Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
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- mathjak107
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Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
japan blew it day one and there central bank continued to do the wrong thing 2 or 3x . plus japan had very little inflation . they needed very little in gains to sustain life , as well as they did not just have to invest in the Japanese markets .
we are not a japan by any long shot .
we are not a japan by any long shot .
Last edited by mathjak107 on Mon Nov 02, 2015 7:45 am, edited 1 time in total.
- MachineGhost
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Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
The former seems like it will occur when all the foreign sovereign USD-denominated debt at near zero interest rates starts blowing up once the Fed raises. It will be like dominoes collapsing around the world and then eventually it will hit the last man standing, the US. So depending on how slow/clueless/idiotic the ruling/bureaucratic class is at the Fed, NGOs, etc. the SHTF may last a couple of years or it may be nipped in the bud rather quickly as the USD is replaced as the world's reserve currency. Foreign nations will be demanding its replacement because their stupidity would have been no different than the pegging of their currencies to gold in the 1930's. Pegs ALWAYS fail, everywhere and anywhere without exception. If we're very lucky, the US come out of this standing alive. A lot could depend on whether or not we shift to the right politically because you know progressive liberals like Sanders or Clinton would throw us under the bus to sing Kumbaya! with the incestuous NGOs. Those are the same NGO's "advising" the current EU clusterfuck. Not holding my breath here.barrett wrote: And what might cause that shift? Japan has certainly been trying to get the juices flowing to no avail. And if there is a reasonable chance of high inflation happening in the next few years, then it certainly make sense to hedge against it, right?
OTOH, I think Japanization will occur if voters are again stupid and elect more Nanny-State NeoConners, like Sanders, Clinton, Rubio, etc. Pretty much all of the top tier lot except for Trump, Fiorina, Kasich and Christie. We need a wholesale shakeup of overregulation, not more of the same Bullshit That Has Gone Before. Stagnation and loss of confidence is what causes persistent deflation. Japan has a lack of immigration, women are second class citizens, a ridiculously huge and aged population and they don't date, bother to have sex or get married. It's a whole litany of social issues that we really don't have yet, so economic overregulation is the immediate #1 risk, i.e. turning more and more into that socialist basketcase called France.
Its also quite possible we can have both scenarios occuring one after another or even at the same time!
I think we have a few years left while the Middle Eats does their stupid religious war. There's not enough retail participation in the equity market for another bubble top yet, but I think legal startup investing will light a fire under their ass.
Hey, that's just my opinion, but I could be wrong!
Last edited by MachineGhost on Mon Nov 02, 2015 11:28 am, edited 1 time in total.
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- Kriegsspiel
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Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
You may be right about all this. Except for the sex part. The Japanese DO have sex, it's just with tentacle monsters.MachineGhost wrote:The former seems like it will occur when all the foreign sovereign USD-denominated debt at near zero interest rates starts blowing up once the Fed raises. It will be like dominoes collapsing around the world and then eventually it will hit the last man standing, the US. So depending on how slow/clueless/idiotic the ruling/bureaucratic class is at the Fed, NGOs, etc. the SHTF may last a couple of years or it may be nipped in the bud rather quickly as the USD is replaced as the world's reserve currency. Foreign nations will be demanding its replacement because their stupidity would have been no different than the pegging of their currencies to gold in the 1930's. Pegs ALWAYS fail, everywhere and anywhere without exception. If we're very lucky, the US come out of this standing alive. A lot could depend on whether or not we shift to the right politically because you know progressive liberals like Sanders or Clinton would throw us under the bus to sing Kumbaya! with the incestuous NGOs. Those are the same NGO's "advising" the current EU clusterfuck. Not holding my breath here.barrett wrote: And what might cause that shift? Japan has certainly been trying to get the juices flowing to no avail. And if there is a reasonable chance of high inflation happening in the next few years, then it certainly make sense to hedge against it, right?
OTOH, I think Japanization will occur if voters are again stupid and elect more Nanny-State NeoConners, like Sanders, Clinton, Rubio, etc. Pretty much all of the top tier lot except for Trump, Fiorina, Kasich and Christie. We need a wholesale shakeup of overregulation, not more of the same Bullshit That Has Gone Before. Stagnation and loss of confidence is what causes persistent deflation. Japan has a lack of immigration, women are second class citizens, a ridiculously huge and aged population and they don't date, bother to have sex or get married. It's a whole litany of social issues that we really don't have yet, so economic overregulation is the immediate #1 risk, i.e. turning more and more into that socialist basketcase called France.
Its also quite possible we can have both scenarios occuring one after another or even at the same time!
