Register For Our Mailing List

Register to receive our free weekly newsletter including editorials.

Home / 41

A better approach to post-retirement planning

The post-retirement sector is large and growing rapidly, and financial advice processes need to be more sophisticated to deal with potential problems such as sequencing risk and longevity risk. What I will call ‘Post-Retirement Optimised Portfolios (PROPs), based on stochastic modelling, should be part of the solution.

In the March 8, 2013 issue of Cuffelinks, I wrote, “Growth in the post-retirement population over the next 20 years is mind-boggling, with different five year age groups (e.g. 65-70, 70-75, etc.) growing between 60% and 100% between 2010 and 2030. There will be major growth in the age 65-70 segment over the next five years as the first wave of ‘boomers’ reaches retirement. We need much greater sophistication in post-retirement advice and investment solutions, including the use of investment scenarios or stochastic modelling in building optimised portfolios. This poses particular challenges for product and advice providers.”

Based on the latest Deloitte Superannuation Report, Australia’s post-retirement sector is forecast to grow from $333 billion as at 30 June 2013 to $1.4 trillion in 2033. Over $800 billion of the 2033 assets is forecast to be in SMSFs as the baby boom bulge transition into post-retirement.

Changing the post-retirement emphasis

Let’s start by recognising the post-retirement issues we want to address:

  • sequencing and longevity risks are acknowledged, but without solutions
  • debate is too product-orientated
  • deterministic rather than stochastic planning.

There is much debate about conservative versus growth-oriented asset allocations for retirees in the post- retirement phase. This often rests on assumptions regarding the equity risk premium, and the arguments put forward tend to be too simplistic.

There is now much greater discussion regarding sequencing risk and longevity risk, which is encouraging. However, we still lack sufficient advice solutions and portfolio construction tools to deal with these risks.

Too often the debate about post-retirement solutions revolves around product – for example, the relative merits and demerits of annuities and deferred annuities – rather than a focus on advice solutions and portfolio construction, with products only being considered following that process.

Retirees with less than say $250,000 in financial assets (including super) at retirement will have a significant reliance on the age pension. This largely addresses sequencing and longevity risks for this group. Some retirees will also rely on scoped advice or simple retirement calculators, with all their shortcomings.

People with over $3 million in financial assets, including super, at retirement should also be relatively well-placed to weather sequencing and longevity risks, providing of course they do not practice an overly lavish lifestyle.

This article is primarily directed at those with financial assets at retirement in the $250,00 to $3 million range, and those receiving comprehensive financial advice. A common approach to post- retirement financial advice for these people is risk profiling, cash flow modelling, high level asset allocation, portfolio construction, and product selection.

My concern is that existing processes for cash flow modelling tend to be based on deterministic approaches. That is, determining a fixed expectation of investment returns corresponding to the asset allocation, and conducting future cash flow modelling based on this expected return.

Volatility of returns and the impact of the order of returns (sequencing risk) tend not to be well incorporated. Longevity risk tends to be dealt with in a rudimentary way by assuming living to average life expectancy, sometimes complemented by basic scenario analysis where we assess ‘how long the money will last’ at various ages of death.

The problem is that deterministic models only consider an expected outcome and do not consider the range of possible outcomes that retirees may experience. This is valuable information for the planner to consider, to communicate with their client and to be used as a basis for plan design.

On average, deterministic predictions will have approximately a 50% success rate, meaning that there is a 50% likelihood that a retiree would have experienced their expected planned retirement outcome, with some left over as an estate, and a 50% likelihood that the retiree would exhaust their retirement accumulation and have to accept a lower level of consumption in retirement. Is a ‘50% right’ plan good enough?  Even with cash or contingency reserves of up to twice the targeted annual income draw to deal with sequencing risks, the percentage likelihood of a deterministic based plan being ‘right’ will only be marginally improved.

A proposed approach

We need a stochastic approach rather than a deterministic approach.

