Using Economic Data to Inform Retirement Income Advice - July 2022

Learn how to leverage economic data for better retirement income advice in.

Last published on: September 29, 2025

Economic data are very difficult to apply to short-term investment decisions, but research shows that these data are much more useful when forming longer-term retirement spending plans.

In this webinar, we examine three representative economic indicators related to stock valuations and inflation to see how and when they can be useful in retirement planning, both for developing better spending advice and for enhancing client communication.

 

Video: Using Economic Data to Inform Retirement Income Advice

Webinar Transcript

[Music] good morning everyone we will get started in a minute here

0:11

just giving folks chance to chan uh opportunity to join and i see them coming in

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it's like we still got a few more people coming in right now so we'll give about another

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20 seconds or so

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okay looks like it's sponsored all right good morning everyone thanks

1:03

for joining our income lab webinar this morning we're excited to bring another great topic hosted by our two presenters

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justin and derek before i kick it off to them just going over some quick household items we will

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have the first half of the webinar will be the presentation and then we will open it up for q a after

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uh on your zoom uh toolbar at the bottom you'll see the q a section there please

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drop all your questions there um after we will kind of run through the queue and get all the questions answered you

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can also um like and kind of upvote other people's questions if you'd like to move those up in the queue as well um

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and then outside that you will see um a survey right after the webinar this is uh one of our cfpce um webinar so

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afterwards you'll see the survey where you can fill out your name cfpid so that way we can make sure we get you the cd

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credit for attending this webinar okay all right guys so that's my field to

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start this off justin derek i will turn it over to you guys and i'll be back for the q a

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all right thank you malcolm thanks everybody for uh attending hope your summer's going

2:11

well um today we have um uh i think a pretty timely topic which

2:18

is how um to think about using economic data and economic context when

2:24

developing retirement income advice it obviously seems more relevant or

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important right now but it's always important but now because of you know higher inflation and uh some turmoil and

2:38

equity markets this is probably something that uh that a lot of you are thinking about a lot of your clients are

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are thinking about so hopefully this will be uh timely and and helpful

2:49

the way that we're going to do the presentation here is first we'll kind of go through three examples

2:56

of types of economic data indicators that can that can help

3:03

in providing context for retirement planning um i would think of these as families of indicators and and and also

3:10

that these are not the only ones that might be helpful um so think of these again as as examples not as you know

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the only things to look at or exactly you know the mathematical key to uh to determining retirement um

3:25

advice um so we'll look at price earnings indicators

3:31

um something i'm calling nest egg you'll see what that is and uh inflation which is probably on a lot of people's minds

3:37

then we'll talk about um when you know what types of plans are most uh

3:43

helped by applying economic context um and and then probably most

3:48

importantly is the third thing which is how we might include economic context in client communication about retirement

3:55

planning uh and then finally we'll dive into some of the analytics surrounding

4:00

how you might tilt retirement income advice based on economic context

4:05

and on that last part i think whenever we talk about applying

4:11

economic context market context to advice it's reasonable to get a little

4:16

bit um you know worried that you know is this market timing is this the kind of thing where there's really you know evidence

4:23

to show that these are strong um i think you'll see throughout that the the data shows that

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the longer uh both the longer the plan that we're applying this to and the

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longer the uh the economic measure is um in terms of

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you know sort of how quickly it moves so we want it to move rather slowly um the the

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better um these indicators are for um for helping provide better retirement

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planning advice so this isn't really you know the equivalent of of day trading or stock picking

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it's it's much more about kind of long-term long-term strategic

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positioning in retirement income planning so let's start out with our three

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examples um so the first is probably the most well-known so um and people a lot of

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people have written about this i know michael kitzis and people on the kids blog i've seen

5:21

other things in in journals about price earnings ratios and how those can help

5:27

people um in their retirement income planning so uh you know just a quick uh quick recap

5:34

price earnings typically when you hear that on you know on the on tv or something they're

5:39

talking about current price divided by uh most recent earnings or maybe projected next quarter earnings um but

5:45

what we're going to be looking at is uh i think we could just put under the rubric of cape which is cyclically

5:51

adjusted price to earnings ratio or really just price over a long-term earnings

5:56

pattern so average earnings over a long time window so does this help

6:03

is there a connection to retirement income and if so what is it so

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you'll see this uh this pattern throughout these three examples but with price earnings ratio we see that

6:15

the longer the time window over which we measure those earnings basically the more

6:21

explanatory power which is a a term you know of the art in in statistics it's a

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way to avoid saying uh you know predict predictive power it's you know it's correlation not necessarily causation um

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the higher the explanatory power of price earnings ratio or cape is you know up to a point right so so you can see

6:40

here as we go from zero years so maybe it's one quarter or two quarters um we

6:45

have relatively low r squared relatively low explanatory power although you know honestly 0.29 isn't the end of the world

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um but getting up to close to 0.7 which is quite a robust

6:57

r squared as we get toward 20 years so again this is a pattern we'll see with

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every example here if we use kind of a longer term indicator we get better

7:09

information about retirement income and what i'm doing here is comparing it

7:15

so comparing the the the cape value basically to the

7:20

amount that someone could have withdrawn from a portfolio in this case a 6040 portfolio

7:26

over 30 years so it's really the connection between cape and

7:32

systematic withdrawals now those of you who've been on these webinars before or who use income lab now you know that is

