

cheese_breath wrote:Even though most folks don't make it into their 90s, some do. My philosophy is better safe than sorry, so I'm planning for my mid 90s. If I go before that and leave some behind for the kids, that's OK. That's what parents do. Better that than run out too soon and end up mooching off them.
It's not just you, as they say "you could look it up." Google on "life table" or "mortality table." Or allow me. (This is a chart I made for my own use and I used white males because I'm a white male and white females because my wife is a white female.)GRT2BOUTDOORS wrote:Is it just me or does it appear that most folks who make it to retirement at age 65 do not live into their 90's, making this all-out drive to reach a certain asset level all for naught or really, just for the benefit of heirs/and or some ultimate beneficiary?

GRT2BOUTDOORS wrote:It seems all the retirement investment literature and marketing attempts to steer one to a 25x or 30x expenses in total asset value to reach the promised land. Is it just me or does it appear that most folks who make it to retirement at age 65 do not live into their 90's, making this all-out drive to reach a certain asset level all for naught or really, just for the benefit of heirs/and or some ultimate beneficiary? How do you address this in your planning stages? I have started to question this since a number of folks I know have moved on and even though many of them took extremely good care of themselves never made it to 90, even those who's genes would have indicated otherwise.
ourbrooks wrote:Of course, one answer to the problem is the dual life single premium immediate annuity; it's a bet between you and the insurance company about whether the couple will live longer than average. Leaves nothing on the table and you get to spend the money for as long as you live.
555 wrote:You do not need to depend purely on a safe withdrawal rate (SWR) strategy. Annuities effectively take the guesswork out of unknown longevity to a significant extent. So such savings are probably not needed. That said, it's good to save a decent amount. But also you can't predict where you portfolio will end up, so you need to be flexible, and plan (and update) on what you actually have, both during accumulation and decumulation.
richard wrote:An annuity is also a bet that the insurance company will have the ability to make payments for the entire term and, in almost all cases, a bet that inflation won't have a major negative effect.
555 wrote:You do not need to depend purely on a safe withdrawal rate (SWR) strategy. Annuities effectively take the guesswork out of unknown longevity to a significant extent. So such savings are probably not needed. That said, it's good to save a decent amount. But also you can't predict where you portfolio will end up, so you need to be flexible, and plan (and update) on what you actually have, both during accumulation and decumulation. But you don't need to get it at the beginning of your retirement, and you don't need it for your whole income, so there's that flexibility.
richard wrote:An annuity is also a bet that the insurance company will have the ability to make payments for the entire term and, in almost all cases, a bet that inflation won't have a major negative effect.
cheese_breath wrote:Even though most folks don't make it into their 90s, some do. My philosophy is better safe than sorry, so I'm planning for my mid 90s. If I go before that and leave some behind for the kids, that's OK. That's what parents do. Better that than run out too soon and end up mooching off them.
GRT2BOUTDOORS wrote:It seems all the retirement investment literature and marketing attempts to steer one to a 25x or 30x expenses in total asset value to reach the promised land. Is it just me or does it appear that most folks who make it to retirement at age 65 do not live into their 90's, making this all-out drive to reach a certain asset level all for naught or really, just for the benefit of heirs/and or some ultimate beneficiary? How do you address this in your planning stages? I have started to question this since a number of folks I know have moved on and even though many of them took extremely good care of themselves never made it to 90, even those who's genes would have indicated otherwise.
exoilman wrote:Agree 100% with cheese breath and Nisi.
Sam
exoilman wrote:Agree 100% with cheese breath and Nisi.
Sam
ourbrooks wrote:This table might be the answer: http://www.nyc.gov/html/olr/downloads/pdf/nyceira/joint_table.pdf Dual life expectancies are much larger than single life expectancies.
For a couple who are both 65, the median life expectancy for at least one of the two is 26.2 years. That's a median expectancy; half of the couples will have one member who survives longer. Now, consider a couple in which one member is 7 years younger and retirement is started when the older person reaches 65; median expectancy is 30 years. Again, in half the couples, one will live longer.
