As you plan for retirement any projections you make are based on assumptions. They are critical.
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Some people are enamored with the word tariffs. My new favorite word is assumptions.
I was listening to a podcast today and they told a story of a person who went to two financial planners seeking to determine if his retirement plan was sufficient. The first planner told him he had a 95% chance of success. The second said 75%. Naturally, he went with the first planner, but failed to ask the key question. What assumptions were used in the calculation?
There are so many assumptions to consider – spending levels and patterns, life expectancy, inflation over 30 years or so, risk tolerance, a legacy goal and then there is the biggy, investment returns and the variables within that investment mix and more.
I never had to deal with this, but it sounds scary while extremely important. As the podcast noted, even a 1% difference in investment return assumptions can make a significant difference in the projection – and the income reality in the future.

Turns out in the example which enticed the individual, the 95% success, used aggressive investment return percentages with little deviation. Nevertheless, the – likely unrealistic 95% – was too enticing.
I was surprised to learn from the planners on the podcast that hardly anyone asked about the assumptions used when they presented a client with a plan.
I doubt I would know all the questions to ask, but I know using conservative assumptions would lower my stress even if it meant working a little longer.
How about you? Do you know the assumptions your future is based upon?

