Americans Confused About Safe Retirement Withdrawal Rate

More Americans are estimating a safe withdrawal rate, but at least four in five Americans remain at risk, a study finds.

A 10-year comparison study by New York Life shows that while more Americans are estimating a safe withdrawal rate in retirement—23% of respondents think they can withdraw less than 5% of their retirement savings annually, up from 10% a decade ago—at least four in five Americans remain at risk.

The 2016 survey reveals that 77% of Americans older than 40 do not know how much of their retirement savings they can safely spend each year without running the risk of outliving their assets. In 2006, 90% of Americans did not know a safe withdrawal rate.

Get more!  Sign up for PLANSPONSOR newsletters.

According to the survey, more than half of Americans older than 40 (58%) surveyed overestimated this safe withdrawal rate, which many experts benchmark at 4% annually for the typical retiree. Nineteen percent of respondents admit they do not know how much to withdraw without running out of money in retirement. 

At greatest risk are the more than three in 10 respondents (31%) who believe they can spend 10% or more of their savings each year. At that rate, based on historic investment returns, retirees risk running out of money in about 11 years or less—while studies show most of them will live significantly longer than that.

“There is a tremendous risk lurking in retirement—after years of doing your best to save, there is a risk of mismanaging that nest egg in retirement and running out of money,” says Dylan Huang, head of Retirement Solutions at New York Life. “Turning your savings into income for yourself in retirement is not easy, but the first step is knowing that anything above five percent is way too high.”

Huang adds that the survey found 58% of Americans are interested in learning about how to turn their savings into retirement income for life, up from 25% 10 years ago. In addition, 64% of pre-retirees are interested in learning about how to create their own pension-like income in retirement. “Without the peace of mind that pension income provided to previous generations, pre-retirees are the first generation that needs to turn their savings into adequate income in retirement on their own. It is a positive finding that they are open to finding out how to do that,” he says.

The survey was conducted by Ipsos Public Affairs March 23 through 29, among a national sample of 810 adults age 40 and older with a household income of at least $100,000.

Retirement Advisor Council Offers RFP Tool for Sponsors

Retirement plan sponsors can use the new RFP tool to score responses they receive during the formal search for a new adviser. 

The Retirement Advisor Council unveiled a new request for proposal (RFP) support tool that plan sponsors can use, free of charge, to rate responses from potential advisers, complementing other RFP process documentation and due diligence.

The RFP Response Scoring Tool “dovetails with the council’s Advisor Search RFP Template” and covers 12 lines of questioning that plan sponsors should bring up with their prospective or existing plan adviser.  According to the council, the tool allows users to weight the importance of each factor and to rate adviser responses overall by returning a unique score for each adviser response.

Never miss a story — sign up for PLANSPONSOR newsletters to keep up on the latest retirement plan benefits news.

The Advisor Search RFP Response Scoring Tool is further billed as “an important aid for plan sponsor committees. Using the tool and keeping a record of scoring results helps document that the committee decision was purposeful and followed an established process and a generally accepted practice.”

The Retirement Advisor Council is a national advocacy organization that supports successful qualified plan and participant retirement outcomes through the collaborative efforts of experienced, qualified retirement plan advisers, investment managers and defined contribution (DC) plan service providers. Learn more about the Retirement Advisor Council at www.retirementadvisor.us

«

Thank you so much for your interest in our content. Please register to access this complimentary archived content. By registering, you will receive our newsletter which can be opted out of at any time.

 

Already Registered? Click here to confirm.