7:39

not the only thing important to retirement income people will have other income sources and so on but we've simplified here to imagine people are

7:45

just funding their retirement from uh from systematic withdrawals

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okay so this relationship as you might expect is inverse so if you have high pe

7:56

high cape that means that you know stocks are relatively expensive at least earnings are

8:02

relatively expensive um and so the more expensive those are

8:08

historically which is the only way that we can measure this kind of thing right we have to look at the actual historical

8:13

patterns um the higher cape is the lower the systematic withdrawal rate that was

8:18

available going forward um so you see that on the left um with the box plot which is you

8:25

know sloping down into the right so when cape is particularly low

8:31

the sustainable withdrawal rates were typically quite high so to remind you what a box plot shows is that center box

8:38

is the middle 50 um and then the whiskers are the edge 25

8:44

um so you can see um it's a relatively wide dispersion but um but the bulk of

8:49

it is definitely quite high um 20-year cape you know looks very similar to 10-year

8:55

cape so that's the one you typically see talked about

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and you can see that since about the late 90s

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cape has been elevated quite a bit compared to history um the one exception was the the 2008

9:14

period there is a lot of talk about this this pattern

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um and i think there are some plausible reasons to think that it's a little bit of a

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data problem because earnings measures have changed um and so it's possible that cape is not quite as elevated

9:32

compared to history as it looks here but just taking it on on face value

9:38

this clearly indicates that you know elevated cape with respect to history would typically mean

9:44

um that uh advisors would be a little bit more conservative

9:50

on their withdrawal advice um for clients right

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um however cape because we're talking about stock earnings uh is

10:02

not as useful if the allocation is not as heavy in stock so

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you see here if stock allocations are down in the 10 20 range the explanatory

10:13

power is much lower than if we get up to higher higher stock allocation levels again this is

10:20

should not be surprising to any of us of course right this is a stock indicator so presumably um it's going to be more

10:27

useful when applied to plans where where stock performance matters for

10:32

retirement income planning we'll see as we go on to some more examples of

10:39

this but in practice what we do at income lab is we actually combine

10:44

indicators together so that we're always presenting kind of a broader picture of economic context rather than

10:50

highlighting a single indicator

10:56

okay our second example is um what we call nest eggs

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um and really this is just a way of measuring

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previous sequence of returns okay but you know it's always more helpful to

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kind of tell a story about things it's more memorable so think about it this way

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this is the amount of money that would be uh available after some

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length of time of systematic savings right so imagine for example you're saving a thousand dollars a month

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adjusted for inflation for 35 years and then you were going to use that as a

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source for withdrawals to fund your lifestyle in retirement um

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that measure would have been very different at different times in history so on the right here you'll see the blue

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uh line shows how much someone would have had if they had if they had engaged in that kind of

11:52

savings behavior systematic savings behavior huge differences in the in the portfolio

11:58

someone would have had at different times in retirement and you can also see this compared to the

12:04

sustainable withdrawal rate this is a 30-year sustainable withdrawal rate all of this is for 60 40 portfolios

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but you can see this incredible kind of butterfly pattern this inverse pattern

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so again a very strong inverse relationship between previous sequence of returns and

12:25

future sequence of returns that's what this is showing

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as with cape the longer window we use to measure the nest egg

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the better so the the more explanatory power this measure has um

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in in helping provide some context around withdrawals so you can see if we're looking at you know zero to

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let's say um you know 15 years of systematic savings that's

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that's not enough previous sequence of returns to really provide a lot of explanatory power but

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once we get up to you know 20 25 30 35 years we're looking at again

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um quite strong explanatory power for withdrawals

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here um unlike cape which appears to be

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you know quite elevated a little less so now um but still compared to history

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quite elevated um for nest eggs we see a little bit more of a

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kind of a middle of the road pattern so you know back in 2000 the nest egg value um for 30 35 years of savings was

13:39

quite high you know more than uh almost i think it was two and a half

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standard deviations past the mean so way out on the on the um

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on the high end um more recently it's still above average actually that

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that may have uh changed in the last month or so these data were from a little while ago but um we're more kind

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of closer to the average so if you take these two things cape and nest egg or

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previous sequence of returns together um it's it's maybe not as nest egg is is

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not painting as dire a picture for retirees as as cape is

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the other nice thing about nest egg or previous sequence of returns is that

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the explanatory power is relatively high no matter the allocation

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and the highest levels are found with kind of balanced portfolio allocations

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so here we're matching um sequence over prior sequence of returns for

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some allocation call it 6040 or 2080 or 80 20 to

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following sequence of returns for the same portfolio so always matching things together this is why although the story about

14:58

saving and spending is nice um that's not actually what we mean with nest egg what we mean is match the same portfolio

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look at sequence of returns before and after in practice someone might invest differently uh in their saving period

15:10

and in their retirement period or differently in different parts of those times but here we're matching them together

15:16

and we can see that again um nest egg is probably a little bit more useful across a wider range of um of

15:23

portfolios used to fund retirement because even if there's a lot of bonds

15:29

we have relatively high explanatory power so again a useful a useful indicator for providing some

15:35

context okay the last of our three examples um

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is around inflation so this is probably the hottest topic right now um and unfortunately

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short-term inflation so just you know this year the the change in cpi over the

