Retirement planning often presents a surprising paradox: the same investment strategy can feel both too risky and not risky enough—sometimes at the same time.

For decades, investors have been encouraged to reduce risk as they age by shifting away from equities and toward more conservative holdings. While that principle has merit, modern retirement planning has evolved. Today, the greater challenge is not simply reducing risk—but aligning the right type of risk with your income needs, time horizon, and long-term financial goals.

At Agemy Financial Strategies, we believe retirement success isn’t about eliminating risk. It’s about understanding how to manage it intentionally.

All investing involves risk, including the potential loss of principal, and no investment strategy can guarantee results.

Understanding the Two Core Risks in Retirement

Retirement Risk

When people think about retirement risk, they often focus on market volatility. While that is certainly important, there are actually two primary risks that must be balanced:

1. Taking Too Much Risk

One of the most commonly discussed concerns is being too heavily exposed to market volatility as retirement begins.

A key concept here is sequence of returns risk, which refers to the impact of experiencing negative market returns early in retirement while also withdrawing income. This combination can reduce a portfolio’s long-term sustainability more significantly than downturns experienced earlier in life.

In simple terms:

  • Market declines during accumulation years are temporary setbacks
  • Market declines during early retirement can have lasting consequences if withdrawals continue

For this reason, many retirement income strategies are designed to emphasize  diversification, liquidity planning, and risk management during the early distribution phase.

2. Taking Too Little Risk

On the other end of the spectrum, being overly conservative can also create challenges.

While preserving capital may feel safe, portfolios that are too heavily weighted toward cash or low-growth assets may struggle to keep pace with:

Over long retirement horizons, insufficient growth can reduce purchasing power and increase the likelihood that assets may not fully support future income needs.

The goal is not simply safety—it is sustainability over time.

The Shift From Accumulation to Income Planning

During working years, the primary objective is typically asset growth. In retirement, the focus usually shifts to: 

Creating a reliable and sustainable income strategy while managing risk appropriately.

This transition requires a more dynamic approach to portfolio construction, one that considers:

  • Income needs and timing
  • Market conditions
  • Tax implications
  • Longevity expectations
  • Liquidity requirements

Retirement planning becomes less about a single “risk level” and more about how different assets support different phases of income needs.

Why “Lower Risk” Doesn’t Always Mean “Safer”

Retirement Risk

It is a common assumption that reducing exposure to stocks automatically reduces risk. However, retirement planning is more complex than a simple risk reduction equation.

An overly conservative portfolio may:

  • Limit long-term growth potential
  • Increase reliance on principal withdrawals
  • Struggle to keep pace with inflation

Conversely, an overly aggressive portfolio may:

In both cases, misalignment—not market behavior itself—is often the underlying issue.

Aligning Risk With Your Income “Foundation”

A more modern approach to retirement planning focuses on establishing an income foundation before determining investment risk.

This typically involves identifying:

1. Guaranteed or predictable income sources

Such as:

2. Essential vs discretionary expenses

Understanding what must be covered versus what is flexible helps clarify how much portfolio income is required.

When essential income needs are largely covered, some investors may be able to take a more balanced approach to long-term growth. When gaps exist, more conservative planning may be appropriate.

This structure is intended to help align investment risk with actual income requirements, though outcomes will vary.

Common Behavioral Pitfalls in Retirement Investing

Even well-constructed plans can be disrupted by emotional decision-making. Some common challenges include:

  • Reducing equity exposure after market declines
  • Increasing risk exposure after strong market performance
  • Moving to cash during volatility and delaying re-entry
  • Making allocation changes without a coordinated income strategy

Research in behavioral finance suggests that inconsistent investment decisions can have a meaningful impact on long-term outcomes compared to maintaining a disciplined strategy.

This is why having a structured retirement income plan may have a meaningful impact on long-term outcomes compared to maintaining a disciplined strategy.

How to Evaluate If You’re Taking Too Much or Too Little Risk

Retirement Risk

While every situation is unique, here are some general considerations:

You may be taking too much risk if:

  • A moderate market decline would significantly impact your lifestyle
  • You do not have sufficient liquidity for near-term income needs
  • You rely heavily on equities for short-term withdrawals

You may be taking too little risk if:

  • Your portfolio is primarily in cash or low-yield investments
  • You are concerned about long-term purchasing power
  • Your strategy does not account for inflation or longevity

The key is not avoiding risk entirely—but helping ensure it is appropriate for your plan.

A Framework Some Investors Use: The Bucket Approach

Some retirement income strategies incorporate a “bucket” framework to help align time horizon with asset allocation:

  • Short-term bucket: Liquidity for near-term income needs
  • Mid-term bucket: Stability and income support
  • Long-term bucket: Growth-oriented investments designed to address inflation and longevity

This type of structure is intended to help reduce the need to sell  long-term investments during periods of market volatility while still supporting ongoing income needs.

