%0 Journal Article %A David M. Blanchett %A Michael Finke %A Wade D. Pfau %T Low Bond Yields and Safe Portfolio Withdrawal Rates %D 2014 %R 10.3905/jwm.2013.16.2.055 %J The Journal of Wealth Management %P 55-62 %V 16 %N 2 %X The majority of research on sustainable withdrawal strategies has used either historical rolling time periods or a stochastic (Monte Carlo) simulation process based on long-term averages, where the expected return of an asset class is the same for each year of the simulation. While these approaches may be reasonable to describe long-term averages, we believe they are less useful when there is a significant and sustained deviation, such as the current low bond yield market. This article introduces a model that takes into account current bond yields and allows them to “drift” toward a higher value during retirement, using an autoregressive model based primarily on historical relationships between asset classes. This approach can better replicate the actual bond returns a current or near retiree can expect during retirement both now and in the future. Using this model, we find a significant reduction in “safe” initial withdrawal rates, with a 4% initial real withdrawal rate having approximately a 50% probability of success over a 30-year period. It finds that a retiree who wants a 90% probability of achieving a retirement income goal with a 30-year time horizon and a 40% equity portfolio would only have an initial withdrawal rate of 2.8%. Such a low withdrawal rate would require 42.9% more savings if the retiree wanted to pull the same dollar value out of the portfolio annually as he or she would get with a 4% withdrawal rate from a smaller portfolio.TOPICS: Retirement, simulations, portfolio construction, fixed income and structured finance %U https://jwm.pm-research.com/content/iijwealthmgmt/16/2/55.full.pdf