend dollars and not percents um that being said how can we
37:46
use this to show the impact of changing their savings rate um seems like this is where clients
37:52
need a nudge that pretty clearly comes out when you
Income Adjustment Plan Nudge
37:59
run different scenarios with different savings rate assumptions there that's something i
38:04
i am using um you know even with pre-retirees i actually i like guardrails for even for
38:12
pre-retirees um and more than i think probability of success i'm talking like accumulators
38:17
younger not people who are just right before retirement um i always found that i
38:22
wasn't doing much for monte carlo for them unless it's just like a very basic simple kind of um
38:29
uh you know long-term projection but um you know actually being able to communicate more
38:36
you know where their standard of living would be compared to where it is now where they want it to be um
38:41
it's still a long-term projection in terms of got the accumulation and the accumulation phase
38:47
in there so i still place less weight on it relative to um
38:52
working with retirees but i find that it's useful you can go in adjust the savings assumption now you're going to
38:58
see at retirement what that proposed income level would be and talk
39:03
about the the impact there this one specifically for you as well um
39:12
how do you determine how to set the guardrails with income lab um this advisor is used to talking with clients
39:17
about the guyton clinger portfolio based guard rails um but they have no experience talking about the income lab
39:22
type of guardrails yeah so there definitely is a difference um you know when you think about these
Total RiskBased Guard Rails vs Distribution RateDriven Guard Rails
39:29
total risk based guard rails versus a distribution rate driven guardrail
39:35
um you know it does it will be a little bit of a mental shift but i think you know if
39:41
you're still presenting previously the guy and klinger guardrails to clients in dollar terms it actually doesn't have to
39:47
be that different yeah i think a lot of times we as advisors get more caught up about
39:52
what's going on behind the scenes to getting to those numbers um most of the time when i'm
39:58
talking to clients i'm not getting into any of the details on you know how these guardrails are set
40:03
the different risk risk levels you know any of that i'm just talking in terms of dollars and
40:08
what would need to happen what would cause the spending increase or decrease and um you know it might be if i were
40:14
trying to transition from say a guidance plan or guardrail approach to that that might be a good first step is even
40:20
starting to just change that communication how you're talking about the guy cleaner guardrails
40:25
and then you know you kind of naturally just shift over uh into a total risk-based guardrails
40:33
approach um you know you can and you certainly still could use some of the other rules like things like a you know
40:38
skipping a you know inflation adjustment when you're running a portfolio um has an increase i mean you you could
40:45
layer on a rule uh like that uh to a system like this so that um
40:51
that's not really problematic in in my opinion the big difference is that you know now you're actually accounting
40:56
for social security pension income all these other sources and taxes and how that relates
41:01
in a way that is you know totally missed and you know that justin and i
41:07
we wrote about the retirement distribution hatchet and that distribution shape you see
41:13
and how that can really bias you know plan results and the fact that you don't necessarily want to use that same
41:20
distribution assumptions going through the whole retirement period uh so you know i think there's
41:26
very good kind of financial planning reasons to make the shift to
41:32
a total risk-based guardrails but um you know communication wise i would think about just kind of trying to keep that
41:38
as consistent as possible moving from one framework to the other and realizing that at the end of the day for clients
41:45
um you know the what's behind the scenes probably doesn't matter as much you might have an engineer client that wants
41:50
to dig into it and certainly you can explain it but at least for most of the clients i'm
41:55
working with i'm not getting to that level of depth anyways
42:00
thank you um next question is would you demonstrate a sample presentation of which reports you typically typically
42:07
use and how you'd frame up the discussion with a client um specifically how do you compare or contrast the
42:13
guardrails and probability of success so
Monte Carlo vs Guard Rails
42:19
um when i'm when i'm presenting a plan i'm often approaching it from a very educational
42:25
kind of perspective and it's kind of different depending on if it's a client i've done a probability of success plan for versus one that i
42:32
haven't but when i'm kind of setting that up
42:37
to explain um you know from really an educational standpoint you know
42:42
probably monte carlo is the kind of the dominant uh methodology at least the most
42:48
financially if you walked into a random financial advisor's office that's most likely the type of plan you would get
42:53
here's what it's saying here's you know why i can't just give an overview of the history and a little bit again
42:59
educational and how that's it was an improvement certainly over just a straight line kind of calculation
43:05
um but personally i'm a big fan of guardrails and then shift to some of the benefits of those um and a lot of times the
43:12
