Scott,
Your response to JK in today’s article in the paper confuses me. JK had a 45% exposure to equities and your answer to him was that he might want to reduce it slightly.
I retired at the end of 2007 at age 64 and my wife will retire early in 2009 at age 65.
After reading your articles for years, your book The Coming Generational Storm and looking at my own financial budget and projections, I had concluded that the greatest threat to our retirement security was the impact of inflation (and higher taxes). Both of our families have a history of a long life span. I am just reading your new book Spend ‘til the End now where you may come to different conclusions. BTW – you should have priced the book higher. J
We have no debt, own our home, have maintained our standard of living with our current income level and project to do so after my wife retires. We have health insurance, LTC insurance and a small amount of life insurance (for me only). My pension has a 3% maximum COLA adjustment – my wife’s will be fixed. We have a cash reserve of three years of current expenses in a Money Market and a three year CD ladder that is about 1/3 of the cash reserve amount. We also plan to not take SS benefits until I am 70.
I will receive a cash distribution from my ex-company later this year. Given my circumstances, at the end of the year I was planning to roll my 401K to an IRA, and use the cash distribution in an after tax account to build a 10 Speed Couch Potato Portfolio when the two are added together. The tax deferred portion will have all of the fixed income components and the after tax portion will only have equities. That would seem to provide the greatest protection against inflation with its higher exposure to equities.
Your advice to JK would seem to indicate, given today’s environment, that that one of the Couch Potato portfolios that is less heavily weighted in equities is preferable; e.g. the basic Couch Potato or the Four Square.
Am I reading incorrectly?