A stochastic approach simply considers variability in outcomes by allowing for variation in the inputs which go into the forecasting model. This can be done using mathematical techniques where one derives a distribution of outcomes. The other, more common approach, uses simulation techniques, producing many simulations which are aggregated into a picture of the range of outcomes.

A stochastic approach uses many different sources of variability which affect outcomes. Examples include returns, risks and correlations between asset classes, and factors which affect mortality outcomes (systemic piece (longevity risk) and the idiosyncratic piece (that individuals may experience a different outcome to the population expectation). The amount of detail can be significant when one incorporates products (allocated pensions, life annuities, variable annuities, reverse mortgages), direct investments in the various key asset categories, and the age pension (with means testing and indexation) and various taxes.

The broad approach to the construction of a Post-Retirement Optimised Portfolio (PROP) would be as follows:

  • Retiree client to force rank their retirement objectives (see below).
  • Input key information into the modelling engine, including current assets and allocation, targeted income and capital cash flow requirements,  risk profile, age, force rankings, etc.
  • Perform stochastic runs to produce the many simulations (typically thousands), using random number generators to model many different outcomes, and difference sequences of returns.
  • Review the results of the stochastic model, including the likelihood of meeting the various force ranked post retirement objectives.
  • Adjust inputs to better match achievement of the highest ranked post retirement objectives.

Post-retirement objectives

The three key post-retirement objectives are:

  • a capital or estate goal - i.e.  to have a certain amount of capital preserved at various future ages, either to cover aged care costs, health costs, or targeted estates for beneficiaries
  • income goals
  • goals regarding tolerance for variability in income.

Clients will need to rank what is most important to them.

A key output from the simulations is the construction of an optimised portfolio with asset allocations (including direct investments) which seek to fulfil the ranked objectives. A simpler version is the consideration of say 4-10 alternative portfolio constructions, and using the simulations to assess which constitutes a ‘best fit’ with the ranked objectives.

The outputs from the stochastic modelling will show the full range and extremities of future financial asset holdings and income levels, allowing for different sequences of returns and the risk of outliving the assets.

An optimised portfolio would show the probability of fulfilling the various objectives. For example, it may show that a retiree has an 85% chance of achieving the capital or estate goal at the age of 87 based on an income of $55,000 per annum, indexed to inflation from retirement.

If this client has chosen the capital goal as their most important objective, they may find this outcome unacceptable. They can then recalibrate the inputs to produce a result which more closely fits their force ranked objectives. For example, this may require some increase in their appetite for variability of income. Or a small reduction in targeted income requirements, from $55,000 to $50,000, can significantly increase the likelihood of achieving the capital goal.

This approach enables well informed trade-off decisions. Typically this would be presented in a visual format to increase client understanding.

It is not unusual for such optimised portfolios to have a ‘bedrock’ source of income, which may generate 20-40% of post-retirement income. This could include social security, annuities or an equity release product. Such sources of income also have a low degree of correlation with returns from other financial investments. This PROP approach would also be able to demonstrate where deferred annuities may be appropriate.

Current developments and an appeal for action

Some entities are developing this capability, including Deloitte US, Mercer and Count Financial, and investment research house Lonsec and global actuarial firm Milliman. This paper is a high-level overview and I would love to hear from you if you have been pursuing similar endeavours. It can be refined for factors such as the different phases of post-retirement (active, passive and impaired) and funding future health and aged care costs.

The wealth industry needs to deliver superior post-retirement solutions, including:

  • more research on this topic, such as the work by the Actuaries Institute’s Retirement Incomes Research Group
  • greater innovation and commercial initiative, as mentioned above
  • large wealth management institutions and advice firms embracing these more sophisticated post retirement approaches
  • advisers encouraging their licensee to pursue this more sophisticated approach.

Hopefully, as these approaches are adopted, it will be possible to integrate such modelling with mainstream financial planning software platforms.