at least the typical clients i'm running plans for they tend to not be stretching their
43:18
budget as much they're and so a lot of times the monte carlo result is like 100 probability of success with
43:24
5 million dollars left at the end of the plan and i just kind of make the point you know that that doesn't really tell you
43:30
what to expect or how to adjust or how to stay on course um and it's surprising to me how many
43:35
times um i was just meeting with a physician last week going over an
43:40
initial plan and he he he beat me to it and he said oh yeah this is a very
43:45
static type of um plan it doesn't really tell you much in terms of you know what and it was kind of funny because
43:53
he was taking words from me i hadn't even gotten there yet but um you know it was clicking for him
43:59
you know it's not i'm i'm not like trying to bash monte carlo when i'm presenting that but
44:05
he could see the limitations and then when we moved to guardrails um he said yes i like this much better and so the
44:11
um that's kind of how i'm setting those up and i don't even know if that's the right thing i mean maybe
44:17
maybe i should just skip and go straight into the guardrails and not even talk about that but um
44:22
that's just kind of my educational style of presentation i kind of like to walk somebody through what's out there
44:29
help them understand if they did get a second proposal from another advisor and what that might look like
44:35
why i think there's advantages to the guardrails so that's kind of why i do both but i don't even know that that's
44:40
the ideal way to do that and then when i'm working with a client on an ongoing basis and we're working through their
44:45
guardrails i'm not even talking about probability of successor mike that's totally
44:51
gone away once we've we've got the guardrails planned in place that's where all the focus is
44:57
and i think as far as um reports um i know just working with a lot of our advisors during onboarding uh
45:04
oh there you go justin um i know we have the short-term um income plan report as well as that
45:10
long-term outlook um report seems to be ones uh two that we specifically get
45:16
really good feedback from advisors and clients justin did you have any other reports that you may um
45:21
kind of recommend advisors use if as they're maybe trying to have this discussion with a client
45:27
outside of those two um yeah if you're using pdf reports uh
45:32
those these two um that i just checked the short term income plan is that guard
45:37
rails income adjustment uh section plus some other things long term
45:43
income outlook includes that longer kind of paint the landscape view uh you know depending on the client
45:50
sometimes people will peel back the onion even more get into more details so
45:56
i think this is more rare but you can use the example scenarios to show you know kind of the stair step
46:01
view right here here's an example with stair steps up and stair steps down and so on
46:07
okay we got more questions coming in so i'm going to keep moving um next question do you have a way to
46:13
produce a report for annual guard rail changes
46:20
um let me think
46:26
there is not a report module that specifically shows that it's a good idea though we can take that on board we are
46:32
working on some things for for other displays of plan history so that that
46:37
would be included in that um and the next question is uh do you
46:42
have any recommendations on communicating with clients who have always used monte carlo approach um we
46:48
want to introduce guardrails to them but could see that um they'll question this new approach
Whats Behind the Guard Rails
46:56
i think for me that's that that could be a scenario where again i'm talking about presenting both of them showing them
47:01
side by side and talking through the um the advantages of shifting to the
47:06
guardrails uh because it's it's not um you know at the end of the day
47:12
still trying to help clients stay on track but you know this is a it's giving them parameters to actually make some
47:18
adjustments and helping communicate that and i think you'll find that once clients see that um
47:24
you know there's not going to be any injection it's oh okay this is a neat you know additional piece of information
47:31
um and how you frame that too um you know you i guess there could be questions about
47:37
what role was you know probability success previously playing versus now
47:43
i've given a lot of um initial plan presentations over the past year using
47:48
that exact uh process that i've talked about comparing the two and
47:53
not once has somebody yet asked me what's behind the guardrails you know what's actually driving i know there are
47:59
clients that will want to dive into that depth but for me um you know just talking about
48:04
the actual consequence of here's what happens if uh here's when you make that change
48:10
and most people seem to be fine going along with that and i i think if we think about examples in other contexts
48:15
like if we you know go to a doctor or something right there's all sorts of technical information that my doctor
48:21
could be conveying to me but he or she just doesn't right it's not the the focus of um you know they're
48:28
going to tell me what they prescribe that course of action for me to take and you know it um there might be some
48:35
additional discussion but a lot of times i'm not diving into that if they
48:40
tell me i need to apply a bandage and whatever treatment plan it is for a certain
48:46
injury i'm going to take their advice and and i'm going to do that and trust that there's there's a reason for why they're
