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Looking for a financial planner? → PlanWithJesse.com
In this episode, Jesse applies Charlie Munger's principle of inversion to retirement planning, arguing that instead of only defining success, investors should first identify how retirement plans fail and then design strategies to avoid those outcomes. He introduces a framework of 14 retirement risks and focuses on the first seven: longevity risk, inflation risk, household risk, market risk, sequence of returns risk, withdrawal risk, and health risk. Longevity risk is framed as the danger of outliving assets. Inflation risk is described as the gradual erosion of purchasing power, with equities and TIPS offering partial protection while cash and bonds provide stability at the cost of real returns. Household risk centers on coordination between partners, emphasizing survivor planning, shared understanding of finances, and alignment on spending and documentation. Market risk is presented as unavoidable and inseparable from long-term investing, managed primarily through time, rebalancing, and disciplined behavior. Sequence of returns risk highlights the disproportionate impact of poor early-retirement market performance, with cash and bond buffers used to mitigate early withdrawal pressure. Withdrawal risk focuses on spending levels that are too high relative to portfolio size, while health risk underscores that physical and cognitive decline can ultimately matter more than financial outcomes, making long-term health investment a critical component of retirement planning.
Key Takeaways: • Retirement planning is improved by focusing on failure modes first. • Longevity risk is the danger of outliving retirement savings. • Inflation risk reduces purchasing power over long retirement horizons. • Household risk stems from misalignment or loss within a couple or family. • Market risk is unavoidable in exchange for long-term returns. • Sequence of returns risk is most dangerous early in retirement. • Withdrawal risk occurs when spending exceeds sustainable portfolio levels. • Health risk can undermine retirement quality regardless of wealth.
Key Timestamps: (01:07) – Charlie Munger During WWII (03:13) – Quick Overview (09:40) – 1: Longevity Risk (15:17) – 2: Inflation Risk (19:17) – 3: Household Risk (23:39) – 4: Market Risk (27:31) – 5: Sequence of Returns Risk (31:48) – 6: Withdrawal Risk (33:30) – 7: Health Risk
Key Topics Discussed: The Best Interest, Jesse Cramer, Wealth Management Rochester NY, Financial Planning for Families, Fiduciary Financial Advisor, Comprehensive Financial Planning, Retirement Planning Advice, Tax-Efficient Investing, Risk Management for Investors, Generational Wealth Transfer Planning, Financial Strategies for High Earners, Personal Finance for Entrepreneurs, Behavioral Finance Insights, Asset Allocation Strategies, Advanced Estate Planning Techniques
Mentions: https://bestinterest.blog/e126/ https://bestinterest.blog/e87/ https://bestinterest.blog/rmds-sequence-risk-retirement-destruction/ Retirement Planning Guidebook: Navigating the Important Decisions for Retirement Success by Wade Pfau Wade Pfau chart: https://www.advisorpedia.com/media/2024/2/Sequence_of_returns_risk.png https://open.spotify.com/episode/1ox7hbv5uhG3bHsIzf2Cfk?si=keUGIC4uSfOoEl4VrcpbPg https://bestinterest.blog/e122/
More of The Best Interest: Check out the Best Interest Blog at https://bestinterest.blog/ Contact me at [email protected] Need a financial planner? → PlanWithJesse.com
The Best Interest Podcast is a personal podcast meant for education and entertainment. It should not be taken as financial advice, and is not prescriptive of your financial situation.
By Jesse Cramer4.9
148148 ratings
Looking for a financial planner? → PlanWithJesse.com
In this episode, Jesse applies Charlie Munger's principle of inversion to retirement planning, arguing that instead of only defining success, investors should first identify how retirement plans fail and then design strategies to avoid those outcomes. He introduces a framework of 14 retirement risks and focuses on the first seven: longevity risk, inflation risk, household risk, market risk, sequence of returns risk, withdrawal risk, and health risk. Longevity risk is framed as the danger of outliving assets. Inflation risk is described as the gradual erosion of purchasing power, with equities and TIPS offering partial protection while cash and bonds provide stability at the cost of real returns. Household risk centers on coordination between partners, emphasizing survivor planning, shared understanding of finances, and alignment on spending and documentation. Market risk is presented as unavoidable and inseparable from long-term investing, managed primarily through time, rebalancing, and disciplined behavior. Sequence of returns risk highlights the disproportionate impact of poor early-retirement market performance, with cash and bond buffers used to mitigate early withdrawal pressure. Withdrawal risk focuses on spending levels that are too high relative to portfolio size, while health risk underscores that physical and cognitive decline can ultimately matter more than financial outcomes, making long-term health investment a critical component of retirement planning.
Key Takeaways: • Retirement planning is improved by focusing on failure modes first. • Longevity risk is the danger of outliving retirement savings. • Inflation risk reduces purchasing power over long retirement horizons. • Household risk stems from misalignment or loss within a couple or family. • Market risk is unavoidable in exchange for long-term returns. • Sequence of returns risk is most dangerous early in retirement. • Withdrawal risk occurs when spending exceeds sustainable portfolio levels. • Health risk can undermine retirement quality regardless of wealth.
Key Timestamps: (01:07) – Charlie Munger During WWII (03:13) – Quick Overview (09:40) – 1: Longevity Risk (15:17) – 2: Inflation Risk (19:17) – 3: Household Risk (23:39) – 4: Market Risk (27:31) – 5: Sequence of Returns Risk (31:48) – 6: Withdrawal Risk (33:30) – 7: Health Risk
Key Topics Discussed: The Best Interest, Jesse Cramer, Wealth Management Rochester NY, Financial Planning for Families, Fiduciary Financial Advisor, Comprehensive Financial Planning, Retirement Planning Advice, Tax-Efficient Investing, Risk Management for Investors, Generational Wealth Transfer Planning, Financial Strategies for High Earners, Personal Finance for Entrepreneurs, Behavioral Finance Insights, Asset Allocation Strategies, Advanced Estate Planning Techniques
Mentions: https://bestinterest.blog/e126/ https://bestinterest.blog/e87/ https://bestinterest.blog/rmds-sequence-risk-retirement-destruction/ Retirement Planning Guidebook: Navigating the Important Decisions for Retirement Success by Wade Pfau Wade Pfau chart: https://www.advisorpedia.com/media/2024/2/Sequence_of_returns_risk.png https://open.spotify.com/episode/1ox7hbv5uhG3bHsIzf2Cfk?si=keUGIC4uSfOoEl4VrcpbPg https://bestinterest.blog/e122/
More of The Best Interest: Check out the Best Interest Blog at https://bestinterest.blog/ Contact me at [email protected] Need a financial planner? → PlanWithJesse.com
The Best Interest Podcast is a personal podcast meant for education and entertainment. It should not be taken as financial advice, and is not prescriptive of your financial situation.

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