I think we have a few years left while the Middle Eats does their stupid religious war. There's not enough retail participation in the equity market for another bubble top yet, but I think legal startup investing will light a fire under their ass.
Hey, that's just my opinion, but I could be wrong!
You there, Ephialtes. May you live forever.
- mathjak107
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Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
i have a yen for a japanese call girl ha ha ha
Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
I am retiring in two years. I have the classic 25% PP. If I retired two years ago and drew out 4%, I am guessing I would down close to 8% since PP earned next to nothing in this time period. Assuming this is the case, what would I have to drop down to the the third year to avoid depleting my portfolio to the point that it would not come back to par as far as not outliving the money, assuming another 25 years of life? The original PP had money rates earning something in the 5% range. The money portion is now dead in the water with almost negative rates. Stocks and bonds keep the combination from outperforming enough to over come the shortfall in the cash portion. Gold is a wild card mainly for protection which can go many years before rebounding and can drop even futher due to its extreme volatility. What's everyone's take on this?
- mathjak107
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Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
i use a dynamic method of spending in retirement .
4% of each years balance each dec 31st .
if markets are down i take 5% less then the previous draw or the same draw , which ever is higher .
if the 2nd year is down then it is the same story , 4% of the balance or 5% less , which ever is higher .
because it is dynamic it back tested out 1005 past 40 years of spending
4% of each years balance each dec 31st .
if markets are down i take 5% less then the previous draw or the same draw , which ever is higher .
if the 2nd year is down then it is the same story , 4% of the balance or 5% less , which ever is higher .
because it is dynamic it back tested out 1005 past 40 years of spending
Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
You say you draw out 4% a year. Call me dumb but could you clarify how this works to keep you from depleting your core balance? You say if "the markets are down, you take less then 5% less of the previous draw." How much less? You are taking out on 4% so you would have a negative draw? Is that right? Can you explain this again in another way as I don't really have my head wrapped around it? example, you take 4% a year Dec 31st. The markets are down (how far down, the market or my PP?). In this case you take 5% less then the year before where the year before you took 4%, huh? I am missing something here.
Last edited by portart on Tue Nov 03, 2015 10:36 am, edited 1 time in total.
- mathjak107
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Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
okay , day 1 of retirement you have 1 million clams saved .
you can start with a 40k paycheck first year .
next dec 31st you have an up year and have 1,200.000 .00 so your pay check is now 48k .
3rd year we have a bad year and you are back to 1 million on dec 31 .so you are going to take which ever is higher 4% of the million which is 40k or 48k less the 5% which is 45,600.00 . in this case 45,600 is higher and that is your new pay check for the year .
4th year you repeat and take nother 5% pay cut if need be .
the idea is this keeps you from having to take huge pay cuts if say we fall 40% . for your portfolio to survive only small cuts are needed with this method of withdrawals .
you can start with a 40k paycheck first year .
next dec 31st you have an up year and have 1,200.000 .00 so your pay check is now 48k .
3rd year we have a bad year and you are back to 1 million on dec 31 .so you are going to take which ever is higher 4% of the million which is 40k or 48k less the 5% which is 45,600.00 . in this case 45,600 is higher and that is your new pay check for the year .
4th year you repeat and take nother 5% pay cut if need be .
the idea is this keeps you from having to take huge pay cuts if say we fall 40% . for your portfolio to survive only small cuts are needed with this method of withdrawals .
Last edited by mathjak107 on Tue Nov 03, 2015 12:13 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
Let's say you literally retired two years ago, on November 2, 2013. From peaktotrough.com, with a portfolio of $1 million (and dividends reinvested), we get the following numbers:portart wrote: I am retiring in two years. I have the classic 25% PP. If I retired two years ago and drew out 4%, I am guessing I would down close to 8% since PP earned next to nothing in this time period. Assuming this is the case, what would I have to drop down to the the third year to avoid depleting my portfolio to the point that it would not come back to par as far as not outliving the money, assuming another 25 years of life? The original PP had money rates earning something in the 5% range. The money portion is now dead in the water with almost negative rates. Stocks and bonds keep the combination from outperforming enough to over come the shortfall in the cash portion. Gold is a wild card mainly for protection which can go many years before rebounding and can drop even futher due to its extreme volatility. What's everyone's take on this?
