Quote:
Originally Posted by dhutton
Hi Greg. Does this approach change at some point relative to retirement age or do you advocate this same strategy well into retirement?
Thanks,
Don
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Don -- The old school used to say that as you approach retirement age -- that you should switch to bonds. The reason behind this was that you wouldn't or "shouldn't" loose capital in a down market. Great. NOT. People used to retire at 65 and maybe live to 75.... now that standard is out the window. People live for YEARS and YEARS now. My Mother in Law is 90 and still going strong!
So here's always been my point about this - and I've been retired for 23 years now (I'll be 62 this summer). If a strategy that worked well enough to get me to retirement - which may have taken years - why would I change that? It might have taken 25 or 30 years to get enough of a nest egg that would see me thru retirement.... and perhaps I have ANOTHER 25 years of life left!! I sure hope so!! 65 to 90 is 25 years! Will there be ups and downs in my portfolio over that time? Hell yes! Many of them. But if I've followed the plan --- I'm living off the dividend strategy -- not the capital. Oh - and by the way - that capital should have grown many fold over the time I've been investing. So if I've got 300% more than I put in -- and it's down 20% -- who cares?!?!? I'm not spending (or selling) all of my capital "this year" (the year or two or three when it's down from the HIGH).
The key to happy retirement is to have your spending "in check" -- there just shouldn't be much outgo... and your Social Security should only be a supplement to your real income from your investments... and the dividends should have grown over time from when you first bought "X". Maybe the actual dividend percentage being paid on your original investment is now 20% or more!! Say you bought at $50 and it paid 5% ($2.50 per year dividend) and now 20 years later it's paying you $4.00 per year in dividends. That's now paying you 8%.... and think about this as well.... it's been paying you $2.50 or better per year for 20 years --- at a steady rate of $2.50 for 20 years that's all of your money back ($50 in total dividends per share!). Hopefully you choose to re-invest the dividend all those 20 years and you now have a bunch more shares than you started with.
Here's a real life scenario --- that just happened to close this week. In 2005 I invested $200,000 in an apartment LLC (Limited Liability Corp). The dividend paid was 7% ($14,000 per year).... "We" just sold this property and my net cash out is $655,000. So in 10 years I collected $140,000 in dividends - and I got a net (gross actually) check for $675,000. Now - if I get a call next week from the same group and they ask me to buy into another apartment.... would I say "F" you! I'm retired!? Let me do the math - in 10 more years I'll be 72 - I hope to still be racing with Charlie.... and maybe if this new investment works as well as the last one did -- I'll get a check for 1.5 million (investing $500,000 in the new deal) and the $500,000 at 6% will be paying me $30 grand a year...
So I ask you.... should I change my strategy??? Or should I buy another race car?