 

Andrew Gale is co-owner and Executive Director at Chase Corporate Advisory and a board director for the SMSF Professionals Association of Australia (SPAA). The views expressed in this article are personal views and are not made on behalf of either Chase Corporate Advisory or SPAA.

 

7 Comments
Jim Schwartz
March 26, 2014

Hi Andrew,
I completely agree that a stochastic approach is needed in retirement planning. In fact, I'm currently reading a 2009 study from the Society of Actuaries here in the US on the topic of Retirement Planning Software and Post-Retirement Risks. It mentions one professional-level financial planning software package which allows the use of stochastic longevity but the study doesn't mention the software vendor's name. Do you happen to know if any currently available planning software does allow the use of stochastic longevity?

Thanks, Jim.

Peter
November 22, 2013

All those fancy words. Our Allocated Pension fund doesn't flog me with this type of verbal tirade. What they have done is ensure that we now have more money in the fund than when we first rolled in to it (2007) pre GFC.

Now my crowd probably don't wear silky pinstripe suits, or drive the latest BMW, but then that is fine by me. From me to "my" pension fund team - Keep up the great work!

Cheers

Douglas
November 28, 2013

I agree with a stochastic analysis approach, its required to ensure the ageing population of Australians have a realistic view of what their income/goals should be for ultimate retirement given their increasing longevity.

But how naive are you? What will happen if we have another GFC catastrophe or similar event (look at the history of the markets)? Will you be happy with your Allocated Pension when it goes south and you are squeezed for income in your "old age".

Peter Vann
November 22, 2013

I believe that you have raised some key issues for post retirement, and I would like to add weight that these are also key in the pre-retirement phase. The "debate", or really the thinking, research and discussion, should be about finding good strategies and then "products" can be used, or developed, to implement better strategies.

I have worked on numerous asset-liability analysis and implementations in the finance industry and it constantly amazes me that the rigour that existed in DB schemes is lacking for the liability holder in DC schemes, the member; that is a sad statement on the industry.

We also believe that:

1) analysis must be stochastic, in fact, deterministic analysis can be misleading (Corps law!!)

2) we can overcome the need for time consuming simulations since we cracked a good approximate closed form solution that includes the age pension (within the stochastic framework) and flexibility for varying numerous parameters, including the refinements you mentioned. Hence one can undertake real time analysis and optimisations such as discussed in your article.

Bruce Gregor
November 22, 2013

This analysis and categorising of post retirement objectives is very good and should be given more focus than it has been. With so much money in superannuation assets now tagged to people owning these objectives, it should be these objectives which drive the form of capital markets and personal capital recycling. Unfortunately investment banks (and central bankers) own the models for capital issue markets and self interest does not show much promise of them changing traditional models. Governments own capital recycling markets (death duties concessions, capital gains tax exemptions, annuitisation) and currently they don't seem inclined to use their power to shape to sensible personal capital recycling. The problem is further complicated by investment modelling not focusing on the low long term growth world and debt overhang of western economies which is only just now being realised in IMF projections and the like.

Mark Thomas
November 21, 2013

Good article. It's encouraging to see the industry debating these topics. I wonder though, if we are asking the right question to start with. Many in the industry see it as a savings problem, whilst others see it as a retirement funding problem. I wonder if it isn't a "whole of life" problem, where the saving and the drawdown need to be considered together.

Peter
November 22, 2013

Very, Very simple equation-

You will never get rich by spending more than you earn. Bingo. End of story.
But if you wish to water it down a little, quit your debts rapidly, if possible, don't buy until cash is at hand. Do NOT own a credit card if it is to buy stuff you haven't got the money for today, and you are hoping somehow magically it will pay itself off, and the mortgage? - ask your lender how much extra they want to cut the repayment term down by half. Our 30 year loan was paid off in 17 years with little extra per week. A saving of real disposable cash in excess of $60,000. Yep, $60,000. What could that buy you or allow you to invest in and grow?

Very simple equations.

