A Two-Minute Retirement System Check
Is Your Retirement Plan Built to Hold Together?
A retirement plan can appear diversified while several important parts still depend on the same market outcome. Review six connected areas and identify where your plan may contain a single point of failure.
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The Important Question
Your investments may be diversified. But is your retirement plan?
Retirement risk is rarely isolated to one investment. It often becomes more serious when income, withdrawals, company stock, taxes and market exposure are all connected to the same favorable assumptions.
This educational exercise is designed to help you see those connections more clearly.
Your Retirement Grid
Review six areas that help hold a retirement plan together.
Select each area, answer one question and watch your grid take shape.
Your Grid Is Complete
Review the connections inside your retirement plan.
Your Retirement Grid Results
Your responses identified areas worth reviewing.
Your grid overview
The Connection Matters
Why These Six Areas?
A retirement plan operates as a connected system.
Retirement Income
The more monthly spending depends on investment withdrawals, the more important the timing and source of those withdrawals may become.
Company Stock
A long relationship with one employer can unintentionally create a retirement plan with too much dependence on one company.
Market Exposure
A portfolio can contain many funds and still be heavily dependent on the same group of large companies and the same market direction.
Inflation Protection
Retirement income must support future purchasing power, not simply produce a number on a statement.
Liquidity
Readily available funds can help reduce the need to sell investments at an unfavorable time.
Tax & Pension Decisions
Social Security, pensions, taxes and account withdrawals often affect one another and deserve coordinated planning.
What This Exercise Is Designed to Do
Help you ask better questions.
- Identify possible areas of concentrated retirement risk.
- Show where several decisions may depend on the same outcome.
- Encourage a more deliberate second look before a market reset.
What It Does Not Claim
It is not a financial diagnosis.
- It does not predict when a market decline will begin.
- It does not evaluate your complete financial circumstances.
- It does not recommend a particular investment or transaction.
The Next Step
A second opinion can begin with a simple conversation.
You do not need to make a commitment, transfer an account or provide sensitive financial information to begin.