Inflation – The Evil Twin

 

Inflation erosion

We touched on the subject of inflation before in a previous post on benchmarking, but I would like to return to it briefly just to stress how important it is in your planning.

In the short term, inflation can seem harmless enough. If you leave $100 under your mattress and the rate of inflation is 3%, then next year your $100 will buy 3% less goods and services. In other words, in order to buy the same amount of goods and services you now need $103. When you extend this to 10 years you may think that you now need $130, but the effects of compounding mean that you actually need $134.39. Yes, as wonderful as compound interest is when working in your favor, compound inflation, it’s evil twin, is working against you over time.

So how can inflation affect your long term financial planning? Well first of all it will affect the targets you set. Let’s take an example of someone who wants to have an income of $50,000 per year in retirement in 25 years time:

If you can find a miracle low risk product that generates a 10% annual return, then you need $500,000 in capital at retirement. Then you can live off the interest without spending your capital and it doesn’t matter how long you live.

If we are more realistic and think in terms of a 5% return, then you need $1,000,000 in order to generate $50,000 per year.

What if you can only get 2.5% in retirement? Well then you need $2,000,000.

The problem is that all of these numbers are in today’s money. The table above tells us that over 25 years at 3% inflation, our spending power will more than halve. (it actually goes to 46.70% but let’s keep the numbers simple) That means that with a 5% return we actually need $2,000,000. And with a 2.5% return we need $4,000,000.

This is why it’s important to start saving and investing early. If we are not taking advantage of compound interest on our savings, our nest egg will be getting eaten away by its evil twin inflation!

The Power of Compounding

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I’m a keen golfer. How about we bet on a game of golf? Say 10 cents a hole? How about we double that every hole? It wouldn’t be for big money right?

Let’s take a look hole by hole:

  1. $0.10
  2. $0.20
  3. $0.40
  4. $0.80
  5. $1.60
  6. $3.20
  7. $6.40
  8. $12.80
  9. $25.60
  10. $51.20
  11. $102.40
  12. $204.80
  13. $409.60
  14. $819.20
  15. $1,638.40
  16. $3,276.80
  17. $6,553.60
  18. $13,107.20!

Well, as they say…that escalated quickly!

 

(Credit to Tony Robbins Wealth Mastery for this one)

Retirement Planning – Where to start?

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People save money for many different reasons, but perhaps the most common reason is for retirement. The goal here is to replace income from work with income from investments. It can seem like a daunting task to plan for such a large need, particularly when people these days are far more mobile and may not necessarily know where they will spend their later years.

Here are some simple questions you can start to consider now. Don’t worry if you can’t answer them all yet. Some of them may even have more that one answer:

  • At what age do you anticipate retirement?
  • What country do you plan to make as your base in retirement?
  • Do you want to maintain a similar standard of living in retirement to the one you have now? – simply put do you think you will need the same income, less income, or about the same income as you have now?
  • What value of property would you want in today’s terms?
  • Which assets have you “ear-marked” for retirement planning?
  • Do you think these assets will be adequate?

People tend to underestimate the amount of money they are likely to need to retire securely. Some advisers will say you need a pot of ten times what you earn currently. However, if you are working on current interest rates that is not going to last very long. If you currently earn $100,000 per year, then that’s a million dollar pension pot. Going on historic averages, let’s assume you can earn 5% per year on your capital. That gives you an income of $50,000 per year, or half of what you are earning now. However, the current US base rate is only 1%! A million dollars is only going to earn you $10,000 per year in this environment. The current UK base rate is only 0.25%…

Of course we don’t know where interest rates will be in 20, 30 or 40 years time, but surely it is better to plan conservatively? The number you should really be aiming for is more like 20 times your current income. So a person currently earning $100,000 per year needs $2,000,000. Now two million dollars is a lot of money, but don’t be disheartened. If you start saving and investing early you have the power of compound interest on your side.

If you want to get into more detail on calculating retirement needs, there are a lot of resources available online. Here’s a really simple and easy to use calculator from Vanguard for a start. It’s a US based calculator so it may not be best for everybody. I just like the way you can use the sliders to adjust the variables and see how it affects the end result. If you don’t like it then just google financial calculator and find one that works for you.