Day 18: Use a "Bucketing" System When Constructing your Retirement Portfolio
Degree of difficulty: Moderate to difficult
One of the most daunting aspects of managing your finances is figuring out how to transition from accumulation mode into retirement mode (aka "harvest" mode).
One intuitive way to construct a retirement portfolio is to create various buckets of money based on when you expect to tap them for living expenses. Bucket #1 contains living expenses for the next two to five years, and therefore should consist of highly liquid investments. This is money you can't afford to lose.
Bucket #2 should be positioned for living expenses in years five through 15, and therefore you can afford to take on slightly more risk. Intermediate-term bond funds and even conservative equity funds or balanced funds are good choices for the intermediate sleeve of your retirement portfolio.
Those assets you don't expect to tap for at least 15 years can be stashed in equities and equity funds. Because you've established that you have a fairly long time horizon for this money, you won't be unduly upset if the stock market has periodic hiccups.
Click here for more detailed information about how to construct a retirement portfolio using the "bucket" approach.
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