48:52
giving me that so i i try and keep that in mind too that again a lot of times
48:58
i don't know the clients need that level of detail you get that engineering client of course you want to understand what's going on so that you can
49:04
can't speak to the specifics i've heard that comparison to to positions um
49:11
from some other advisors as well and i think it's a good one sometimes i've heard sort of some anxiety that clients might think well
49:18
you know well what were we doing before was that not good um and it's i think most people understand that
49:24
there's an evolution of technology there's same thing would be true for your physician right a new drug a new medical
49:29
device or something comes along we don't blame them for not using it 10 years ago when it didn't exist so
49:36
you know more static monte carlo approaches were massive improvements on street line
49:41
appreciation or a financial calculator right and so this is just another improvement
49:47
um and then this question and partially feedback are there any plans to add a feature to the income adjustment plan
49:54
for a more visually appealing way to show the um and so the example here is maybe a
49:59
picture with an upper and lower guard rail along with a dot for the current portfolio balance in relation to those
50:04
two yeah i think you mentioned the plant history
50:10
visualizations that we're working on and and that's certainly one of them that we've you know i have actually mocked them up
50:16
before showing exactly that your portfolio balance with the guard rails and you know you would see
50:21
over time the balance might be you know approaching one of the guard rails or the other yeah
50:28
and the next question is uh what's one area in income lab uh would you share with a prospective client
50:37
so i guess if you had to like pick one place in the platform to really highlight for a prospective client what
50:42
would you say for me personally it would be the guardrails it'd be talking about um you
50:48
know what putting a plan in place um you know for for the client helping them understand
50:56
and i think uh dave yeske has a good uh on the kids advisor
51:01
success podcast he's a good episode about using guardrails for clients and just the communication impact when so
51:08
many um you know he's at the experience where clients tell now this makes sense right like now they finally
51:15
um you know they've met with other advisors but they finally feel like they actually have a plan and understand
51:21
their spending in retirement i think guardrails are very powerful for that reason
51:27
um and i think that would be you know if i'm i'm only going to focus on one thing um with the client there's
51:35
you that now depending on the situation um i know the question was just for one but a second area that i think is very
51:41
powerful depending on what the plan results are but the tax center for me is a really big area to go in and show something
51:49
like the value of um you know roth conversion strategy and
51:54
um that's one where i don't i don't pitch it this way or frame it this way but like i had one experience where
52:01
it was a situation where the total dollar value was very high it was something like the 600 000
52:07
benefit to using a roth conversion strategy and the prospective client said to me
52:12
they said well that is more you know that pays your fee for our lifetime working with you
52:18
if we get this one thing right and that's not necessarily how i'm framing it and trying to position it but
Retirement Planning Analogies
52:25
it does help quantify kind of that value of good tax planning financial planning
52:30
and um you know i think actually helps people understand you know why
52:35
why it is that you know what advisors do is valuable and how um they can actually get some of that value from that so that is
52:42
another area particularly for that prospective client again assuming it not all cases there
52:47
may not be value um there but in cases where it is that's definitely something to
52:52
highlight um because it's it's another one i've seen some real impact uh in terms
52:58
of clients understanding value and willingness to go forward with an advisor
53:05
and then uh derrick this one's up for you as well but it's what's your favorite retirement planning analogy to
53:10
use with clients i probably it's probably an area where
53:17
i'm weak and i probably should use more um analogies i i do really like
53:23
the and i don't necessarily present it and present it well but kind of like the
53:28
mountain climbing i think wade fowl has one where he's talking about you know the
53:33
actually the descent right and mountain climb is actually a very dangerous part of the
53:38
process i don't like to use danger i don't like to use words like that but just the fact that you know that um
53:45
you know there is new challenges right when you're thinking about retirement planning and there's new risks involved
53:53
uh that that is one analogy that i do see myself occasionally using
53:59
again as much as i'm fumbling through it here i obviously don't do it often um i probably should use more of those
54:05
analogies but that's that's what i like you know just the whole kind of guide somebody you know being along with you
54:12
kind of a sherpa type analogy i like that as well um just to you know assist
54:17
with that journey um i think it's pretty powerful because again that's that's something that even
54:22
for a do-it-yourselfer who you know accumulated an estate on their own there are challenges that come
54:28