15:55

last 12 months does almost nothing to help us

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understand what someone might be able to withdraw from their portfolio over the

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next 30 years so you can see on the left that that explanatory power is very low

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if we're just looking at the last you know zero years one year uh it's you know point zero five it's basically zero

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however if we look at longer um windows of average inflation so what's

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the trend in inflation um we do actually get um you know once

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you get above 8 10 15 even 20 years we get some reasonable connections between that

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longer term pattern of inflation with

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what sorts of withdrawals might be possible going forward and the connection here is is a positive

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correlation so it's not inverse like the other two were basically historically when inflation has been

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very high for longer periods of time people have typically been able to

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withdraw more from their portfolio going forward when inflation has been very low for long periods of time people have

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been able to withdraw less from their portfolio that can be a little counterintuitive right we think of

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high inflation as being a time of a lot of turmoil and it typically is

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however what we're seeing here is um is basically a reversion to the mean pattern or the idea that you know yes

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inflation might have been very high in let's say the 70s but it came down in the 80s and was

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accompanied by really strong you know equity markets and bond markets

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and so really what we see with inflation is and and vice versa extremely low inflation

17:48

may think well that's that's great stability that's um that's probably a good situation

17:54

um and again it is at the time it feels that way but over very long periods what we see is kind of this reversion to the

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mean this alternation so for example in the mid 60s which is

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really the poster child for um for a period where relatively low

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withdrawals were possible it's where the four percent rule comes from that is the period that uh in the last you know

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hundred years um that had the lowest withdrawal rates possible

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um actually in the mid 60s inflation wasn't all that bad it's that

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higher inflation was coming poor with poor returns were coming right so it was about what was coming in the future so

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long-term inflation at that point was trending quite low it was actually not not too unlike what we've experienced

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recently through the teens um where it was you know two and a half i mean we

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saw we saw deflation in the united states a couple times in the last 10 years

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the difference so far is that um the return somebody might have seen from you

18:58

know 1965 through let's say the early 70s um were

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um much worse than what somebody would have seen so far if they had retired let's

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say um you know five years ago um because they had seen robust returns

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since then so time will tell how much these uh these periods the 60s and the and the 2020s uh rhyme

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but that's that's really what we're what we're seeing here um so the example you see on the screen

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uh shows you know these these periods and for example the the late 40s with um

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where inflation was relatively high um going down to the uh the mid 60s

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where inflation was relatively low and you see you know a drop from five percent to four percent um sustainable

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withdrawals that's not as uh as incredible as going to uh the early 80s

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where inflation was incredibly high and uh we know now that withdrawal rates

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were relatively high um keep in mind that uh the nest eggs available at these points would have been quite different

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right so the nasdaq in the early 80s would not have been as high but with a higher withdrawal rate

20:11

the the dollar amounts withdrawn would have been um would have been better than expected

20:19

okay and just like the other two indicators cape which was strongest with high stock allocations uh nest eggs

20:27

which had reasonable uh levels of explanatory power across portfolio types

20:32

uh inflation measures are shown here compared to the allocation and

20:38

we see kind of the reverse of what we saw with cape so here inflation matters more for bond heavy

20:44

allocations that makes sense because inflation is much more connected with

20:49

with bond performance i would also say inflation is very important for people who have

20:55

um income streams that are not tied to inflation so you know let's say

21:01

social security is tied to inflation but many people would have a nominal

21:06

meaning not adjusting for inflation pension from work um and so for a plan

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that relies heavily on such a such a pension we would also see extremely high explanatory power so this is

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you know we're mostly focusing on connections to portfolios and withdrawals from those

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portfolios but some of these indicators in particular inflation can be really important for

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plans that are a little bit more you know diverse in their uh in their sources of income

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okay so what we've seen so far is that the generally a longer-term

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economic indicator will provide more context more information to an

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advisor who's trying to figure out um you know what's what might my client be in for as they're going through the rest

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of their retirement or embarking on retirement for the first time

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we can also see that connecting those longer term indicators to longer term plans provides

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more help in the planning process so if we're dealing with shorter plans

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the explanatory power is lower so you know what we see here is down to a five-year plan um

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that's probably fairly rare but you know if people are a little little further on in life five or ten year plans might be

22:29

around and we see that uh in particular cape and nest egg are much lower um this

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is basically just showing again that um short-term you know using short term

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uh using any context to provide short term kind of tactical um

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approaches is not as robust as kind of the longer term strategic positioning

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okay so the takeaways from these examples and again these are just examples we've looked at lots of other things um but these are these are quite

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strong is that longer term versions of economic measures tend to have more power than

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shorter term measures more explanatory power is found when matching economic factors to the factors

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that most affect the plan that you're working on and longer term plans have the most to

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gain from economic context

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okay so uh now we'll turn to using economic context in in client communication i think this this may be

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the most important part of of the presentation

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so economic context can be used in in a bunch of ways in planning

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you can certainly use it to tilt income advice up or down when income risk is

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estimated to be particularly high or particularly low and we'll talk a little bit about that at the end of the

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presentation but you can also simply use it to enrich client communication to kind

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of help clients understand the connections between economics and retirement income that might be particularly helpful

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when a client has a particular worry maybe it's inflation maybe it's uh you know recession or depression

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so that's where economic context can really help and we found that providing a historical picture of the

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context really can help clients um understand the

