Skip to Content

What the meltdown means to the retiree

More
Text SizeAAA

Filed under: Retire, Recession

The steep downturn in the markets has hit senior citizens the hardest. Many of them have seen the value of their portfolios plummet, at a time when they need their money the most.

An elderly widow I will call Mary is one victim. Her husband died a few years ago, leaving Mary, in her early eighties, with a nest egg sufficient to meet her needs for the rest of her life

Shortly after his death, her trusted "investment professional" invested most of her portfolio in two financial stocks. In less than two years, the portfolio lost over $150,000.

The news is not all bad. The brokerage firm made over $50,000 in commissions by excessively trading the balance of her portfolio.

Mary has now entered a nursing home. Her retirement funds are nearly gone. She risks becoming a ward of the state.

It is easy to blame the markets. They did fall in value. But that is precisely how markets are supposed to work. The foundation of all returns is risk. Markets go up and down, usually in cycles.

Mary's problem was the perfect storm of an inappropriately risky asset allocation and an incompetent or greedy broker. She could not afford any meaningful market risk. Her portfolio should have had an allocation of no more than 20% invested in a broadly diversified stock market index fund with the balance of 80% in a low cost index fund benchmarked to the Lehman Bros. Aggregate Bond Index.

There is plenty of blame to go around. Most of it should be focused on poor asset allocation and broker misconduct, not on the markets.

Read how the financial crisis is affecting other WalletPop bloggers.

Dan Solin is a Registered Investment Advisor and the author of The Smartest Investment Book You'll Ever Read (Perigee Books 2006) and The Smartest 401(k) Book You'll Ever Read (Perigee Books 2008).



Subscribe to Walletpop

Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)

Featured Sponsor

Will you spend as wisely as you save?

If a 65-year old couple retires today, how much savings may they need now to cover future health care costs?



Vote Now For the Readers' Choice Best in Food Awards
Nominations have been received and vetted for the best-of-breed in gourmet grocers, online gourmet ...
Neal's Yard Dairy: Farm Cheeses from the British Isles
Neal's Yard Dairy is a nominee for a Luxist Award for Best Cheese Shop. Neal's Yard Dairy was ...

Ask Me About Retirement

Dan Solin

Do you have a question about retirement? Ask our retirement expert Dan Solin.

Zac Bissonnette
Zac Bissonnette Filed under: Real Estate

National Association of Realtors predicts 4% gain for housing in 2010

The good news: National Association of Realtors chief economist Lawrence Yun is predicting that home prices will rise 4% in 2010. The bad news: Lawrence Yun has never been right about anything in ...
Amy Pyle
Amy Pyle Filed under: Banks, Budgets, Credit, Real Estate, Recession

Faces of loan modification: Christine Attalla, Bolingbrook, Ill.

How well is the government's loan modification working? WalletPop's four-part special report continues with profiles of some of those trying to get help. To read the overview, click here. Christine ...
Barbara Bartlein
Barbara Bartlein Filed under: Budgets, Debt, Home, Real Estate

Extreme home makeover, Part V: $55,000 later, we're finally done

This is the last of a five-part series about how the writer and her husband, Charlie, tackled a major overhaul of their home and the pitfalls they faced along the way. To read the first installment ...
Barbara Bartlein
Barbara Bartlein Filed under: Budgets, Home, Real Estate, Wealth, Recession

Extreme home makeover, Part IV: Progress at last, but roadblocks remain

This is the fourth part of a five-part series about how the writer and her husband, Charlie, tackled a major overhaul of their home and the pitfalls they faced along the way. To read the first ...

Retirement Basics

Retirement Basics

Should I Convert My IRA to a Roth IRA?

$
$

Headlines from WalletPop Partners