How Should I Invest Bucket #1 of my Retirement Portfolio (3 Bucket Strategy)

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  • Опубликовано: 1 июн 2024
  • The "Three Bucket Strategy" is a popular retirement income planning method. The first bucket covers immediate expenses in retirement. Listeners John and Donna are seeking advice on constructing their first bucket. With $1.6 million in assets and pension incomes, they aim to retire in 2026.
    James analyzes their needs, income sources, and portfolio and lays a foundation for their Bucket #1. It's crucial to bridge the gap between expenses and income, considering risk capacity and tolerance.
    Questions Answered:
    How do you divide assets into the three buckets, and what is the purpose of each?
    What role do risk capacity and risk tolerance play in determining portfolio allocation?
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    ⏱Timestamps:⏱
    0:00 - John and Donna
    3:36 - The bucket approach
    5:50 - Start with expenses
    8:53 - Non-portfolio income sources
    11:23 - Identify and bridge the gap
    13:06 - Assessing their portfolio
    14:53 - Portfolio dividend yield
    16:49 - Do you need Bucket 1?
    19:16 - What is the specific need?
    21:07 - Risk capacity
    23:22 - Test contingencies
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Комментарии • 43

  • @vincentslusser9205
    @vincentslusser9205 3 месяца назад +13

    James, This is very helpful. You do explain these financial strategies in a fantastic way. You're the Best of the Best on You Tube.

  • @BadPhD777
    @BadPhD777 3 месяца назад +7

    A good tip I heard recently: when the market is up, you want to draw from bucket 3 for expenses and leave bucket 1 alone so it will be there (and full) when your investments in bucket 3 take a dip because the last thing you want to do is sell stocks when they're down.

    • @JandD127
      @JandD127 3 месяца назад

      I agree, James talks about Guyton Klingler guardrails that helps guide WHERE to pull the funds (Stocks, Bonds, "Money" reserve). It makes sense to me.

  • @JoeCoIIar
    @JoeCoIIar 2 месяца назад +1

    Amazing when you are informed of all the laws and investment vehicles how you can survive financially. Thanks James!

  • @markb8515
    @markb8515 3 месяца назад +2

    Thanks James, another very informative video. You have a great way of explaining the thought process you need to go through to find the best solution.

  • @ld5714
    @ld5714 3 месяца назад +2

    James, great insights and discussion on this interesting quesiton. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and expereince to help your followers.

  • @richdewitt760
    @richdewitt760 3 месяца назад

    Well done James..Thank you!

  • @spdog3344
    @spdog3344 3 месяца назад +3

    I’m nowhere near retirement (32 y/o) but I love financial planning content haha great video! I don’t know anyone my age with a pension and not sure I trust Social security to be there in its entirety. The way we are planning, if we do get SS it will just be icing on the cake.

    • @CTHou13
      @CTHou13 2 месяца назад

      My children are aged 23 and 24. They are on track to have $5 million by the time they’re 55 years old. If Social Security is around, it will only benefit that. Invest in your Roth, max out your 401(k), invest in the stock market or real estate, set up your disaster fund, set a budget and live within your budget under your means and don’t overspend.I love to see young people succeed good job to you for starting early

    • @jameswitte5676
      @jameswitte5676 2 месяца назад

      40 years ago we said the same thing about social security. It’s not as good now as it was for my parents and it will probably be worse when it’s your turn.

  • @shanew7361
    @shanew7361 3 месяца назад +4

    They don't have 2 million, and they will have to pay taxes on some of that money. Not all of their money is in a Roth. You're not considering taxes and inflation.

  • @MichaelToub
    @MichaelToub 2 месяца назад

    Great Video!

  • @benmccarty4598
    @benmccarty4598 3 месяца назад +2

    James, another outstanding video and great insight on the very good question topic!!!
    My and I can relate to the submitted question, and love your take on it. They may not need a 3 bucket portfolio 👍🏼

    • @JandD127
      @JandD127 3 месяца назад

      James' suggestions have really raised some questions we plan to dig into.