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what the retirement plan you're presenting to them um really means and you know how it compares to the other

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sorts of things that that might have happened in the past or could happen in the in the future um so it's a little

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bit more concrete than just using kind of abstract statistical measures um you

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know for example i would certainly not present clients uh you know r-squared numbers uh when

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talking about economic context um so in the income lab

24:55

uh platform you've seen we have a historical analysis graph it looks like this

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different colors here but uh and what this shows is for the given retirement plan so the

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given mix of of uh income sources the portfolio and so on

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what income level would have been available to somebody with that plan if they were

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to have experienced the sequence of returns and inflation sequences from the past so we know these were real

25:27

sequences of returns and inflation that people really experienced so we know that at least that is the range of

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what's possible and so that graph shows you um the range and you'll see here

25:40

this is a plan that depends only on portfolio withdrawals which again that's that's not all that common but it's

25:45

helpful to just kind of simplify things and we see here um

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that there's quite a range right again we saw from the early 80s very high withdrawal rates were possible from the

25:55

mid 60s they were much lower see a similar thing although most of us wouldn't remember this from you know the

26:01

roaring 20s versus the uh uh the period right around the crash of

26:06

of 1929. um so this huge range right um highs and

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lows but helping clients understand okay yes this is the historical picture but

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which of these pictures should we bother looking at right i mean just although inflation is getting much

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higher now and so we're getting more similar to the the 1980s um

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in in general we're still more like the 60s and 70s um

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than those periods um you know keep in mind interest rates were in the teens right

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um and and so we can say look we've looked at you know your your plan

26:45

depends heavily on the performance of your investments right so so we're really looking at you know our our

26:51

stocks highly valued or or not and if we look at history we see that in general

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in time periods like today when stocks were were valued you know more like they are

27:01

today people could have afforded um a lower withdrawal so they spent a little if

27:07

they had spent less from their portfolio um they they would have had a better time of it right had fewer downward

27:13

adjustments that's what this is really showing the red versus the the blue

27:19

um let's take an example of a nominal pension so let's say somebody you know again will completely simplify and say

27:25

the only thing they have is a 60 000 a year nominal pension um

27:31

so here not really taking portfolio withdrawals into account

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um how much of that nominal pension could they have spent um

27:42

saving the rest into a portfolio so there's some uh performance of

27:48

investments involved here um and and again survived 30 years not had to reduce

27:54

their income um very different um picture here although we do see uh that peak again in

28:00

the in the 1920s um that's actually because there was a lot of deflation uh coming

28:06

up um but you can again say okay there's quite a range of what someone

28:11

could have spent from this 60 000 a year nominal pension um

28:16

for all the way from basically spending all 60 000 of it every year and don't worry about it from the 1920s to periods

28:23

where they were spending basically half and saving the rest to accommodate future

28:29

um cost of living adjustments right so you're kind of putting some putting some money away to it to account for those

28:35

and so in a conversation with a client like this we could say well let's look at the periods where the longer term inflation

28:41

trends were more similar to today so again that picks out the the 60s and early 70s here it does not pick out um

28:48

you know the 80s and 90s and we can say okay um i

28:54

we have a choice here we could assume that inflation will be the worst it's ever been and spend half of this or we

29:00

could you know maybe we'll spend a little bit more than that um thinking that well maybe we won't have

29:05

you know 10 15 years of horrible inflation but if we do you know we'll we'll be we'll be ready to adjust right

29:11

this gives you a a way to have that conversation in this example which is admittedly

29:16

pretty extreme you know helping someone understand that they couldn't spend their entire sixty thousand dollar a year pension would

29:23

would be um potentially quite difficult so this could this could help a bit

29:29

and as i said on income lab we actually combine economic indicators to just provide a kind of a

29:34

broader picture because plants tend to be uh complex they tend to have you know lots of moving parts lots of inputs

29:43

and you're able to dive in a little bit more so you can even we had a an advisor tell us that a

29:50

client was particularly worried about kind of great depression type experiences well you can zoom in and say

29:56

okay here's the crash of 1929. here's world war one here's world war ii and we can look at you know the income proposal

30:03

versus what we know someone could have afforded with the same sequence of returns and sequence of

30:10

inflammation that that someone would have experienced during the great depression so this gives kind of concrete um

30:16

uh connections uh in the minds of of these people now most of us didn't live

30:21

through the great depression but we can at least see what it what it might have looked like

30:27

and again here the the blue in in income lab picks out the periods that are closest

30:33

to today in economic terms does that mean that they're exactly the same as today it's just the gray stuff is the

30:39

things farthest away you know we kind of like gray those and kind of background those and foreground the blue

30:46

to pick out periods that are maybe most uh most comparable to today

30:54

okay so that's that's a little bit about um about communication and communicating economic context um i wrote an article

31:01

in the kitsis blog where i kind of some example kind of scripts about these things too

31:06

so you might have a look at that i will close with a little bit on tilting retirement

31:12

income advice using economic context so a little bit more on the analytical side if you don't if you've had enough charts

31:18

uh for today just close your eyes uh and uh and uh this this part uh will fly by

31:25

um so to to show how um kind of the risk picture

31:31

changes or how you can view retirement risk using a lens of economic

31:36

context we use this tool that derek and i developed we have some articles and kitchens as

31:42

well that we call the the spending risk curve and this is just a way to show that