The Real Goal: Intentional Risk, Not Elimination of Risk

The purpose of retirement planning is not to remove uncertainty entirely—that is not realistic in any market environment.

Instead, the goal is to help align the following, recognizing that results cannot be guaranteed:

  • Risk is intentional, not accidental
  • Investment strategy aligns with income needs
  • Long-term sustainability is prioritized over short-term reactions

When risk is properly structured, it becomes a tool—not a threat.

How Agemy Financial Strategies Can Help

Retirement Risk

At Agemy Financial Strategies, we understand that retirement planning is not just about selecting investments—it’s about building a coordinated strategy intended to support your income needs, lifestyle goals, and long-term financial confidence.

Because every retiree’s situation is different, we take a personalized approach to help you evaluate whether your current level of risk is aligned with your retirement objectives.

Our process typically includes:

  • Clarifying your retirement income needs so you understand what must be funded versus what is flexible
  • Evaluating your current portfolio risk exposure in the context of both market conditions and withdrawal strategy
  • Identifying potential gaps in income planning, including inflation and longevity considerations
  • Coordinating investments, income sources, and time horizons into a more intentional structure
  • Helping you avoid common behavioral pitfalls, such as reactionary allocation changes during market volatility

Our goal is to help you gain greater clarity around how your financial strategy is structured to support your retirement years.

Whether you are approaching retirement or already transitioning into it, we aim to provide guidance that helps you make more informed, confident decisions about the risks you are taking—and the risks you may be unintentionally overlooking.

Final Thoughts

So, are you taking too much or too little risk as you approach retirement?

For many individuals, the answer is not one or the other—but a combination of both in different parts of their financial plan. The key is ensuring that your portfolio is designed to support both your near-term income needs and your long-term financial goals.

At Agemy Financial Strategies, we believe retirement planning works best when risk is not simply reduced—but thoughtfully aligned with your income strategy, time horizon, and life goals.

Contact us today to schedule a complimentary consultation. 

There is no obligation to engage our services.


Investment advisory services are offered through Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, a Registered Investment Adviser and fiduciary to its clients. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. is a franchisee of Retirement Income Source®, LLC. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC are affiliated entities but are not affiliated with Retirement Income Source®, LLC.

This material is provided for informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as personalized investment, tax, or legal advice. You should consult with a qualified professional before making any financial decisions based on your individual circumstances.

All investing involves risk, including the possible loss of principal. No investment strategy can guarantee results or protect against loss in all market conditions. Past performance is not indicative of future results.

For high-net-worth individuals (HNWIs), financial planning is rarely a once-a-year exercise. Markets shift, tax laws evolve, investment opportunities emerge, and personal priorities change, often faster than expected. That is why the middle of the year presents a critical opportunity to pause, evaluate, and recalibrate your financial strategy before year-end deadlines begin to narrow your options.

In today’s environment of elevated interest rates, persistent inflation concerns, evolving tax policy discussions, and concentrated market leadership, mid-year reviews have become increasingly important for affluent investors seeking both resilience and opportunity.

A mid-year financial check-up is more than reviewing account balances or investment performance. It is a proactive assessment of your overall financial picture, designed to identify inefficiencies, uncover opportunities, and help ensure your wealth strategy remains aligned with your long-term goals.

Whether your focus is preserving generational wealth, reducing tax exposure, optimizing investment performance, preparing for retirement, or strengthening your legacy plan, a mid-year review can help ensure the second half of the year is approached with intention, not reaction.

Why Mid-Year Reviews Matter for HNWIs

Mid-Year Financial Check-Up (3)

Affluent investors often face a level of financial complexity that requires ongoing oversight. Between diversified investment portfolios, business ownership interests, real estate holdings, charitable strategies, estate considerations, and evolving tax regulations, even small inefficiencies can have significant financial consequences over time.

By mid-year, most individuals have enough financial data to identify trends and adjust course if needed. Waiting until the fourth quarter often limits your flexibility, especially when it comes to tax planning and investment decisions.

A comprehensive mid-year review can help you:

  • Evaluate portfolio performance relative to your goals
  • Assess exposure to unnecessary risk
  • Identify tax-saving opportunities before year-end
  • Revisit retirement income strategies
  • Review estate and legacy planning documents
  • Adjust cash flow or liquidity strategies
  • Ensure insurance coverage remains adequate
  • Reassess philanthropic and charitable giving plans
  • Prepare for potential economic or market volatility

For HNWIs, the value of proactive planning often lies not just in investment returns, but in avoiding costly oversights.

Reevaluate Your Investment Strategy

Mid-Year Financial Check-Up (2)

The first half of the year can reveal whether your investment portfolio is still positioned appropriately for current market conditions and your personal objectives.