  • @CTHou13
    @CTHou13 2 месяца назад +1

    I love the bucket system

  • @jeffgagnon2622
    @jeffgagnon2622 3 месяца назад

    I really liked the dividend component, gets the mental gears turning.

  • @mucusofwanderhome6945
    @mucusofwanderhome6945 3 месяца назад +2

    I always find it more interesting how everyone seems to have a pension in 90% of “scenarios”. I guess it makes the stories better .

    • @Tony-dx3eo
      @Tony-dx3eo 2 месяца назад +1

      Agreed- been working 35+ years for several different large corporations and zero pension for either my wife or I. Our future financial security rests firmly on our shoulders alone hence why we still need to continue our work journey.

    • @shanasvensson7384
      @shanasvensson7384 Месяц назад

      Govt workers

  • @davideberhart9523
    @davideberhart9523 3 месяца назад

    Great video James. Watching this today over a cup of afternoon coffee and thinking, "When is a strategy not a strategy?" In other words, yes...making the correct decisions with allocations, factoring other sources of income such as pensions, dividends and available cash...make it unnecessary to choose from the typical bucket strategy, guardrails, etc. My wife and I are in this exact situation. The strategy is to use the two pensions, two SS and two dividend distribution accounts to live on and never touch the principal, allowing it to grow as a legacy portfolio. I guess that's a "strategy" but it takes out the guess work and forces us to focus on allocation into growth, value, Large, Mid, Small Cap, mixed investment grade corporate bonds, to serve as a backstop. PS. No mortgage, paid that off years ago and double dipping on pensions, too. Will retire in June 2025 at 63 and 59 yoa. The only thing we need to think more about is when to start taking SS?
    Love your style and delivery techniques while teaching your viewers various "real life" scenarios.

  • @Jack51971
    @Jack51971 2 месяца назад +1

    More risk more reward...Vanguard Growth Company funds? Buy..hold....❤

  • @Jbedard1963
    @Jbedard1963 2 месяца назад

    Fantastic piece. Just so you know, I watch a DIY RUclips channel titled "I was Retired". He recently did a piece on the best places to get quality, unbiased information and he mentioned you. This was excellent and I'm passing your info on to all I know. We're inside the window, I was taking very copious notes and you posed a great question ... "Do you even need a bucket 1"? Thanks for furthering my education on our approach. I'll be watching all your content in coming episodes. Thanks again!

    • @RootFP
      @RootFP  2 месяца назад

      Thanks for watching!

  • @williamrogers1219
    @williamrogers1219 3 месяца назад +2

    Paying the house off early still leaves the property taxes and homeowners insurance. The only savings is the mortgage interest.

    • @shanew7361
      @shanew7361 3 месяца назад +2

      Yep, and they both only go up every year as well as health insurance premiums and deductibles. Don't forget maintenance on the home too.

    • @celloplayermom
      @celloplayermom 2 месяца назад

      Well, the savings is not just the interest but also the principal too. Not having to pay the P&I can still be a substantial monthly savings.

  • @mikehennecke3846
    @mikehennecke3846 3 месяца назад +1

    Hi James. Love your content. I'd like to ask a question that I haven't seen you answer yet. At what age should you start working with a financial advisor. Additionally what steps should I be taking in my 30's to prepare for a successful retirement? Thanks for all your valuable information!

    • @Chasing72
      @Chasing72 2 месяца назад

      It’s never too early to start working with an FA. If you start at 32, you’ll have time to check out a few and then stick with one you really like for the long term. In your 30’s, simply put, be socking away as much as you can and live as frugally as you can stand to.

  • @krjohnson29
    @krjohnson29 Месяц назад +1

    Can I just say:
    This couple seems like they are in incredible financial shape. Should be spending their time planning European vacations instead of worrying about how to invest their conservative bucket imo 😂

  • @shanasvensson7384
    @shanasvensson7384 Месяц назад

    My bucket 1 in vanguard mutual earning over 5% and two other funds managed by Vanguard paying divs and CG and i focus less on market yps and down but my overall yield/ gains at end of year.

