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Pros and cons of different withdrawal rate rules

Update Dec 7, 2016: Check our new series on safe withdrawal rates: The Ultimate Guide to Safe Withdrawal Rates – Part 1: Introduction

Look around in the early retirement community and everybody is raving about the 4% rule. It’s a “safe” withdrawal rate, we are told, by the Trinity Study and some in the early retirement community. Some claims, we found, are downright false but more on that later.

Of course, there is not one single withdrawal rule. You can adjust not only the withdrawal rate, from 4% to 3% or 5% but also the detailed mechanics of the rule. Small changes in the rule can make big changes in your consumption path and/or success probabilities. Here are three versions of the safe withdrawal rate (SWR) and their pros and cons.

Rule 1: 4+CPI = 4% rule with inflation adjustment

This is the standard 4% rule; you pick the initial withdrawal at 4% of your investments, then inflation-adjust your withdrawals, regardless of your portfolio returns. This seems to be the most widely cited and used rule. The Trinity Study and a lot of the calculations by finance guru Michael Kitces use this rule.

Advantages:

Failure rates under 4% Rule. $1,000,000 initial portfolio, $40,000 initial withdrawal, Fees=0.05%, Retirement cohorts 1871-1966. Source: cFIREsim.com

 

Disadvantages:

Failure rates under 4% Rule. $1,000,000 initial portfolio, $40,000 initial withdrawal, Fees=0.05%, Retirement cohorts 1871-1966. Source: cFIREsim.com

Some claims about the 4% rule from other blogs that are clearly false

Claim 1: “In fact, even when starting with a 4% initial withdrawal rate, less than 10% of the time does the retiree ever finish with less than the starting principal. And it has only happened four times in the ‘modern era’ of markets: for retirees who started a 30-year retirement time horizon in 1929, 1937, 1965, and 1966.” (claim by Kitces, also referenced by MadFIentist).

Truth: The probability was significantly lower, at least according to cFIREsim. Here are the probabilities computed for staying above the CPI-adjusted initial value, with simulations from cFIREsim:

Probability of final portfolio > initial. 4% initial withdrawal, Fees=0.05%, Retirement cohorts 1871-1966. Source: cFIREsim.com

Certainly false under the 60/40 portfolio rule. Even using 100% equities, the probability of ending up with more than the initial value stays way below 90%. Michael Kitces probably mixed up nominal and real (CPI-adjusted) final portfolio value. True, the nominal value might have stayed above the initial value 90% of the time, but after 30 years of inflation, that’s not a very high hurdle.

Claim 2: “the safe withdrawal rate actually has a 96% probability of leaving more than 100% of the original starting principal!” (claimed by MadFientist)

Truth: This claim is even more false than Claim 1. Incidentally, this claim of 96% success rate is contradicted with the identical claim but with 90% success rate in the following bullet point on that same blog page, which we proved wrong above.

Claim 3: “A withdrawal rate of 3.5% can be considered the floor, no matter how long the retirement time horizon, so don’t jump on the dividend bandwagon just so you can avoid selling shares during retirement” from MadFIentist.

Truth: According to cFIREsim, the 1966 retirement cohort would have had an SWR of 3.1476% for 50 years, using a 60/40 S/B portfolio. This withdrawal rate would have created a “point landing”, i.e., exactly zero money left over after 50 years. A withdrawal rate of 3.5% would have wiped out the portfolio after only 32 years. Just a 0.35 percentage point increase in the withdrawal rate would have shortened the sustainable window by 36%. Ouch, that’s not very robust!

Claim 4: Over long horizons the sustainability of the SWR becomes very robust: “If the withdrawal rate is low enough to survive the first two decades of bad returns, then eventually the good returns arrive, the client recovers and gets ahead, and adding more years to the time horizon is no longer a risk.” (referenced by both Kites and MadFIentist)

Truth: As the calculation in claim 3 shows, small changes in the SWR can have big changes in the number of years of sustainable retirement consumption. For example, for 30 years the safe withdrawal rate would have been 3.6009% for the 1966 cohort (again assuming 60/40 S/B, 0.05% fees). The 40 year SWR would have been 3.4432%. A change of 20 years of sustainability going from 3.1476% to 3.6009%!

 

Rule 2: 4+dynamic = 4% withdrawal of asset value, recomputed every year

Implementation: Every year you withdraw 4% of the current portfolio value.

Time series of Withdrawals (CPI-adjusted) under the 4+dynamic rule. 1871-1966 cohorts. 100% stocks, 0.05% Fee. Source: cFIREsim

Advantages:

Disadvantages:

Rule 3: CAPE-based = Adjust the withdrawal rate every year, taking into account equity valuations

Implementation: The default setting in cFIREsim is to calculate the inverse of the CAPE, call it the CAEY (cyclically-adjusted earnings yield). Compute the sustainable withdrawal rate as 1% plus one-half times the CAEY. We played around with different parameters but liked the simulation results with the default settings the best. We plot the time series of withdrawals below. Notice that the initial withdrawal is no longer fixed at $40,000. Depending on the initial CAPE ratio, consumption would start off at anywhere between $28,477 and $107656:

Time series of Withdrawals (CPI-adjusted) under CAPE-based rule (1% intercept, slope=0.5). 1871-1966 cohorts. 100% stocks, 0.05% Fee. Source: cFIREsim

Advantages:

Disadvantages:

Summary stats:

Final Portfolio Stats (CPI-adjusted). Assume $1,000,000 initial portfolio. Fees=0.05%. Source: cFIREsim

Conclusions:

We don’t like the 4% rule. The probability of running out of money and the uncertainty along the way are not conducive to a relaxed retirement. The 4% rule, dynamically adjusted every year, might be more sustainable but creates vast swings in annual withdrawals. Not very pleasant.

We like the dynamically adjusted withdrawal rate according to the CAPE ratio. It’s a balance between long-term sustainability and manageable fluctuations in annual consumption. Right now the recommended withdrawal rate is 3%. We target a net worth large enough to give us an even smaller SWR target of 2.5-3.0%, just to be sure.

 

Stay tuned for future parts of this series!

Intro: Pros and cons of different withdrawal rate rules

Part 1: Equity expected returns

Part 2: Bond expected returns

Part 3: The small-sample problem in historical simulations

Part 4: More bad news on equity expected returns

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