A 65-year-old retiring this month faces a financial puzzle: leaving work with $1.3 million saved, but entering retirement when the S&P 500 sits up 13% over the past year and 80% over five years. The market feels extended, inflation remains at 3.2%, and the first few years of retirement withdrawals could determine whether this nest egg lasts 30 years or runs dry at 80.

This is sequence of returns risk—the single biggest threat to a portfolio at retirement. The timing of market returns matters far more than average returns when you’re taking withdrawals. A retiree who started with $1 million in 2000 and withdrew $50,000 annually would have run out of money by 2015 despite the market eventually recovering. Someone who retired in 2010 with the same plan would still have over $1 million today.

This retiree needs $65,000 annually but can claim Social Security now for $28,800 per year, leaving a $36,200 gap to fill from the portfolio—a 2.8% withdrawal rate. That’s conservative and sustainable under normal conditions. But these aren’t normal conditions.

The portfolio breakdown: $950,000 in a traditional 401(k), $180,000 in a Roth IRA, and $170,000 in taxable accounts. The 70/30 stock-bond allocation was appropriate during accumulation but needs immediate adjustment. With bonds (AGG) up 7.5% over the past year and yielding around 4.5%, there’s finally an alternative to stocks that pays meaningful income.

Building a cash reserve. Many financial planners suggest a three-bucket strategy before touching the 401(k): 2 years of expenses ($72,000) in high-yield savings at 4.5%, 3-5 years ($195,000-$325,000) in short and intermediate-term bonds, and the remainder in stocks. This approach creates flexibility to avoid selling stocks in a downturn.

Delaying Social Security. Taking benefits now feels safe, but waiting until 70 increases the monthly payment to $3,456—a 44% raise. Each year of delay adds 8% to the benefit, and it’s inflation-adjusted for life. Financial advisors often note that if a retiree works part-time earning $18,000 for three years, they could cover most spending without portfolio withdrawals, let Social Security grow, and give the portfolio time to compound through any near-term volatility.

Rebalancing into bonds. Financial advisors often recommend adjusting allocations from 70/30 to 50/50 or even 40/60 for the next 3-5 years. This approach focuses on portfolio preservation if the market drops 30% in year one of retirement.

One approach planners often suggest for Year 1: using $18,000 from part-time work plus $28,800 from Social Security if claimed, supplemented by $18,200 from the taxable account (which has the lowest tax cost). Many advisors suggest avoiding 401(k) withdrawals initially.

For Years 2-5: Financial planners often recommend continuing part-time work if possible and drawing from the bond bucket while letting stocks recover from any downturn. Advisors frequently discuss using low-income years to convert portions of the 401(k) to Roth, staying within the 12% tax bracket.

The math is clear: retiring into uncertainty requires defense first, growth second.

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