  • @anthonyelizabethmuia3000
    @anthonyelizabethmuia3000 3 месяца назад

    Unrelated question. My husband and I are hoping to retire early...60 years old. We are dual US/Canadian citizens and will be living in Canada at least 4 months of the year. We would like someone to look at our numbers and advise wether it's better to reclaim residency in Canada for free healthcare or to just buy insurance through exchange. If we do reclaim residency how does that impact our taxes and estate should we pass while living in Canada. Are there financial specialist that can do that? Some direction would be appreciated.

  • @macgeek2112
    @macgeek2112 2 месяца назад

    Couldn't watch because of the bouncing camera. Had to listen only. Good info as always.

  • @maxjackson6227
    @maxjackson6227 2 месяца назад +1

    Is there a plan for people who make 40 thousand dollars a year?

  • @dforrest4503
    @dforrest4503 3 месяца назад +6

    $350k for bucket 1, after pensions, seems like a lot. But to each their own, I guess.

    • @JandD127
      @JandD127 3 месяца назад

      350k/5=70k + 40k pension + 20k pension till 2033 = 130k - taxes - pre-medicare costs - go go years finance... I'm not sure what I'm missing?

  • @momplaygroupfouz4946
    @momplaygroupfouz4946 3 месяца назад +2

    lol😅I have a bridge to sell anyone who thinks these are real questions. He makes them up. Normal clients do not know what they do not know.
    A couple making less than $200k but saving $100k makes zero realistic sense. Where do they live? In the woods?

    • @JandD127
      @JandD127 3 месяца назад +2

      Nope... FL. 🙂 James was guessing at numbers based on the Roth... Maxing 401k, 403b, 457b (all pre tax), and a brokerage account. Late starters, trying to catch up.

  • @shanasvensson7384
    @shanasvensson7384 Месяц назад

    They must work for govt. Yall funding that pension. Lol

  • @linnyh8242
    @linnyh8242 3 месяца назад

    After they come up with the number for bucket 1, and even 2, if they have a young adult child, I would contact a New York Life agent and put them in through 5-year pay custom dividend-paying life insurance through the child. If they prefund, now they can get 12% for year 1 and 6% every year after for the entire amount in prefund account. It's practically a tax advantaged compounding corporate bond based returns while liquidity of an online account via practical wash loans. Shouldn't bother with the lifetime hassles of swapping CDs and Treasuries just to get taxed each year, or the volatility of bond funds.

    • @rayzerot
      @rayzerot 3 месяца назад +1

      My questions- does the 6% payment increase with inflation? And why aren't financial advisors suggesting this as a solution, aka what drawbacks aren't we seeing?

    • @linnyh8242
      @linnyh8242 3 месяца назад

      @@rayzerot I think you are thinking of SPIA. What I described was to prefund a dividend paying life insurance. The 12% for year 1 and 6% every year after are fixed rates for the entirety of the amount in prefund account. Other than those fixed rates, there won't be growth for like 4 years via dividends but after year 4 people can expect around 5+% tax free growth in the policy even if rates go back down to zero for a while (that was the case even when interest rate was practically 0 for 15 years). Most financial advisors do not know much about insurance products and they can be company-specific, all they want to do is gather AUMs and charge the second biggest fees in life, after taxes. The money in the policy is likely outside of AUM which they control and can charge for.

  • @bruced.370
    @bruced.370 3 месяца назад +2

    Sorry, i can't watch a video about rich people who also have a oension too. I just can't relate to this. I have to stop this video.....

    • @condensedmic
      @condensedmic Месяц назад +1

      You don’t have to relate to everyone to learn something. Maybe in 20 years you’ll be just as rich if not richer and you’ll have more insight than if you just skipped all these videos.