Cheers

 

Leave a Comment:


RELATED ARTICLES

An insider's view of the last financial crisis

Behavioural reasons why we ignore life annuities

Getting the most from your age pension

banner

Most viewed in recent weeks

The nuts and bolts of family trusts

There are well over 800,000 family trusts in Australia, controlling more than $3 trillion of assets. Here's a guide on whether a family trust may have a place in your individual investment strategy.

Welcome to Firstlinks Edition 581 with weekend update

A recent industry event made me realise that a 30 year old investing trend could still have serious legs. Could it eventually pose a threat to two of Australia's biggest companies?

  • 10 October 2024

Welcome to Firstlinks Edition 583 with weekend update

Investing guru Howard Marks says he had two epiphanies while visiting Australia recently: the two major asset classes aren’t what you think they are, and one key decision matters above all else when building portfolios.

  • 24 October 2024

Preserving wealth through generations is hard

How have so many wealthy families through history managed to squander their fortunes? This looks at the lessons from these families and offers several solutions to making and keeping money over the long-term.

A big win for bank customers against scammers

A recent ruling from The Australian Financial Complaints Authority may herald a new era for financial scams. For the first time, a bank is being forced to reimburse a customer for the amount they were scammed.

The quirks of retirement planning with an age gap

A big age gap can make it harder to find a solution that works for both partners – financially and otherwise. Having a frank conversation about the future, and having it as early as possible, is essential.

Latest Updates

Planning

What will be your legacy?

As we get older, many of us start to think about how we’ll be remembered by those left behind. This looks at why that may not be the best strategy to ensure that you live life well and leave loved ones in good stead.

Economy

It's the cost of government, stupid

Australia's bloated government sector is every bit as responsible for our economic worries as the cost of living crisis. Grand schemes like the 'Future Made in Australia' only look set to make it worse.

SMSF strategies

A guide to valuing SMSF assets correctly

SMSF trustees are required to value all fund assets, including property, at market value when preparing the fund's financial statements each year. Here are some key tips to ensure that you get it right.

Economics

Australia is lucky the British were the first 'intruders'

British colonisation's Common Law system contributed to economic prosperity, in contrast to Latin America's lower wealth under Civil Law. It influenced capitalism's success in former British colonies, like Australia.

Economics

A significant shift in the jobs market

The expansion of the 'care sector' represents the most profound structural change to Australia's job market since the mining boom. This analyses how it's come about and the impact it will have on the economy.

Shares

Searching for value in tech stocks

Just because a stock is cheap doesn't necessarily make it good value. This uses case studies in the tech sector to help identify when stocks trading on 30x earnings may be inexpensive and when others on 10x may be value traps.

Investing

Are more informed investors prone to making poorer decisions?

Finance Professor Michael Finke recently discussed the double-edged sword of taking an interest in your investments, three predictors of panic selling, and why nurses tend to be better investors than doctors.

Sponsors

Alliances

© 2024 Morningstar, Inc. All rights reserved.

Disclaimer
The data, research and opinions provided here are for information purposes; are not an offer to buy or sell a security; and are not warranted to be correct, complete or accurate. Morningstar, its affiliates, and third-party content providers are not responsible for any investment decisions, damages or losses resulting from, or related to, the data and analyses or their use. To the extent any content is general advice, it has been prepared for clients of Morningstar Australasia Pty Ltd (ABN: 95 090 665 544, AFSL: 240892), without reference to your financial objectives, situation or needs. For more information refer to our Financial Services Guide. You should consider the advice in light of these matters and if applicable, the relevant Product Disclosure Statement before making any decision to invest. Past performance does not necessarily indicate a financial product’s future performance. To obtain advice tailored to your situation, contact a professional financial adviser. Articles are current as at date of publication.
This website contains information and opinions provided by third parties. Inclusion of this information does not necessarily represent Morningstar’s positions, strategies or opinions and should not be considered an endorsement by Morningstar.