“The good news is: we’re living longer. The bad news is: we’re living longer,” says Tina Di Vito, director of retirement solutions at Bank of Montreal in Toronto.
In fact, a 65-year-old couple has a one in four chance of at least one partner reaching 97 years of age. “We have to start being more realistic with our clients,” she says. “The money has to last 20 or 30 years. And the impact of even the nominal inflation we have experienced recently can cut a portfolio’s purchasing power in half over 20 to 25 years.”
Di Vito runs through a few scenarios to show how savings can be eroded. In her example, the client has a $300,000 RRIF earning a 6% return. (Inflation is ignored in these calculations but would worsen the situation.) The results are:
> Scenario No. 1: withdrawing $20,000 pre-taxes a year from age 55 to age 90 leaves your client with $61,757 at age 90.
> Scenario No. 2: delaying withdrawal by five years, then withdrawing $20,000 pre-taxes a year from age 60 to age 90 will leave your client with $130,395 at age 90.
Scenario No. 3: withdrawing $25,000 pre-taxes a year from age 55 to 64 and reducing withdrawals to $20,000 a year from age 65 onward will result in the client’s money running out by age 81.
> Scenario No. 4: withdrawing $30,000 a year from age 55 to 64, then reducing withdrawals to $20,000 a year will result in the money running out by age 74.
— MARY TERESA BITTI
Can your client’s retirement assets stretch over 30 years?
- By: Mary Teresa Bitti
- November 13, 2006 November 13, 2006
- 13:48