To make things even scarier, look at this: http://www.bogleheads.org/wiki/Trinity_study_update The 25x factor is based on a 4% withdrawal rate; that's only a reasonable rate if neither of you plan on living more than 30 years and you're willing to accept a significant probability of spending all of your investments. Try 3% if you think one of you will be above average and live for 40 years after retirement start. That ends up being more like 33x
Of course, one answer to the problem is the dual life single premium immediate annuity; it's a bet between you and the insurance company about whether the couple will live longer than average. Leaves nothing on the table and you get to spend the money for as long as you live.
GRT2BOUTDOORS wrote:How do you address this in your planning stages?
dbphd wrote:It depends a great deal on genetics. My mother at 99 is the youngest of 7 siblings, 3 of whom lived to be 100 (104, 102, 100). She is physically and mentally healthy, and seems very likely to live a few more years. She enjoys an active life in the assisted living building of a very nice retirement center in Santa Barbara, where she dines with friends, attends the many on-campus lectures, concerts, and chapel. Her one bedroom apartment has a small kitchen and even a powder room for guests. She uses her MacBook for email correspondence. The cost of this nice lifestyle is a bit over $65K a year, paid for by the family trust, a small pension, and social security.
ourbrooks wrote:If you need to live off of part of the money you are saving, the results don't apply; Milevsky even says so.
A simple, but real example: Suppose you need $12,000 a year in income. It'll cost you $172700 at age 65. If you wait until age 80, it will cost only $102887 but you'll have used up $180,000 in other capital. That's a total of $282,887. To make it pay to wait, you'll have to get a 10.24% return on your money while waiting until age 80. Not very likely.
GRT2BOUTDOORS wrote: Is it just me or does it appear that most folks who make it to retirement at age 65 do not live into their 90's, making this all-out drive to reach a certain asset level all for naught or really, just for the benefit of heirs/and or some ultimate beneficiary?
tetractys wrote:I'm planning for 100, or 120--can't make up my mind. -- Tet
Alas, my casual investigations suggest that this is not nearly as true as people think. Despite all the talk about "choosing your parents," the correlation of longevity between parents and children is there, but it's low, like maybe 30%.dbphd wrote:It depends a great deal on genetics.
Inflation adjusted annuities have been around for a very long time. The old fashioned ones just increased the payments by a fixed percentage each year; the newer ones actually base the increase on the CPI-U. You can even role your own with a Vanguard variable annuity with a Guarenteed Lifetime Withdrawal Benefit (GLWB) rider.
RedJones wrote:GRT2BOUTDOORS wrote: Is it just me or does it appear that most folks who make it to retirement at age 65 do not live into their 90's, making this all-out drive to reach a certain asset level all for naught or really, just for the benefit of heirs/and or some ultimate beneficiary?
Do you have fire insurance on your house? Which is more likely: you live into your 90's or your house burns down?
jginseattle wrote:The fact fact is that people are living longer. My nephews may make it to 110 or 115. How would you like to fund a retirement like that?
This is anecdotal, but I recently heard a financial advisor say that three clients, all of whom were doctors, came to him independently and each changed their plans to factor in a lifespan of 115 years.
Cut-Throat wrote:jginseattle wrote:The fact fact is that people are living longer. My nephews may make it to 110 or 115. How would you like to fund a retirement like that?
This is anecdotal, but I recently heard a financial advisor say that three clients, all of whom were doctors, came to him independently and each changed their plans to factor in a lifespan of 115 years.
Not really. The facts do not agree with you. To factor this in to a retirement plan is akin to buying lottery tickets to retire in the first place. Get real!
A supercentenarian (sometimes hyphenated as super-centenarian) is someone who has reached the age of 110 years. This age is achieved by about one in a thousand centenarians.[citation needed]
There are estimated to be 300 – 450 living supercentenarians in the world, though only about 70 individual verified living supercentenarians are known.[1] A study conducted in 2010 showed that the countries with most supercentenarians were United States, United Kingdom, Japan, France and Italy.[2]
The first verified supercentenarians in human history died in the late 19th century. Until the 1980s, the maximal age to be attained by supercentenarians was 114, but this has now been surpassed. To date, there are 7 undisputed cases of people who have lived to 116 years of age or older. The oldest verified person ever is Jeanne Calment, who died in 1997 at the age of 122 years 164 days.
