This year has compounded the income problem as the financial impact from COVID-19 has seen a cashflow squeeze on companies, greatly reducing their ability to maintain or increase dividends.
A low-income portfolio return early in retirement can have a long-lasting impact on future income. Consequently, retirees may be driven to chase yield up the risk spectrum to try to preserve the same level of income.
Before taking on excessive risk in your retirement fund, it might be useful to know that a critical component of portfolio construction, and a major determinant of risk and return in any portfolio over time, is adhering to an appropriate asset allocation on a regular basis.
The concept of maximising returns while minimising risk might sound straightforward, but there is a methodical process to attaining an “efficient frontier” in the portfolio.
To achieve true diversification, there would need to be an optimal exposure to different asset classes in Australian equities, international equities, fixed-income securities, cash and alternatives.
If we drill down further, there would likewise be a discerning split between different sectors of healthcare, technology, industrials, utilities, financials, mining, energy and other sectors.
Growth assets, such as Australian and international equities, small-cap shares, and emerging markets, generate long-term capital growth to protect against inflation, low interest rates and longevity risk.
Defensive assets, such as bonds, bank hybrids, term deposits and cash, provide liquidity to help match regular drawdowns and reduce overall volatility in the portfolio.
This plays a key role in tackling sequencing risk [the timing and order of returns] for retirees which prevents the need to sell down growth assets in a share market downturn to meet drawdown obligations. All the while, a main determinant of each exposure is uniquely based on the individual retiree’s risk profile.
Rebalancing the asset allocation of a portfolio may feel emotionally counter-intuitive at times, but a diligent investor will sell down growth assets (such as shares) in a bull market and buy growth assets during market stress.
The primary goal of this strategy is to maintain an appropriate risk exposure in the portfolio to generate better risk-adjusted returns in an expanding and contracting sharemarket.
It can help manage downside risk during a market sell-off, in part due to the capital-preservation qualities in the portfolio, and it can also enhance risk-adjusted returns over time by allowing for better repositioning of stocks, sectors and asset classes into the recovery period.
Unfortunately, retirees may no longer be able to rely on traditional investments to solve their income problem, but rather a careful combination of dynamic strategies to future-proof their retirement.