Right. Thanks for the reply.TokyoWart wrote: ↑Tue Jan 15, 2019 9:32 amJust to clarify, I think 3% is a conservative withdrawal rate for a US-dominated portoflio that has at least 50% stocks. In Japan it is less conservative because the long-term market returns here have not been as good as for the US and because the bond portion would return so poorly at today's interest rates. However, "less conservative" is relative. Sustainable portfolio withdrawal calculations are usually done for 30 years. Put your money in a shoebox and you can take 3% of the original out for over 30 years.Thanks for the replies, TokyoWort and retirejapan.
TokyoWort, you think 3% is a conservative return rate even above inflation, is that right? And maybe especially easy to achieve in Japan?
retirejapan, could you explain a bit more why a 4-5% withdrawal rate would by definition mean you wouldn't run out of funds. Are you assuming natural fund inflation would be around that much, and inflation in Japan being negligible?
Back to the original question though, say you had ¥50 million invested in the stock market, do you think you could reasonably easily take out 3% a year on top of inflation and be reasonably confident it would stay at ¥50 million (adjusted for inflation) pretty much for ever?