In this podcast, Motley Fool retirement expert Robert Brokamp discusses the pros, cons, and trade-offs of various retirement-account withdrawal strategies with Christine Benz, director of personal ...
You might assume that building up a retirement nest egg is one of the most challenging things you'll ever have to do. After all, it's not easy to find the money for your retirement savings year after ...
The “right” safe starting withdrawal rate is a moving target, depending on equity valuations, bond yields, prospects for inflation, and a retiree’s own life expectancy and asset allocation, among ...
Morningstar research suggests that clients retiring in 2026 could start with a withdrawal rate of 3.9% and, adjusting for inflation, continue through a 30-year retirement without running out of money.
Recent research reveals retirees withdraw just 2.1% of their savings annually—about half the amount experts recommend. Here's ...
The 4% rule has you withdrawing 4% of your savings balance in your first year of retirement and adjusting future withdrawals ...
2020-2021 retirees faced 15-20% portfolio losses and should cut withdrawal rates to 3%. New retirees can sustain 4.5-5% withdrawals with current bond and dividend yields at 4-5%. Retirees with ...
The classic 4% rule for retirement withdrawals was built for a bygone era. Learn why it's less reliable today and how to ...
Margaret Giles: Hi, I’m Margaret Giles from Morningstar. Morningstar’s annual safe withdrawal rate research suggests that new retirees consider a 3.9% starting withdrawal if they’re looking for the ...
Up next, why a safe withdrawal rate in retirement might be less than 4% or almost 6% when Motley Fool Money continues. Robert Brokamp: The number one financial goal for most Americans is retirement.
The 4% rule has you withdrawing 4% of your savings your first year of retirement, with future withdrawals adjusted for inflation. For the rule to work, certain factors need to be present. Research ...