up in retirement cognitive decline health decline other risks that are just very different
54:35
and reasons why even somebody who you know very successfully did accumulate on
54:40
their own might still want to be working with an advisor who has their best interests at heart
Asset Map vs Income Lab
54:47
and then this next question is um so this advisor said i use asset map slash target maps initially based on their
54:54
current lifestyle cost i work up some basic target maps at low return rates which shows if they're funded or not um
55:02
any questions any recommendations for moving from the asset map slash target
55:07
maps to income lab and how to make that transition
55:13
i can speak to i i do use asset map um i've never i often will use asset map
55:21
the target maps more for like life insurance needs analysis and so i've never
55:26
leaned on it as heavily for retirement so it's not necessarily a transition i've made
55:32
but um i do um i i think you would find it's you know
55:37
pretty natural again just kind of like the evolution of here's a here's a tool that allows us to go a little bit deeper and i know that's
55:44
at least from podcasts and other things i've listened to from the asset map it sounds like that's it's very popular way
55:50
that people are using their tool is that um you know there's the what kind of light planning capabilities there might
55:55
give somebody a rough quick you know if you're on a call or something a first response on how
56:01
somebody um you know their retirement projections look but most advisors are moving into more
56:08
specialized tools for that more in-depth analysis and i would say that definitely it's the case here where
56:14
um you know the target map approach is you know just basically
56:19
straight line time value money type calculation um and you're getting something very very
56:25
different with income lab so just explaining kind of the benefits of of doing that showing somebody at
56:31
guardrails you know maybe maybe i'm wrong about this but in my experience when i've seen
56:37
um the guardrails almost sell themselves as i explain the value of it and showing
56:43
somebody that when they make that adjustment how big that adjustment is um that just seems to be i i just had
56:50
the quote i think you know lowering of the blood pressure like that really seems to do it a lot to see
56:56
what that downward adjustment would be and how far the portfolio would need to fall before they need to do that
57:03
it obviously doesn't take away the anxiety in the moment as mark is declining entirely but at least
57:08
it helps somebody know ahead of time what action they would take when they would take that and i think that's a huge huge benefit
57:16
and we have three minutes left so i'll give us one last one and and then we'll wrap it up um and then for our other
57:23
folks who um we didn't get a chance to answer your questions feel free to email uh me or our info team and we'll be sure
57:30
to answer those via email as well um but yeah last question here is uh so the historical analysis chart seems to
57:36
indicate that sequence of returns risk may be overblown um do you agree with
57:41
this comment um do you have any additional comments um around this question and uh kind of the part two of
57:47
that is uh would the advisor be able to get a copy of this chart or can we tell them what software um we use to generate
57:54
it so um i think the second part of that question is um
57:59
you can get the copy inside income lab since it's proprietary to us and that's the only place you can get this chart
58:06
but in regards to kind of this chart um indicating that sequence of returns to us may be overblown um what are your
58:13
kind of thoughts and comments on that so this this graph like we said it's
58:19
it's um in the application income lab and what's special about this is this is specific to this plan
58:27
so if these folks depend heavily on portfolio withdrawals the difference between the peaks and valleys which is
58:34
one way to look at this as communicating sequence of return risk will be larger
58:40
if they depended almost exclusively on social security and inflation-adjusted pensions that it would be a much flatter
58:46
landscape right so you actually would see the difference in sequence of return risk um so i don't know if it's
58:51
overblown i would i guess it have to i think in the sense that i talked about in this
58:57
presentation of focusing on the left tail and you know really pinning the the plan to
59:03
accommodate the worst thing anyone has ever experienced or the worst thing that is you know hypothetically possible into
59:10
monte carlo i do have issues with that but um you know i think i think it's just it's
59:16
one of the things to consider and in fact i think next month we're going to have a webinar on the subtleties around sequence of
59:22
return risk and how that's really not you know withdrawal rates and things are not the only thing to consider um when
59:29
figuring out you know is this a good or bad time to retire
59:35
all right guys well hey always appreciate the time uh you guys fit into putting up our presentations
59:42
getting the discussions together and then answering the questions and thank you to all of our users and
59:47
new folks who joined us today um please uh be on the lookout for the webinar recording as well as the invitations to
59:54
our upcoming webinars next month and up uh and just folks saying you guys did a
1:00:00
really great job so i wanted to share that positive feedback with you as well um outside of that guys thank you so
1:00:05
much i will go ahead and stop the recording and we will see you all on the next one