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My latest crack at a "Retirement Portfolio"

Saturday, March 21, 2020

A one fund portfolio. How's your advisor doing?

Note the big loss in 2016. Losses are a part of investing and part of a well managed retirement portfolio.

Warning: The figures in my little post came from a spreadsheet and the TD historic figures for TDB622. I cannot swear by them. They are close, I'm fairly sure, but without an editor, errors are more possible. The point I am making is valid. Whether my figures are completely accurate is open to question. Cheers!
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Do you have a financial advisor? An expert who guides your portfolio into the best investments carrying the least risk. I don't have one. When I did, I could not afford the losses.

Let me give you an example and then you can compare it to your experience.

In my example, a fellow has an RRSP at retirement His wife also has an RRSP. He retires at age 60, taking a buyout. He has a total of $500,000 to invest or with which to buy an annuity. When told an annuity would only deliver $26,000 annually and it would not increase one cent with inflation, he put the money in the TD Monthly Income Fund (TDB622).

Unfortunately, he needed money to live, and so he was forced to immediately remove $26,000 from his buyout money to live. He invested the remaining $474,000 in the TD fund. It was an amazing year. The market was recovering from a serious bear market. Come Jan. he cashed units worth $26,343.20 to raise money to live. It was his portfolio and he was going to increase his payments with inflation. The remaining mutual fund units were left in the fund. He told the bank to apply the DRIP approach to his account.

He continued doing this annually until January 2020 when he removed $31,333.51 to live. This made him smile. If he had gone the annuity route he would still be drawing only $26,000 annually. Life would be getting very difficult if he had purchased the annuity as so many had advised.

He started the year with a mind boggling sum: $698,790. And then the coronavirus hit and the Saudis and Russians got into an oil war. By mid March his portfolio had shrunk to $685,220. He wasn't worried. You see, our senior was a bit of a nerd despite his age. He knew it would take about $602,565 today to buy what $500,000 would buy back in 2009. No matter how one calculated it, even with the great loss, he still had a comfortable amount of money.

He knew he'd have to lose more than $80,000 to be back to where he was when he started. Would he lose another 12 per cent. It was possible. But then he'd lived through a decade of the ups and downs of the stock market while owning TDB622. One year he had actually lost almost $55,000.

This bear was going to consume more than he would have thought possible but that's the market. When he got to worrying, he had only to think of 2009 and 2010 when the market was climbing back from the disaster that was 2008. He was confident the bull would return given enough time.

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