Saying "I do" to your wife's retirement planning may pay off
It's high season
for nuptials, and newlyweds-to-be are better focused on wedding plans
than retirement plans. Fair enough. But there’s an additional, important
vow for new husbands to consider post-honeymoon: Thou shalt look to thy
wife to drive retirement planning.
If that sound sexist, it’s not. In many cases, it’s just smart financial planning, given a few key retirement facts:
The stakes are highest for women
From
a practical standpoint, the “till death do us part” wedding vow often
has a brutal coda: “Until, I, your husband, die first.”
Fifty-two percent of women between the ages of 75 and 84 are widowed,
compared to 17 percent of men, according to
the Society of Actuaries. Among the 65-to-74 crowd, 26 percent of women
are widowed, and 8 percent of men have lost their spouse.
With women more likely to need retirement income to last longer,
it makes a lot of sense for them to head a couple's retirement
planning. David Littell, director of retirement income planning at the
American College, says a common lament he hears from advisers is that
couples don’t think through strategies that will provide the most security for the surviving spouse.
Women may be more far-sighted
Retirement
planning is an excruciatingly hard exercise in delayed gratification.
Some studies show that women are more naturally inclined to be long-term thinkers.
When Russell Investments asked 343 financial advisors which gender
tends to have more of a long-term planning focus, women won by 56
percent to 5 percent. (The remainder said it was a tossup.)
Women are more patient and less (overly) confident
Fifteen
years ago, economists Brad Barber and Terrance Odean scoured the
investment accounts of more than 35,000 households for trading data. They found
that men traded nearly 50 percent more frequently than women, and they
pointed to overconfidence as a behavioral tic of male investors. The
kicker: The researchers also found that the net return for the men in
the study was nearly 1 percentage point lower than for women.
More recently, robo-advisory Betterment
noted that in the two years leading up to early January 2014, men
tended to check their portfolios 45 percent more frequently than women
did. Men also changed their allocations 20 percent more often than
women. That’s not best practice for patient buy-and-hold success, and
trying to time the market has a notoriously bad record. And when clients
strayed from Betterment’s suggested asset allocation, a higher
percentage of those adopting a riskier asset mix were men.
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