New York Times columnist Peter Coy just published an interesting article entitled "How to Enjoy Retirement Without Going Broke." The sub-title is "the problem of decumulation is a tricky one, even for Nobel Prize-winning economists." It may be of particular interest interest for anybody planning how to spend money in retirement (link listed below...but it might be behind the NYT paywall).
Some of the topics covered in this piece include the following:
Do you keep your spending steady and allow the assets in your portfolio to fluctuate, or do you do the opposite — keep your portfolio steady and allow your spending to fluctuate?
Do you keep a big nest egg, or do you convert your savings into a stream of monthly checks?
How much risk do you take?
Much of this article was based upon a 600 page document developed by William Sharpe, who won a Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 1990. He has posted the entire thesis for
free on the Stanford University website. There is also a link to a related podcast by the same author.
I found it useful and closely aligned with the advice that I have received from my financial planner.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/27/opin ... Position=2
https://web.stanford.edu/~wfsharpe/RISM ... bfddc4d8a7
https://podcasts.apple.com/es/podcast/m ... 0386103377