Getting There: Your Working Years

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Charting Your Course Through Retirement

ul a

total assets

t en m e tir ion e t R er P um c Ac

Accumulation Phase

$ Wages

$

Coordination Center Design, construction, and maintenance of your financial plan

· Education · Car · House

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$

t io

n

$

$

Saving, future

• • • • • • • •

Cu

r re n

t sp e n di

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Define future needs Pre-retirement assessment and projections Create and manage separate “buckets” for specific items like car, house, and college Select appropriate retirement savings vehicles Determine investment mix for various accounts Minimize tax & interest costs Adjust plan/investments as situation changes Incorporate inheritance or windfall, if applicable $

Retirement Reservoir: Saving for the future Time horizon

Shorter

Risk tolerance

Low

Longer High

Necessary rate Preservation of return

Investment model % Stocks/bonds

© Niehaus Financial Services, LLC

nt

time

$

Specific needs & emergency fund

Ret i Di

e m u re rib st

Getting There: Your Working Years

Transition

5600 Harrison Avenue . Cincinnati, Ohio 45248 513.471.9600 . www.niehaus-financial.com

Growth

Defensive Conservative

20/80

40/60

Balanced

Equity-tilted

Equity

60/40

75/25

100/0

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Charting Your Course Through Retirement

ul a

total assets

Transition Phase

t en m e n ir et tio R e Pr u m c Ac

Ret i Di

e m u re rib st

Decisions: Once in a Lifetime

Transition

5600 Harrison Avenue . Cincinnati, Ohio 45248 513.471.9600 . www.niehaus-financial.com

nt

t io

n

time

$ Sustainable withdrawal rate

Pension decisions

Coordination Center Design, construction, and maintenance of your financial plan Long-term care insurance option

Account consolidation

Helping you with transition phase decisions, including: • How much can you afford to spend from your investments and have your money last? • When should you take Social Security? • What pension payout option should you select? • How can you consolidate accounts for ease of management and record-keeping? • How can you fine-tune your investment mix in anticipation of future distributions? • What are tax-saving strategies to consider as your sources of income change? • Should you pay off your mortgage? • Should you consider puchasing long-term care insurance?

Mortgage payoff timing

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AL SECURITY SOCI

Social Security timing

Investment mix fine-tuning

Tax-saving strategies 2

total assets

Distribution Phase

t en m ire n et tio R ePr u m c Ac

nt

t io

n

time

Retirement Reservoir: Income that lasts Time horizon

Shorter

Risk tolerance

Low

20/80

· Legacy · Gifts · Long-term care

High Growth

Will

Defensive Conservative

% Stocks/bonds

Specific needs & emergency fund

Longer

Necessary rate Preservation of return

Investment model

Ret i Di

e m u re rib st

Making It Last: Drawing Income & Leaving a Legacy

Transition

5600 Harrison Avenue . Cincinnati, Ohio 45248 513.471.9600 . www.niehaus-financial.com

ul a

Charting Your Course Through Retirement

40/60

Balanced

Equity-tilted

Equity

60/40

75/25

100/0 $

$

• Coordinate withdrawals from various accounts

Design, construction, and maintenance of your financial plan

• Establish withdrawal plan (systematic or take as needed) • Decide what to sell to raise cash for withdrawals • Monitor investment mix and realign with model as needed • Update projections periodically to confirm money will last • Review estate planning considerations

Social Security/ pension

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Investments $

$

$

$

$

during reti re ing d en

t en m

$

Part-time wages

Sp

Coordination Center

• Minimize tax & interest costs

$

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Disclosures:

Charting Your Course Through Retirement

a. Securities offered through Securities America, Inc., Member FINRA/SIPC and advisory services offered through Securities America 5600 Harrison Avenue . Cincinnati, Ohio 45248 Advisors, Inc. Niehaus Financial and the Securities America companies are unaffiliated. 513.471.9600 . www.niehaus-financial.com b. Investments in model strategies may expose the investor to risks inherent within the model and the specific risks of the underlying investment directly proportionate to their allocation. All investments involve the risk of potential investment losses. c. A defensive investment model is suitable for highly conservative investors, including those nearing or in retirement or requiring withdrawals of some of their invested assets within a three-to-five-year time frame. This portfolio will have up to 80% of the assets invested in fixed income and no more than 20% of the assets invested in equity. d. A conservative investment model is suitable for conservative investors, including those nearing or in retirement or requiring withdrawals of some of their invested assets within a three-to-five-year time frame. This portfolio will have up to 60% of the assets invested in fixed income and no more than 40% of the assets invested in equity. e. A balanced investment model is suitable for investors uncomfortable with an aggressive all equity strategy who nevertheless require a greater return to pursue their specific investment goals. This portfolio will have up to 60% of its assets invested in equity and up to 40% of its assets invested in fixed income. f. An equity-tilted investment model is suitable for investors with longer time horizons who are willing to assume above-average shortterm volatility in pursuit of long-term growth. The portfolio will have up to 75% of its assets invested in equities and up to 25% of its assets invested in fixed income. g. An equity investment model is suitable for long-term investors willing to accept greater risk in pursuit of growth potential. This portfolio will have up to 100% of its assets invested in equity. h. Diversification seeks to reduce the volatility of a portfolio by investing in a variety of asset classes. Neither asset allocation nor diversification guarantee against market loss or greater or more consistent returns. i. Bonds are subject to interest rate risks. Bond prices generally fall when interest rates rise. The price of equity securities may rise, or fall because of changes in the broad market or changes in a company’s financial condition, sometimes rapidly or unpredictably. These price movements may result from factors affecting individual companies, sectors or industries, or the securities market as a whole, such as changes in economic or political conditions. Equity securities are subject to “stock market risk” meaning that stock prices in general may decline over short or extended periods of time. j. Tax services offered through Niehaus Tax Services, LLC and legal services offered through Niehaus Law Office, LLC, both of which are unaffiliated with Securities America.

© Niehaus Financial Services, LLC Rev. 9.10.2014

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