31:49

there's a trade-off in retirement um you can have higher income and higher spending as long as you're willing to accept a

31:55

higher risk that that spending is too high and you'll have to reduce it at some point or

32:00

if you prefer to really minimize the chances that you'll have to lower your income you're going to have to accept lower income and lower spending right

32:07

now it's just a trade-off there's no right answer people will find themselves anywhere

32:12

along this and we demonst we display this as a curve so just saying risk level 0 to 100 which is equivalent

32:20

to um kind of a in a different framing a probability of success of 100 to 0 or

32:27

probability of failure of 0 to 100 and it just shows the trade-off here right so we see if we wanted to if we

32:34

could accept going from a risk of 10 to a risk of 20

32:40

in this case somebody could have gone from 45 600 to 51 900 in in annual uh

32:46

withdrawals um so this this kind of shows shows the trade-off um between risk level

32:52

probability failure and success and income level so with that in mind

33:00

we can use our historical data and say well what does risk look like when you apply a lens in this case of cape

33:08

so in 2022 these these numbers are from march um

33:13

if we took all of a variable of history and did the same thing ranked how much could

33:18

somebody have afforded um to spend from a million dollar portfolio

33:23

at every risk level right we can see way over on the 100 side uh you know there was

33:29

one time in history where someone could have spent uh you know almost 12 percent of that portfolio right

33:34

whereas on the far left side we see um you know a little bit below forty thousand dollars a little bit below four

33:40

percent that's from the early part of the 20th century so that's the blue line is everything in

33:46

history but what if we only look at times where cape was particularly elevated so we exclude all of those

33:52

really low cape periods right let's exclude the early 80s and so on well if we do that the available income

33:59

at every risk level goes down right so from this shows the risk level

34:04

30 we go from 52 2 to 46 9 right at every single risk level

34:10

we're going down so this again shows that if you want to tilt your advice

34:17

in this case for for someone who has a stock heavy plan um it it might be prudent if you take the

34:23

the cape pattern seriously to to kind of dial that that down now this is not always what you would

34:29

see so in 1982 and using only data available from 1982 so no foresight

34:36

here the opposite happens so if we excluded periods

34:41

that are least like 1982 so basically excluding all the high cape periods because cape

34:48

was quite low in 1982. the blue line shows everything from history up to 1982 the red line is

34:56

through that cape lens right so at this point income available at every risk level has

35:02

gone up so at 30 we went from 53 to 65 so someone in 1982 who was taking cape

35:09

seriously which would have been a trick since the concept of cape did not yet exist but the data was available um they would

35:16

have felt comfortable tilting their income advice up at that point and in retrospect of course that that is

35:22

actually true the early 80s could have somebody could have avoided avoid afforded

35:28

a higher withdrawal rate without taking on more risks so that's what that's what this is showing you just this concept of

35:33

tilting um advice up or down but of course for client communication talking about

35:41

proposed income and retirement except in extremely

35:46

limited circumstances the point is that this will simply affect the proposal so

35:52

if you are applying a tilt if you're applying economic context then the proposed income all else being equal

35:57

right now would be a little bit lower in 1982 it would have been a little bit higher so that is

36:03

sort of the so what of this is how it affects people's um people's lives

36:09

and then as time goes on you know if you're tracking a planet income lab and we reached a point where that was more like 1982 the

36:15

reverse would actually be true so if you're applying a tilt you would actually get a little higher income than

36:20

you would if you were not applying that tilt um so i know that was a lot of data a lot

36:26

of charts um but hopefully uh we have some good uh good questions and so on um but first as

36:33

usual we'll turn it over to derek um and i'm curious derek what kinds of uh

36:39

thoughts you have on applying economic context and also just conversations you're having with clients right now

36:45

yeah and i think for me really the the power you know again of having these analytics

36:51

of knowing that i can tilt kind of my advice in that direction is really useful

36:56

it's not something that i get you know really into the weeds of you know what economic context is how we

37:02

how we select it um but one chart i really excuse me i really like the chart on the

37:08

historical analysis tab when i can go there and show somebody you know here's what it would look like

37:14

here's the plan level of spending um and this this graphic right here is a good example of it where i can really point

37:21

out for at least you know almost all uh you know periods in history right we're seeing that the the spending level

37:27

here is lower than what we'd be looking at and i think that's provides a lot of peace of mind it's one

37:33

of those slides that when i go to this somebody realizes okay yeah if they could have gone and lived through

37:39

world wars and you know everything that's happened from there and i do like to pull out some of those historical events or what you can do by you know

37:46

just toggling on the little purple triangle there and highlight what that is i i think that has been really

37:53

effective in terms of uh kind of helping somebody understand the level of conservativeness that's going into to a

38:00

plan and really for me that's been one of the kind of the way i actually use economic context

38:07

for for my clients is to quick kind of go over that chart show the relative conservativeness of the plan uh relative

38:14

to history and then you know i can make a quick note as well about the blue shaded areas and how those better reflect uh the

38:20

economic conditions we're in now and why those periods you know kind of give those a little bit more weight when

38:26

we're thinking about how um how much they can spend but for me that's about the level of

38:31

depth i'm actually getting into uh you know the communication with the clients even though obviously i love

38:38

love all the stats and power and everything else behind it from an analytical perspective but i like to

38:44

keep things pretty simple and i think uh in general that conversation's gone well with clients and even you know talking

