Superannuation Discussion + market volatility

Assuming you own you own home, and will - at some stage - go onto the pension, the article estimates singles need to retire with about $310k and couples $420k in their super.

That’s gonna give you $43k to $62k a year to spend.

Not bad, and makes super a bit more realistic and achievable. ‘experts’ continually saying you need more, more, more is disheartening.

True. I've been trying to ignore these types of articles. $75,000/year for couples is more than "comfortable" and I think is overkill.

Also you are not going spend the same money at 70 years old, 80 years old or even 90 years old.

Aged care is unknown. For me I'm trying to save enough now in Thailand if we need aged care later. (I refuse to consider the ridiculous cost of aged care in Australia. The government should have stepped up to create not for profit aged care a long time ago.)

P.S. I think I'm already there but no point retiring while daughter is at school.
 
$75,000/year for couples is more than "comfortable" and I think is overkill.
The problem with that is it assumes regular and stable income from the investments. Unfortunately it is rare for any investments to provide stable returns over the decades it is needed. There should be enough buffer to cover downturns in the investment such that it does not run out before you want it to run out, otherwise you will be constantly worried when the ASX has a cold. We have not had a real recession for decades and there is a generation of Australian who have never experienced one.
 
$75,000/year for couples is more than "comfortable" and I think is overkill.

Also you are not going spend the same money at 70 years old, 80 years old or even 90 years old.
Well, in our case (my wife and I are both in our mid 70's), we seem be spending that sort of money every year, and I don't think we live particularly extravagantly.

Such mundane things as health care expenses can rise significantly as you get older. For example, my wife has just had knee replacement surgery (successful) and may need a hip replacement too. Doing it privately (in the ACT), with hospital rehabilitation, had out of pocket costs of around $7,000, and that's with full health insurance (which in itself isn't cheap). The alternative was to wait for a long time for public hospital treatment.

Of course one can forego these discretionary things and rely solely on the public health system and other Government agencies, and live more frugally, albeit at a cost to your health, which as you get older seems be assume more importance in one's mind.
 
Well, in our case (my wife and I are both in our mid 70's), we seem be spending that sort of money every year, and I don't think we live particularly extravagantly.

Such mundane things as health care expenses can rise significantly as you get older. For example, my wife has just had knee replacement surgery (successful) and may need a hip replacement too. Doing it privately (in the ACT), with hospital rehabilitation, had out of pocket costs of around $7,000, and that's with full health insurance (which in itself isn't cheap). The alternative was to wait for a long time for public hospital treatment.

Of course one can forego these discretionary things and rely solely on the public health system and other Government agencies, and live more frugally, albeit at a cost to your health, which as you get older seems be assume more importance in one's mind.
Likewise, my father has full PHI and after a recent prostate cancer surgery still had out of pocket costs of nearly 10k. I wouldn't be waiting for a public slot to open up to treat that. That could be life ending.
 
My discretionary spend does not included alcohol because I'm not into it so super balance can be a little lower or slightly more resilient if the market catches a cold. I suppose for some, alcohol does not fall into the discretionary columns
 
The problem with that is it assumes regular and stable income from the investments. Unfortunately it is rare for any investments to provide stable returns over the decades it is needed. There should be enough buffer to cover downturns in the investment such that it does not run out before you want it to run out, otherwise you will be constantly worried when the ASX has a cold. We have not had a real recession for decades and there is a generation of Australian who have never experienced one.
The system is semi self correcting to some extent, in that if you take the min 4% to start and hope to average 6% return, your fund will have a net growth of 2%. But if there is a downturn, the actual dollar figure of 4% will reset to a lower amount the next year - so not gobble up your capital.

Yes, there’s potential feast and famine scenarios if super is your only source of income. But there are leavers increase/decrease your draw in the early years.

Not financial advice but the risk could be greater for those in very conservative options and interest rates reset to low levels. A 4% or 5% draw on 2% return is a path to the OAP.
 
Sure, the problem occurs with expectations around lower super balances that can't afford the downturns.
The principle is the same for $200k or $2mil.

A good financial advisor can help someone with a lower super balance go thru the “What ifs”.

Currently a tax free income stream of $40k at 4% draw requires $1,000,000, assuming not eligible for the OAP*.

A 20% market fall would result in a $32k pension the following year. If my math is correct!

*it irks me when reporters still talk about taking the OAP and Super. Those days are numbered for the vast majority of us - as alluded to in the stats mentioned earlier. After all, that was the point of compulsory super.
 
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The principle is the same for $200k or $2mil.

A good financial advisor can help someone with a lower super balance go thru the “What ifs”.

Currently a tax free income stream of $40k at 4% draw requires $1,000,000, assuming not eligible for the OAP*.

A 20% market fall would result in a $32k pension the following year. If my math is correct!

*it irks me when reporters still talk about taking the OAP and Super. Those days are numbered for the vast majority of us - as alluded to be the stats mentioned earlier. After all, that was the point of compulsory super.
Teacher friend of ours retired 5 years ago and takes $65k a year with an initial balance of around $650k after 40 years. (ART Industry fund.) The super balance has in fact increased by $25k in that timeframe including withdrawals. Good thing is super.
 
We are retiring at 75 and 73 after a pretty full on business life that included several downturns.We all hope that long recessions won’t occur but they do. Australia should have more put aside in these good times.
 

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