Initial values of stocks, bonds, cash, gold, and total PP:
11/2/2013: 250,000 250,000 250,000 250,000 1,000,000
After one year:
11/2/2014: 290,416 289,363 250,325 223,177 1,053,281
That's a gain of 5.3%. Withdrawing 4% from cash, that's $42,131, gives the following allocation:
11/2/2014: 290,416 289,363 208,194 223,177 1,011,150
The next year elapses:
11/2/2015: 307,067 303,056 208,714 215,414 1,034,251
That's a gain of 2.3%. Withdrawing 4% ($41,370) from cash gives:
11/2/2015: 307,067 303,056 167,344 215,414 992,881
Overall, you would be down less than 1% from your starting million. Would this return be worse from a different starting date? Perhaps. But we can see from this example that the PP hasn't been performing too badly recently.
- mathjak107
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Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
your master score card is this :
you need to maintain at least a 2% real return average for the first 15 years of a 30 year retirement to stand up to the traditional 4% safe withdrawal rate .
if you are getting less than that 7 years or so in you need to cut back the pay check .
if you fail to get that 2% real return for the first 15 years then there will not be enough left to grow even if markets do turn around after that .
you need to maintain at least a 2% real return average for the first 15 years of a 30 year retirement to stand up to the traditional 4% safe withdrawal rate .
if you are getting less than that 7 years or so in you need to cut back the pay check .
if you fail to get that 2% real return for the first 15 years then there will not be enough left to grow even if markets do turn around after that .
- MachineGhost
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Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
How much slack is there? Can you miss a couple or a string of years and make it up later before the 15th year, or MUST each and every year be at least 2% real return without exception?mathjak107 wrote: if you fail to get that 2% real return for the first 15 years then there will not be enough left to grow even if markets do turn around after that .
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- mathjak107
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Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
yes , in fact that is what will happen as sequence risk takes over . however being down for an extended period of time day 1 before an up cycle develops that cushion could seriously effect your outcome . the first 5 years can be pretty crucial to the success of the retirement while the first 15 determine the entire 30 year plus outcome .
follow that ?
this why methods like the rising glide path are now becoming popular to protect the early years when the most damage can be done .
follow that ?
this why methods like the rising glide path are now becoming popular to protect the early years when the most damage can be done .
Last edited by mathjak107 on Tue Nov 03, 2015 1:26 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- mathjak107
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Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
keep in mind it isn't the size of the drop at all that hurts a retirement which is why draw down is a mental thing more than mathamatical . it is the length of time a recovery takes that is key .
even a modest drop for a couple of years can do damage which is why even the pp can be at risk as a retirement portfolio , for a 2008 retiree it was a non event financially , perhaps not mentally because the recovery was so quick .
those who retired in 2008 are on track to be no different then any other retiree in any other normal time frame .
the y2k retiree is very different and they are on track to match the 1929 retiree which means income wise they will get through most likely but with very little left .
90% of the time retirees with a 50/50 mix or 60/40 following the 4% swr have ended with more than they started so the y2k retiree is on track to rival the 1929 retiree .
even a modest drop for a couple of years can do damage which is why even the pp can be at risk as a retirement portfolio , for a 2008 retiree it was a non event financially , perhaps not mentally because the recovery was so quick .
those who retired in 2008 are on track to be no different then any other retiree in any other normal time frame .
the y2k retiree is very different and they are on track to match the 1929 retiree which means income wise they will get through most likely but with very little left .
90% of the time retirees with a 50/50 mix or 60/40 following the 4% swr have ended with more than they started so the y2k retiree is on track to rival the 1929 retiree .
Last edited by mathjak107 on Tue Nov 03, 2015 1:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
Both the size and duration of the drop matter. Unless you intentionally cut back your expenses in the down year (a fine idea, BTW), your fixed expenses (that do not shrink with your portfolio decline) will take out a large chunk of your investments and greatly prolong the recovery time to get back to where you were before. Drawdown complicates the recovery time, and volatility does have a measurable effect on withdrawal rates.mathjak107 wrote: keep in mind it isn't the size of the drop at all that hurts a retirement which is why draw down is a mental thing more than mathamatical . it is the length of time a recovery takes that is key .
even a modest drop for a couple of years can do damage which is why even the pp can be at risk as a retirement portfolio , 2008 was a non event because the recovery was so quick .
You're correct about the performance percentages of a 60/40 portfolio, and it's a fine choice in retirement. But using the same methodology other portfolios (including the PP) have supported higher withdrawal rates 100% of the time over the data we have available. One is free to choose the portfolio with the longer data set if that makes them feel more comfortable, but ignoring good opportunities simply because Ibbotson Associates didn't include those assets in their annual returns yearbook that the Trinity and Bengen studies used is up to the individual.