Jerilynn wrote:The one thing that can't be predicted is if a medical breakthrough will occur that will increase lifespan significantly. A cure for cancer, for example. That would sure mess up the ins companies' actuarial tables, don't you think?
Cut-Throat wrote:jginseattle wrote:The fact fact is that people are living longer. My nephews may make it to 110 or 115. How would you like to fund a retirement like that?
This is anecdotal, but I recently heard a financial advisor say that three clients, all of whom were doctors, came to him independently and each changed their plans to factor in a lifespan of 115 years.
Not really. The facts do not agree with you. To factor this in to a retirement plan is akin to buying lottery tickets to retire in the first place. Get real!
A supercentenarian (sometimes hyphenated as super-centenarian) is someone who has reached the age of 110 years. This age is achieved by about one in a thousand centenarians.[citation needed]
There are estimated to be 300 – 450 living supercentenarians in the world, though only about 70 individual verified living supercentenarians are known.[1] A study conducted in 2010 showed that the countries with most supercentenarians were United States, United Kingdom, Japan, France and Italy.[2]
The first verified supercentenarians in human history died in the late 19th century. Until the 1980s, the maximal age to be attained by supercentenarians was 114, but this has now been surpassed. To date, there are 7 undisputed cases of people who have lived to 116 years of age or older. The oldest verified person ever is Jeanne Calment, who died in 1997 at the age of 122 years 164 days.
jginseattle wrote:http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-12783874
Cut-Throat wrote:You can set your retirement plan to 175 if you want, and buy some lottery tickets while you're at it.
Jerilynn wrote:The one thing that can't be predicted is if a medical breakthrough will occur that will increase lifespan significantly. A cure for cancer, for example. That would sure mess up the ins companies' actuarial tables, don't you think?
Stryker wrote:There's must be something to being a stock investor and having longevity. In no particular order, John Templeton, Walter Schloss, Phil Fisher, and Philip Carret all lived into their 90's. Irving Kahn is still working in New York at the age of 106.
Cut-Throat wrote:Jerilynn wrote:The one thing that can't be predicted is if a medical breakthrough will occur that will increase lifespan significantly. A cure for cancer, for example. That would sure mess up the ins companies' actuarial tables, don't you think?
Anything is possible, but I wouldn't plan on it.
You can set your retirement plan to 175 if you want, and buy some lottery tickets while you're at it.
This comment should be deleted or at least edited for "politics".
Leesbro63 wrote:RedJones wrote:GRT2BOUTDOORS wrote: Is it just me or does it appear that most folks who make it to retirement at age 65 do not live into their 90's, making this all-out drive to reach a certain asset level all for naught or really, just for the benefit of heirs/and or some ultimate beneficiary?
Do you have fire insurance on your house? Which is more likely: you live into your 90's or your house burns down?
Apples and oranges because the cost to insure your house is way less than the cost to insure longevity.
RedJones wrote:Leesbro63 wrote:RedJones wrote:GRT2BOUTDOORS wrote: Is it just me or does it appear that most folks who make it to retirement at age 65 do not live into their 90's, making this all-out drive to reach a certain asset level all for naught or really, just for the benefit of heirs/and or some ultimate beneficiary?
Do you have fire insurance on your house? Which is more likely: you live into your 90's or your house burns down?
Apples and oranges because the cost to insure your house is way less than the cost to insure longevity.
People don't buy insurance just because it is cheap. They buy it when they cannot afford to bear the loss themselves. Or, at least. that is the rational approach.
Leesbro63 wrote:RedJones wrote:Leesbro63 wrote:RedJones wrote:GRT2BOUTDOORS wrote: Is it just me or does it appear that most folks who make it to retirement at age 65 do not live into their 90's, making this all-out drive to reach a certain asset level all for naught or really, just for the benefit of heirs/and or some ultimate beneficiary?
Do you have fire insurance on your house? Which is more likely: you live into your 90's or your house burns down?
Apples and oranges because the cost to insure your house is way less than the cost to insure longevity.
People don't buy insurance just because it is cheap. They buy it when they cannot afford to bear the loss themselves. Or, at least. that is the rational approach.
Yeah but they also don't buy insurance when they cant afford to bear the immediate cost of the premium, even if they have to retain a risk of much worse later on.
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