38:49

through things like the inflation in the 70s and 80s when people

38:54

where we're at now that's obviously coming up more and more and uh you know letting them understand

39:00

it was the combination of the low returns coming for people in the 60s plus that high inflation

39:05

um and you know that you know they're certainly taking that into account when we're

39:11

finding their overall spending level um i think is is useful so yeah happy to

39:16

jump into questions but i think that's if somebody's looking for the really practical kind of

39:22

where do i see a lot of conversations coming up it's often this chart here um not not diving too deep into the

39:28

technical weeds unless the client really wants to i was just wondering um

39:33

when you have those historical conversations do you ever have somebody say uh yeah but what if it's worse

39:39

in the future than anything we've ever seen in the past or do you not have as pessimistic of a clientele

39:46

i it hasn't come up much um i i sometimes i like to pull up kind of

39:52

the world wars and some of that right away as i'm showing the the chart and something like if i'm presenting

39:57

actually outside of income lab maybe in a powerpoint or something i'll have those on there and i don't know if that

40:03

maybe deters some of that when people think okay these include world wars these include some tough time periods um

40:11

but um i'm sure that question could come up um and i think you know my my answer there would be that you know

40:17

that's that's why we're going to take a dynamic approach and we'll make adjustments when adjustments are called

40:23

for because it certainly could be the case that uh pass could be worse than in history but also pointing back to you

40:29

know let's look at some of the events that are on the timeline here this is not uh all you know

40:35

rosy great periods and we still see the you know often it's not always the case and sometimes there's a few periods that

40:41

were are showing up below the planned income level but oftentimes it's just a few um

40:46

and that's where i'm having more of that conversation about uh adjustment yeah the the inflation in the 70s and

40:53

80s was profound and long-term so yeah i think that's important to remind people like we actually have seen some relatively

41:00

bad inflation in the united states um uh before and yeah as you said it and it

41:05

can depend quite a bit on the actual plan right so um we do sometimes see kind of the the teens the 19 teams are

41:11

sort of the worst period um but typically those are you know those have to be plans that have a decent

41:17

dependence on on withdrawals so the more you might have social security and things like that you might see those come up but um

41:24

that's helpful thank you luckily do we have some questions we do thanks guys um and to our

41:31

attendees please drop your questions into the q a i will start with the first few ones that we have here um first

41:38

question is i just really want user want to kind of review the nest egg slide again they said they didn't really

41:43

understand that slide so i'm going to be wondering if you can touch that it's probably the the

41:51

that concept of nest egg is potentially the least uh maybe least familiar to people so again

41:59

really what this is measuring is is sequence of returns prior to some point in time and its

42:06

relationship to sequence of returns after that point in time so it's really just a it's a way of kind of showing um

42:13

reversion to the mean or sort of the cyclical nature of of investment performance historically

42:20

so the blue line here shows if if someone had

42:26

spent 35 years saving systematically a thousand dollars a month adjusted for inflation

42:32

which i get is is probably not what most people do right but again this is just a way to measure previous sequence every

42:37

returns so for example the first one here is um is 1906 that's the retirement date so

42:44

for the 35 years before that that person had been saving a thousand dollars a month um

42:50

and they had you know quite a bit above 1.6 million in inflation-adjusted dollars right

42:56

whereas somebody who was retiring in the uh you know roughly 1920 um they would

43:01

have had only four hundred thousand dollars um so hugely different sequence of return there and actually what we see

43:08

was sequence of return previous to today or affecting this nest egg

43:13

amount is that um it's the sequence it's the most recent returns that that matter the most for

43:20

our uh our portfolio um because in this case we've been saving systematically so

43:25

starting out we don't have much money right we put our first thousand in and then our next does and so on but at the end

43:30

we have a lot of funds we've put in there and so the same return percentage will

43:36

have a larger dollar effect on this so it's basically sequences of return we all know that in retirement what matters

43:42

most is segments of return soon after retirement the same is true looking backwards so the most recent

43:48

sequence of return matters the most so that's what this is showing and then the red is simply showing okay

43:54

from that point forward right so call it 19 you know 20. um

44:00

what could someone have actually afforded in withdrawals with full

44:05

with full knowledge of the future right so this is this is looking at actual actual history and we know that actually

44:11

that person in the in 1920 could have could have afforded very large percentage withdrawals which um

44:17

uh would have helped uh their uh helped their situation a lot that's because the 1920s had very good returns

44:24

uh until we got to 1929. so that's that's what that's showing

44:29

um i think that was maybe the slide that

44:34

yep and then uh actually we had a kind of a follow-up on that one so i don't know maybe you want to go back to that last slide but um

44:41

kind of the follow-up question is uh from a different attendees you know they're having trouble connecting making the connection with nest egg and

44:48

sequence of return so are you saying high nest egg implies good prior sequence of returns so more likely that

44:54

sequence or returns is bad going forward so lower withdrawal rate exactly and it's perfectly fine to think

45:01

of this just as nasdaq think of it as your dollar amount i i keep connecting it to sequence of returns because that

45:06

is what it's based on but if you just think okay do people have um you know all else being equal if they had state

45:13

invested uh would they have large nest eggs now or would they be low compared to history

45:19

and that they're they're they're high if things have been good recently um and they're low if things have been bad