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Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
not quite true about steep drops , michael kitces did a paper on this . it is only the duration . a steep drop like 2008 was a non event to its success rate .. a modest drop over an extended duration has far more serious consequences .
the worst case scenario's the 4% safe withdrawal rate is based on already expects steep drops . that is why it is called a safe withdrawal rate . all it cares about is the 15 year average is at least a 2% real return .
https://www.kitces.com/blog/how-has-the ... al-crisis/
the worst case scenario's the 4% safe withdrawal rate is based on already expects steep drops . that is why it is called a safe withdrawal rate . all it cares about is the 15 year average is at least a 2% real return .
https://www.kitces.com/blog/how-has-the ... al-crisis/
Last edited by mathjak107 on Tue Nov 03, 2015 2:04 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
You keep assuming things always recover within a year or so, clearly this is nonsense.

Now what..? US is replaying this scenario now.
Now what..? US is replaying this scenario now.
Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
From the Kitces paper (empahsis added):mathjak107 wrote: not quite true about steep drops , michael kitces did a paper on this . it is only the duration . a steep drop like 2008 was a non event to its success rate .. a modest drop over an extended duration has far more serious consequences .
He doesn't say the severity of the drop does not matter. Only that the recovery time also matters. I don't disagree with that at all. Also note that he's discussing the survival of a stock/bond portfolio (that I do not dispute), while I'm comparing performance of two different portfolios. Other portfolios he does not consider also do quite well while avoiding both the sharp and long declines.The viability of a 2008 retiree following the 4% rule is especially notable, and reflects a key (but often ignored or misunderstood) tenet of managing sequence-of-return risk in retirement: it’s actually not just about having a severe market crash in the early years of retirement, but a crash that doesn’t recover quickly.
Last edited by Tyler on Tue Nov 03, 2015 2:10 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- mathjak107
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Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
well the 40% drop in 2008 was a non event , he says it . the fast recovery made it such .
on the other hand the y2k retiree is the one in possible trouble .
on the other hand the y2k retiree is the one in possible trouble .
Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
The 0.8% PP drop in 2008 was the true non-event. And a Y2k PP retiree is doing just fine.mathjak107 wrote: well the 40% drop in 2008 was a non event , he says it . the fast recovery made it such .
on the other hand the y2k retiree is the one in possible trouble .

- mathjak107
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Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
clearly we are not japan and have not been anything like japan in 30 years .dutchtraffic wrote: You keep assuming things always recover within a year or so, clearly this is nonsense.
Now what..? US is replaying this scenario now.
- mathjak107
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Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
Tyler wrote:The 0.8% PP drop in 2008 was the true non-event. And a Y2k PP retiree is doing just fine.mathjak107 wrote: well the 40% drop in 2008 was a non event , he says it . the fast recovery made it such .
on the other hand the y2k retiree is the one in possible trouble .![]()
correct but so is the conventionally invested retiree fine , it was the same non event for them as it was for the pp retiree ..Tyler wrote:The 0.8% PP drop in 2008 was the true non-event. And a Y2k PP retiree is doing just fine.mathjak107 wrote: well the 40% drop in 2008 was a non event , he says it . the fast recovery made it such .
on the other hand the y2k retiree is the one in possible trouble .![]()
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Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
This is not an argument whatsoever.mathjak107 wrote: clearly we are not japan and have not been anything like japan in 30 years .
But you keep saying this, you really do believe americans are 'special' don't you..?
- mathjak107
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Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
until our markets aren't , yes , we have been special and we are still one of the best places to invest in the world today - at least for now .
Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
Yes, they both were non-events in the sense that a 4% WR is working fine for both. The difference is that the low volatility (paired with reasonably high real returns) allows the PP to support a higher WR than the 60/40 portfolio over identical timeframes. That's what I mean about volatility making a difference. It's a big factor of what determines the SWR in the first place.mathjak107 wrote: correct but so is the conventionally invested retiree fine , it was the same non event for them as it was for the pp retiree ..
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Re: Why the PP is better in accumulation than you think
kitces:
The 2000 retiree is already half way through the 30-year time horizon with similar wealth to a 1929, 1937, or 1966 retiree had at this point, and the 2008 retiree is even further ahead than any of those historical scenarios (and even ahead of the 2000 retiree, too!).
And in the case of a 2008 retiree, the withdrawal rate is already right back at the 4% initial withdrawal rate the retiree began with (after already doing 6 years' worth of retirement spending!).
The 2000 retiree is already half way through the 30-year time horizon with similar wealth to a 1929, 1937, or 1966 retiree had at this point, and the 2008 retiree is even further ahead than any of those historical scenarios (and even ahead of the 2000 retiree, too!).
And in the case of a 2008 retiree, the withdrawal rate is already right back at the 4% initial withdrawal rate the retiree began with (after already doing 6 years' worth of retirement spending!).