towards a successful retirement plan

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Towards a Successful Retirement Plan THE IMPLICATIONS OF EARLY RETIREMENT CAPITAL WITHDRAWALS AND INVESTMENT COSTS ON ACHIEVING SUITABLE REPLACEMENT RATES AT RETIREMENT By Daniel R Wessels October 2013

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Towards a Successful Retirement Plan. The implications of early retirement capital withdrawals and investment costs on achieving suitable replacement rates at retirement. By Daniel R WesselsOctober 2013. Key Concept - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Towards a Successful Retirement Plan

Towards a Successful Retirement PlanTHE IMPLICATIONS OF EARLY RETIREMENT CAPITAL WITHDRAWALS AND INVESTMENT COSTS ON ACHIEVING SUITABLE REPLACEMENT RATES AT RETIREMENT

By Daniel R Wessels October 2013

Page 2: Towards a Successful Retirement Plan

Key Concept

To maintain one’s standard of living at retirement one should have sufficient retirement

capital available at retirement to substitute at least 75% of final year’s pre-retirement

income with post-retirement income, i.e. replacement rate of 75%...

Page 3: Towards a Successful Retirement Plan

Explanatory Notes

Savings rate = the net savings (after costs) as a percentage of pre-retirement gross income that is

allocated each year towards the retirement plan.

 

Contribution period = the number of years that allocations will be made towards the retirement

plan.

 

Replacement rate at retirement = Post-retirement income as percentage of one’s final year’s gross

income before retirement. Typically, it is recommended that a replacement rate of 75% should be

ideal to maintain one’s living standard at retirement.

Gross investment portfolio real return = Returns in excess of inflation rate before deduction of

fund management, product, administration and advice fees

Net investment portfolio real return = Returns in excess of inflation after deduction of fund

management, product, administration and advice fees

Page 4: Towards a Successful Retirement Plan

Explanatory Notes (continued)

  Maximum sustainable replacement rate = based on a drawdown (withdrawal) rate of 6% of

retirement capital available at retirement, and considered as the maximum withdrawal rate without adversely

affecting the long-term sustainability of one’s retirement plan.

Drawdown rate = post-retirement withdrawals, which is the income paid to the retiree and

administrative costs associated with the post-retirement investment, as a percentage of retirement capital.

Early withdrawal = Withdrawing full amount of capital available during pre-retirement phase,

proceeds are not used to supplement retirement capital or retirement income at retirement

Investment costs or fees = fund management, product, administration and advice fees as a

percentage of investment per annum

Page 5: Towards a Successful Retirement Plan

Net real return of 4% p.a.Early withdrawals and impact on replacement rate at retirement

Page 6: Towards a Successful Retirement Plan

Gross real return of 6% p.a. ...The impact of costs on replacement rate at retirement

Page 7: Towards a Successful Retirement Plan

And when considering both early withdrawals and investment costs …

For example, comparing no withdrawals with full withdrawals at n years

from the inception of retirement plan and calculate replacement rate

attained at retirement for different contribution periods and investment

return assumptions…

Page 8: Towards a Successful Retirement Plan

Gross real return of 6% per annum…

The adverse effects of investment fees and early withdrawals on replacement rates

Gross real return = 6%, savings rate = 15%, contribution period = 40 years

No withdrawal

Withdrawal = 4 years

Withdrawal = 8 years

Withdrawal = 12 years

0%

25%

50%

75%

100%

125%

1.00% 1.50% 2.00% 2.50% 3.00% 3.50% 4.00% 4.50% 5.00%

Investment fees

Re

pla

ce

me

nt

rate

Page 9: Towards a Successful Retirement Plan

We can’t always expect high investment returns, or hope it will save the (retirement) day…but we have some control over our savings rates and

contribution periods…and early withdrawal decisions, investment strategy/costs!

Targeted replacement rate = 75%Contribution period, savings rate and net real returns

required

SR = 10%SR = 12.5%SR = 15%SR = 17.5%SR = 20%

0.0%

1.0%

2.0%

3.0%

4.0%

5.0%

6.0%

7.0%

8.0%

9.0%

30 35 40 45

Contribution period

Real

ret

urns

req

uire

d

Page 10: Towards a Successful Retirement Plan

Thinking about retirement planning & “reforms”…

•Costs… if one needs a net real return of 4% p.a. over a 40-year period to achieve a replacement rate of

75%, how much “investment cost in the system” can be afforded?

e.g. 3% cost = 7% real on a gross basis, but is that a reasonable expectation?

•Consider the cyclical nature of real returns over time and beware that we’ve experienced a period of

high real returns in recent times…

•Implications for investment strategy?

•But can’t focus on the cost aspect only without addressing issues regarding capital preservation, e.g.

(unnecessary) early withdrawals…

Page 11: Towards a Successful Retirement Plan

Disclaimer:

Please note that all the material, opinions and views herein do not constitute investment advice, but are published primarily for information purposes. The author accepts no responsibility for investors using the

information as investment advice. Please consult an authorised investment advisor.Unless otherwise stated, the author is the sole proprietor of this publication and its content. No quotations

from or references to this publication are allowed without prior approval.