45:25

recently and what this is showing is that cyclical nature of okay if things are going really well

45:31

people have larger nest eggs but with that comes the

45:36

um with the idea that maybe they shouldn't spend as much of that nastag as a

45:42

percentage as they might have in a different situation so a lot of people have been talking about this recently i know

45:47

morningstar had some uh research that came out recently and they tried to there were headlines

45:53

about this being you know oh the four percent rule is now 3.3 but there was a lot of work in there saying hey by the

45:59

way there's a connection here to they didn't call it nest eggs but essentially how much money you have um

46:07

and that goes a long way to helping people actually still have an okay standard of living even if the

46:12

withdrawal rate is relatively low compared to history the dollar amounts might be still still pretty reasonable

46:20

awesome and then um next question here is more feedback actually um feedback

46:26

here says it would be helpful if we could add an appendix to income lab reports which contain key economic dates

46:32

uh i'm assuming data such as cape projection inflation etc um the user said this could inform the client

46:38

discussion and reduce the black box aspect of the withdrawal recommendation

46:45

yeah that might be possible for sure and i know you know in our reports we have our assumptions uh reports in the

46:51

gloucester as well which kind of helps already kind of give some of that that information in front um so i could maybe

46:57

just use expanding on that already one additional on the kind of the black box element um ever everybody might be

47:04

different uh levels of familiarity with with what we're doing in the software but if you go to

47:10

um i think the justin and i have a kid's article on the retirement distribution hatchet

47:16

um and i think that's a good one for really trying to get perhaps

47:22

more foundational just kind of what's going on in setting those recommendations and how how risk thinking of kind of total

47:29

risk uh guard rails how those differ from withdrawal rate driven guardrails um i

47:34

think part of our intent in writing that was to help put some turn some

47:40

terminology and understanding around this framework and what it's actually doing um so i found that's one that sometimes

47:46

if somebody is feeling you know where does this come from that's another good resource to go to not so much on economic context that's

47:52

different but um i found that useful thanks thanks dear um

47:57

do we have any other questions those are the q a that's coming so far uh for our users still here please drop in more

48:03

questions um derek while we're waiting on those uh you know one question i know we do briefly talk about uh how you explain

48:10

the historical analysis chart um and i know you know working with users one question they ask is you know what are

48:15

the kind of questions clients most often ask when you do show them that range

48:22

uh for me um and uh i apologize i was reading one of the questions there too at the same time but the so you're

48:28

talking about the historical analysis chart that one specifically

48:33

so they're the i really do think it's it's an interest some some clients it's

48:39

a very quick they just kind of gloss over it and it's like oh that was uh you know that's nice to know this is

48:45

relatively conservative from a historical perspective um some of the clients it's you know

48:50

whatever it is about you know they enjoy history they enjoy um like i've had clients that just

48:56

really get lost in this chart almost about can we you know what was this what was that uh what was the

49:01

uh you know especially when you look at like the recessions and some of all the neat things you can turn on in the chart

49:07

that just really get into it from a historical perspective um so i do have a lot of uh questions that come up i think

49:14

around that and why were certain areas low like you know why do we see the the mid 60s

49:20

having a dip there why do we see the teens with the dip so i think as an advisor um

49:27

being prepared to answer some of those questions can definitely be be useful so kind of having an understanding of

49:33

what's going on what's driving that so that you don't just get that kind of question out of blue and not sure

49:39

how to answer that um but again it for me it's just a lot of getting into the tool understanding it looking at the

49:46

history that was there you know seeing what was going on um and sometimes it's okay to walk away

49:51

and say that's something i need to look into because i'm not a economic historian by any means and so sometimes somebody will hit me with a

49:57

question i don't quite know gotcha cool we got some more uh coming in um

50:04

this one i can answer um the question is where can we find a list of these great articles referenced

50:10

you can find them on our website in our resources section um we have all the articles um

50:16

links to all the ones that justin and derek have done specifically on kids so you can access them through our website as well as other articles that we've

50:22

published um on our resource page and then you can also view all the previous webinar recordings as well

50:29

and then next question here is uh sequence of returns is a look back in

50:35

history how does that apply today to deciding how much to withdraw in 2002 and 2003.

50:43

yeah that's a that's a great uh a great question um so in order to study the

50:49

link between economic context and sequence of returns we we have to use history right i mean

50:54

there's no way to uh or it wouldn't be very interesting to randomize economic context uh in a monte carlo um

51:02

context so that's everything that you've seen in the presentation is is doing

51:07

that um that being said uh i i know that there is value and a lot of people are

51:12

using um particularly today they might say hey look um if i use historical

51:17

sequences of return historical sequences of inflation um which uh

51:23

i think that's that's a maybe a more important term than we than we've understood in the past sequence of

51:29

inflation right high then low that kind of thing if you're using historical patterns you're saying okay it could be a broad

51:35

range of things but you might have a very strong opinion that inflation will be higher for a period and it's not it's

51:43

not really even an uncertainty right and so then i've seen people go to our regime-based monte carlo

51:49

analysis method where then you can kind of put your thumb on the scale change your inflation assumptions at least for

51:54

the near term say hey we we know inflation is higher and let's let's look at what that might

52:00

mean for your plan um you know if it lasts for five ten years um and and then

52:06

you can you can uh you can see how that affects the proposed income um so that is a way i know um you know using

