Before the article, here’s what’s happening this week on our podcast, Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors:
Barry wrote in and asked:
Jesse – I’ll need about $100,000 per year from my portfolio in Retirement. I have $3M in my retirement portfolio. It’s producing about $60,000 in income and dividends for me, meaning I only need to sell $40,000 (net of taxes) of the principal value to fund the rest of my need. By my math – $40,000 divided by $3M is about 1.3%. That withdrawal rate is WAY less than the 4% rule.
Am I thinking about this correctly?
Before answering today’s question, we must ensure we’re all on the same playing field.
If you’re not familiar with the 4% rule, here’s some excellent info for you:
We also need to discuss where investment returns come from. Where does the “Growth” come from if you own stocks, bonds, Real Estate, or anything else? How does the “return on investment” end up in your pocket?
The answer is different for each investment class.
But *most* investments provide their return to investors via two separate mechanisms:
For a typical retirement portfolio:
Portfolio Growth = Dividends + Interest + Capital Appreciation
When someone says, “A 60/40 portfolio grows by ~9% per year, on average,” what they are actually saying is:
9% = Average Dividends + Average Interest + Average Capital Appreciation
To answer today’s question:
Yes, if dividends and income leave your portfolio, they are part of your withdrawal rate. If you extract 2% of your portfolio via income and dividends and another 1.3% via selling assets, then your withdrawal rate is 3.3%.
The dividends and income are not free Money. They are one of the key components of your overall portfolio return. If you weren’t extracting those dollars, you’d reinvest and compound them. Believing that dividends are “free” is one of the biggest misconceptions in DIY investing.
The simple fact is that the 4% rule—or any withdrawal rule—is only a rule of thumb. It’s a starting point but highly limited. You must go deeper.
A real CFP financial planner would use a long-term cash flow model to analyze your portfolio’s planned withdrawal sequence, including any income or dividends from your taxable account.
Your withdrawal sequence is likely to be lumpy. It’ll change once you start collecting Social Security And change again when you hit RMD age. Some years should include Roth conversions. You should plan all of this out ahead of time!
Starting your retirement without taking this detailed step is a risky move. If you haven’t taken it already, there’s no better time than now.
Thank you for reading! If you enjoyed this article, join 8500+ subscribers who read my 2-minute weekly email, where I send you links to the smartest financial content I find online every week. You can read past newsletters before signing up.
On that note, our podcast “Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors” is by far outpacing this written blog. Tune in and check it out.
-Jesse
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