Financial Advice Does it Make a Difference?

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The Future of Retirement Income in America

Presented by:

Michael S. Finke

Professor & Director, Retirement Planning and Living Department of Personal Financial Planning

T EXAS T ECH U NIVERSITY

Growth in DC assets vs. assets in public and private defined benefit (DB) pensions $8,000

$7,000

$6,000

$5,000

$4,000

$3,000

$2,000

$1,000

$0 1974

1979 IRAs

1984 DC plans

1989 Private-sector DB plans

1994

1999

2004

State and local government DB plans

2009 Federal DB plans

2014

Net Tax Benefit for US DC Plan Participation 75.00% 65.00% 55.00% 45.00% 35.00% 25.00% 15.00%

Authors calculations, Percentage benefit of saving over 30 years vs. taxable account at 9% in a 50/50 portfolio

Defined Contribution Plan Balance by Income Age 43-50 $800,000 $700,000 $600,000 $500,000 $400,000 $300,000 $200,000 $100,000 $0 0

1

2

3

4 Median

5 75%

6

7

90%

Source: 2008 National Longitudinal Survey of Youth

8

9

Defined Contribution Plan Balance by Age Group $600,000

$500,000

$400,000

$300,000

$200,000

$100,000

$0 25-34

35-44 20% Percentile

45-54 Median

80% Percentile

55-64

Financial Literacy Particularly Low Among Less Educated Americans 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Basics

Borrowing 85

Does Money Make you Happy?

Source: Ho and Finke, 2015

45

Because Rich Retirees Spend More?

Same Cohort Health and Retirement Study Consumption 2000-2008

Source: Browning, Cheng, Finke and Guo, 2014

46

Financial Wealth Differences

Source: Browning, Cheng, Finke and Guo, 2014

47

Income & Consumption by Wealth $70,000

Average Income

Real Consumption

$60,000 $50,000 $40,000 $30,000 $20,000 $10,000 $0 Lowest Wealth

Quintile 2

Source: Browning, Cheng, Finke and Guo, 2014

Middle Wealth

Quintile 4

Highest Wealth

48

Consumption Gap High Wealth 100%

80%

Success Rate

60%

40%

20%

0%

30 Year Retirement, 40% Reserve A c t u a l S p e n d i n g

$40k

GAP

$60k

M i n i m u m S p e n d i n g $80k

$100k

$120k

Benefit of Late Life Annuities $100,000 $90,000 $80,000 $70,000 $60,000

Cost of Buying $100,000 Income at 65

$50,000 $40,000 $30,000

Mortality Weighted Cost of Buying Income

$20,000

Difference = QLAC Efficiency

$10,000 $0 65

70

75

80

85

90

95

100

Bond Ladder Vs. QLAC (Assume 4% Bond Return)

Invest $125,000 in a Bond Ladder at Age 65 $300,000

$250,000

$200,000

Can Fund $125K QLAC Income Until Age 91

$150,000

$100,000

$50,000

$85

86

87

88

89

$(50,000)

Bond Portfolio

Spending

90

91

92

Need to Invest $248,000 at Age 65 to Fund Spending From 85 Until Age 100 $600,000

$500,000

$400,000

$300,000

$200,000

Or Simply Invest $125,000 in a QLAC at Age 65

$100,000

$85

87

89

91

93

95

97

99

Options for Funding Late Life Income

How much would a 65-year old male have to set aside today to fund same level of spending at age 85? Cost to Fund $44,623 in Spending at Age 85 $350,000 $300,000 $250,000 $200,000 $150,000 $100,000 $50,000 $0 Buy a QLAC

Bond Ladder at 4%

Bond Ladder at 3%

Cognitive Risk

Immediate and Delayed Average, 2010 Health & Retirement Study 6

Episodic Memory 5.5

5

4.5

4

3.5

3 60

65

70

Source: Browning and Finke, 2013

75

80

85

90

Dementia

Rates of Cognitive Impairment by Age 80 70 60

39

50 40

Dementia

29

30 20 10 0

37 16

24

5 71-79

80-89

Source: Agarwal, Driscoll, Gabaix and Laibson, 2010

Cognitive impairment, not demenita

90 +

Age and Financial Literacy

Source: Finke, Howe and Huston, 2013

Financial Literacy and Confidence 90

Financial Literacy

Confidence

80

70

60

50

40

30

20

10

0 60

65

Source: Finke, Howe and Huston, 2013

70

75

80

85

Risk Aversion Change and Market Sentiment 0.25 0.2 0.15 0.1 0.05 0 25 or under

26-35

36-45

46-55

Over 55

Equity Allocation and Cognitive Decline Percentage Change in Equities 2008-2010 by Word Recall 0% -5% -10% -15% -20% -25% -30% -35% -40%

Low Cognition

Average Cognition

High Cognition

Questions/Comments

Michael S. Finke, Ph.D., CFP®

Professor, Department of Personal Financial Planning

T EXAS T ECH U NIVERSITY

[email protected] Twitter: FinkeonFinance