William Reichenstein , CFA, holds the Pat and Thomas R. Powers Chair in Investment Management at Baylor University. bill_reichenstein@baylor.edu.
AAII Web Author .


Discussion

I find the article helpful. There are very few articles on financial planning in retirement.

posted over 2 years ago by Frank from California

I found the article useful. It would be of additional use if the author would recommend additional articles or books that offer more detail on retirement financial planning.

posted over 2 years ago by Fred from Indiana

Very helpful. Am considering a Charitable Gift Annuity. Seems to be a good fit for both long term income and avoiding tax rate increases. Major portion of income would be tax free for over 15 years. I am 70 now, have a partially inflation adjusted retirement income and sizable assets. Long term projections show the annuity would reduce estate remainder by small percentage, assuming newer high tax rates pass. Else will likely stay with TIPS for those funds.

posted over 2 years ago by Juanita from Florida

Lot's of good info here. Will Have to bookmark for a reread.

posted over 2 years ago by Wayne from Louisiana

Interesting , But I suppose the author didn't think about ederly couples
Say a Man who is 84 and is Wife is 78
Getting income from their investments and both have social secutity benefits
Their investments total 1.25 million dollars
Any ideas ?

posted over 2 years ago by Michael from California

I found it very helpful as I am looking at moving from a finacial advisor to doing it myself, mostly with index funds.

posted about 1 year ago by Larry from Minnesota

Hi -- I'm fishing for ideas too. Am 67 and have a small IRA, which paid off at the get-go with a nice (tax) return: approx. $2k on a $6k contribution. But now it sits. Not impressed with the ETF performance chart, but looking for some reasonably safe ideas for div/growth w/in 5 years.

posted about 1 year ago by Marilynn from Maryland

I am definitely interested in guidelines for the use of Charitable Gift Annuities. They seem very attractive in providing a tax deduction to help offset the RMD from my IRA, partially taxable income, and a donation to relevant charities. I do not need to leave a legacy to heirs. But I do not want to put too much into the annuities since the contribution cannot be recovered. Also, the rates that the annuities pay may change from year to year. I am 68, with Social Security and sufficient assets for my current lifestyle.
Ed from New York

posted about 1 year ago by Edward from New York

Very good article. I am 79, manage the family retirement accounts and this is useful information. May be little heavy into stocks.

posted about 1 year ago by George from Alabama

Good Article...supports my idea of one size does not fit all retirees which is what you usually see!

posted about 1 year ago by Robert B from Colorado

On the fixed income side I likr GNMA and Munis. To offset inflatiom I like TIPs and GLD and GLD can help with deflation.

posted 6 months ago by Jerome Paananen from Florida

I believe everyone has a different set of circumstances. In my case (I'm 85 wife 80, both in good health)I have oil income to live off. I have an IRA, Roth IRA and a Trust of $750,000 that I will leave to my Children. Your recommendations of investment for the IRA's and investments for the trust to minimize tases'

posted 9 days ago by LTom D from Arizona

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