52:13

history again i think i started this presentation by saying it can make us feel a little uncomfortable right because we're saying um

52:20

you know maybe this is the only set of things that could happen um that that's a good way to um to kind of apply that

52:26

opinion if if that is your opinion of um and it doesn't have to be that you're predicting that that's exactly what's

52:32

going to happen you might just want to understand how would i adjust my income advice for somebody if i want to

52:38

make sure that they're protected from kind of a medium-term high inflation period

52:44

perfect um and next question is um when you're talking about tilting advice

52:51

for economic context would we start with the income lab proposed income and then further adjust that amount for current

52:57

cape inflation etc or does an income lab already build these factors into the proposed income figures any suggestions

53:05

or clarifications yeah if you're using the historical analysis

53:11

method which uses historical sequence of returns and secrets of inflation then

53:16

you're already applying economic context if you want to adjust that it's actually

53:22

right here this slider so you can turn it off completely right you could say i think this stuff is

53:27

nonsense don't don't do it um and then apply it to the plan

53:33

um the other way to do it would be as i said maybe you have particular um

53:39

you know things you want to do like like adjust for higher inflation so then you would want to go to the uh

53:45

to the capital market assumptions and um and adjust for example your inflation uh

53:53

for typically what people would do is is use the regime based um because then you don't then you're not saying well it's

53:58

going to be like this forever 30 40 years um you'd be saying okay well i have a nearer term view maybe it's 10 years

54:04

maybe it's less and you could adjust you know your inflation and your inflation standard

54:11

deviations so um again an income lab we don't assume inflation is just flat and

54:16

stays the same every month every year of the plan it's actually it's varying it the same way that it

54:21

varies um investment returns

54:26

perfect and then uh two more questions um i know we've got about five minutes here so there's only 12 everyone's time um so

54:34

second last question is following up on the next egg um so in 1920 is the graph

54:39

indicating that they were able to withdraw over 10 percent from the lower 400k beginning next step next time

54:48

and i can let you get to that i think that's right if i i don't have a photographic

54:55

but uh yeah that's that's exactly right so now these are very brief peaks right so

55:02

uh you're you're catching a falling knife there but uh but yeah exactly kind of that 1920 that could have been i'm not

55:08

sure exactly what year it is but the the sustainable withdrawal rate was above 10

55:14

but from a 400 000 portfolio so we've actually done a we had a webinar i think

55:20

it was on something like what's the worst time to retire in history um where we kind of we talk about this

55:26

concept um i don't know that we called it nest egg we might have um but this idea that it's

55:31

the combination of how much money you have and how much you withdraw as a percentage that leads to your standard

55:37

of of living um and and that's exactly what you would see here is that

55:42

the you know blue line times the red line is a much more it's a much smoother line it's not

55:48

completely flat but it's a much smoother line and then a question here is um if a

55:55

client user utilizes a cash bucketing approach how does that factor into

56:01

the income lab analysis so i would depend on what you mean by cash

56:07

bucketing i definitely you know i would make sure you have the cash allocation put in there and then it will

56:15

um it will apply either your capital market assumptions regarding that the performance of cash

56:20

uh or the historical patterns of cash returns and that is a very important input to the uh to the proposed income

56:29

i know derek you've talked before and we don't we don't have a feature for this on income lab but ways of kind of talking about maybe some of the safer

56:36

assets although in inflation periods i hesitate to call cash safe but um and how you talk about that with clients

56:43

yeah so i i mean i personally like to use michael kids this has an article on using bucketing strategies as more of a

56:50

psychological tool than an actual kind of portfolio management tool that's largely

56:56

how i personally use buckets in my practice so i talk about buckets um i talk about having a protection bucket a

57:01

growth bucket i like a two very simplified two kind of bucket framework but um for me it's understanding income

57:08

labs just gonna be looking at the allocation uh that you have set in there so getting that cash setting

57:14

correct as justin mentioned um but you know if you're actually wanting to analyze like spending down

57:21

one of those buckets that's not something that just to be clear that's as far as i'm aware that's

57:26

not something that can be done in the software no that's that's right

57:32

and then uh these last two are more just um kind of suggestions for future topics um and so to close out i will kind of

57:39

walk through those so uh first one is it'd be nice for future webinars to show how to apply different analysis methods

57:44

so that historical versus monte carlo versus regime based um yeah great topic i think we should do

57:51

that in the future um and then last one is oh it looks like um so we

57:57

have a user you know starting to get notices that plans are needing adjustments and some are in positive directions um any chance we could have a

58:04

webinar to review how to understand implemented plan adjustments in the near future

58:09

that's a great idea as well yeah i think we can definitely do that we could uh we'll uh we'll create some fake plans

58:15

that had different types of adjustments and we'll look at them and see why and so on yep that's good perfect

58:20

well hey i love it um justin derek again thank you guys so much we really appreciate the time you

58:26

made to keep bringing uh these amazing webinars for us and our users um

58:32

for anyone else who's um signed up we will again send out the recording uh later for your review as soon as i close

58:39

off the webinar you will get that survey to put in your cfp information um and

58:44

i'm sorry we had one last um uh no ryan you don't have to subscribe to bridget to get that

58:50

integration up i will actually send you an email here with some information to help you get that integration set up um

58:55

outside of that guys thank you so much and um we will see everyone on the next one take care thanks everybody

 

 
 



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