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How advisers can help clients with retirement's biggest conundrum

How advisers can help clients with retirement's biggest conundrum
(Ekahardiwito/Envato Elements)

It used to be that retirement represented the finish line after years of working and saving. 

On reaching that point, most people would simply use their pension savings to buy an annuity that would provide a guaranteed income after retirement or begin drawing on their final salary pension.

That remains the case for some, but they are definitely in the minority. Those reaching retirement now mostly remain invested in retirement and have to navigate the complexities that come with the flexibility of drawdown arrangements.

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As we approach a decade since the pension freedoms were first set out, that challenge is one that continues to exercise pension companies, investment managers and financial planners alike. The recent market volatility has underlined the need to get it right in decumulation.

Time versus money

Creating a sustainable retirement income while also preserving your wealth is far from straightforward, as many are discovering. There is one overarching risk among all the complexities and nuances: running out of money. 

There are various reasons why this may happen, including the specific investment risks around drawdown.

It can be easy to fall into the trap of drawing down too much too soon due to human error, fraud, over-optimism about investment returns and/or dipping into retirement funds to cover short-term emergencies.

Some people use up their savings too quickly and succumb to longevity risk – that is, underestimating how long they could live for.

This is a common mistake, according to the Institute for Fiscal Studies. Its research found that people in their 50s and 60s typically underestimate the likelihood of living to 75 by some 20 percentage points and to 85 by up to 10 percentage points.

If someone’s actual life span exceeds their life expectancy, the financial implications are potentially severe.

Risks

Drawdown has other features that give rise to dangerous risks, for instance sequence risk, which is when poor returns in early retirement take chunks out of the pension pot and so reduce how much income can be sustainably taken from it.

That can be exacerbated by pound-cost ravaging, where income continues to be taken from a drawdown fund even as its value is being eroded by market volatility. Advisers can add a lot of value in helping through clients these particular risks. 

Trying to avoid or minimise sequence risk or pound-cost ravaging can, however, lead to another big risk: the risk of investing over-cautiously, resulting in low investment returns that are insufficient to meet their longer-term needs.

The importance of advice

There is no silver bullet that takes all these risks out of the drawdown equation. They are a natural side-effect of the flexibility that drawdown can offer. But there are effective ways of mitigating them, so that the drawdown phase can be enjoyed without sleepless nights.

Professional financial advice first and foremost is essential, especially when it comes to creating a sustainable income withdrawal level, picking an appropriate investment strategy and taking income in the most tax-efficient way.