How sequence risk hurts your portfolio
Investors can typically start withdrawing funds from retirement accounts without penalty at age 59½.
But there’s a big risk for younger retirees or near-retirees who experience stock market downturns just before or as they start tapping accounts.
Withdrawing from your portfolio when the stock market drops could mean selling more assets for the same amount of cash. As a result, you’re left with fewer investments to capture future growth when the market rebounds.
It’s the biggest issue for younger retirees with decades of living expenses to cover from their nest egg, experts say.
Here are some ways to mitigate your sequence of returns risk, according to financial advisors.
Diversify your portfolio
As retirement approaches, it’s important to adjust portfolio allocations from heavy concentrations in higher-risk assets to less volatile investments like bonds, experts say. The right mix may depend on several factors, including your risk tolerance, goals and life expectancy.
“Diversification among several different asset classes can help make volatility less pronounced,” Lyon said.
Diversification among several different asset classes can help make volatility less pronounced.
Collin Lyon
Wealth strategy advisor at Anderson Financial Strategies
Build a ‘war chest’ to fund living expenses
You can avoid selling assets in a down market by keeping a six-month emergency fund and a “war chest” to cover living expenses, according to CFP Jonathan Bednar II, a wealth advisor at Paradigm Wealth Partners in Knoxville, Tennessee.
For Bednar’s clients, the war chest includes five years of expenses in fixed-income assets — typically in a bond or certificate of deposit ladder — so retirees can “weather any market volatility,” when the sequence risk is highest, he said.
Opt for a flexible withdrawal rate
Flexible withdrawals are another way to safeguard your portfolio from sequence risk, experts say.
“Instead of withdrawing a fixed percentage, the rate can be adjusted based on market performance,” explained Orlando-based CFP Brad Brescia with Moisand Fitzgerald Tamayo.
Reducing withdrawals during years of negative returns “can help preserve the portfolio’s core,” he added. However, some retirement accounts eventually have required withdrawals.