A mid-year review should go beyond simply asking whether your portfolio is “up” or “down.” Instead, consider whether your investments continue to align with your broader financial goals, risk tolerance, time horizon, and liquidity needs.

Questions to revisit include:

  • Has your risk tolerance changed?
  • Are your investments overly concentrated in a particular sector or asset class?
  • Have recent market gains created an imbalance in your portfolio allocation?
  • Are you holding underperforming assets for emotional rather than strategic reasons?
  • Are alternative investments still serving their intended purpose?
  • Does your portfolio generate the level of income or growth you currently need?

For affluent investors, portfolio drift can occur quickly, especially during periods of strong market performance. An allocation that was once balanced may now carry unintended risk exposure.

Many affluent investors also face concentrated equity exposure tied to business ownership, executive compensation, or highly appreciated stock positions, creating additional risk management and tax-planning considerations.

This can also be an ideal time to evaluate opportunities for strategic rebalancing. Rebalancing helps maintain alignment between your investment mix and your financial objectives while potentially reducing unnecessary risk.

Additionally, HNWIs may benefit from reviewing:

  • Private equity allocations
  • Real estate exposure
  • Fixed-income positioning
  • International market exposure
  • Cash reserves and liquidity strategies
  • Tax-efficient investment vehicles

Investment decisions should support not only growth but also tax efficiency, wealth preservation, and long-term sustainability.

Review Tax Planning Opportunities Before Year-End

One of the greatest advantages of a mid-year review is the ability to make tax adjustments while there is still time to act strategically. Many affluent households unintentionally approach tax planning reactively, focusing primarily on filing requirements rather than year-round optimization. However, proactive tax management can significantly impact long-term wealth accumulation and preservation.

2026 is a pivotal year for tax planning, especially with the potential sunset of current federal tax provisions after 2025. For high-net-worth households, that makes mid-year planning especially important for bracket management, estate planning, charitable strategies, and gifting.

Mid-year tax planning strategies may include: 

Tax-Loss Harvesting

If certain investments have declined in value, harvesting losses may help offset capital gains elsewhere in your portfolio, subject to IRS rules and limitations. This strategy can help reduce taxable investment income while preserving long-term portfolio positioning.

Capital Gains Management

If you anticipate large capital gains from the sale of a business, real estate transaction, or appreciated investments, mid-year planning can help minimize the resulting tax burden.

Roth Conversion Opportunities

Strategic Roth conversions may help create greater tax diversification, reduce future required minimum distributions (RMDs), and potentially improve wealth transfer efficiency for heirs.

Charitable Giving Strategies

For HNWIs with philanthropic goals, charitable planning can serve both personal and tax objectives. Mid-year is an excellent time to evaluate:

  • Donor-advised funds (DAFs)
  • Qualified charitable distributions (QCDs)
  • Charitable remainder trusts
  • Appreciated asset donations

Estimated Tax Payments

Reviewing estimated tax obligations now may help avoid penalties and improve cash flow management later in the year.

Business and Real Estate Considerations

For business owners and real estate investors, mid-year is also a smart time to revisit:

  • Depreciation strategies
  • Entity structure efficiency
  • Succession planning
  • Business expense timing
  • Real estate tax exposure

The earlier tax strategies are identified, the more flexibility you typically have in implementing them effectively.

Assess Retirement Readiness and Income Strategies

Mid-Year Financial Check-Up (2)

Even affluent individuals can face uncertainty around retirement planning. High income does not automatically guarantee financial efficiency in retirement, particularly when taxes, healthcare costs, longevity, and market volatility are factored into the equation.

A mid-year review provides an opportunity to reassess:

For HNWIs, retirement planning is often less about “Will I have enough?” and more about:

  • Maintaining lifestyle flexibility
  • Preserving wealth across generations
  • Minimizing taxes
  • Reducing sequence-of-return risk
  • Managing healthcare and long-term care costs

It can also be important to revisit whether your retirement assets are positioned appropriately for your current stage of life. Many affluent investors remain overly growth-oriented late into retirement, potentially exposing themselves to unnecessary volatility during income distribution years.

Conversely, becoming too conservative too early may reduce long-term purchasing power and legacy potential.

Balancing growth, income, preservation, and tax efficiency is essential.

Evaluate Cash Flow and Liquidity

Liquidity planning is often overlooked among affluent households because substantial net worth can create a false sense of financial flexibility.

However, many HNWIs have significant portions of their wealth tied up in:

  • Illiquid investments
  • Real estate
  • Closely held businesses
  • Deferred compensation structures
  • Private equity vehicles

A mid-year review should evaluate whether your liquidity strategy adequately supports:

Periods of market volatility often highlight the importance of accessible liquidity. Investors forced to sell appreciated or depressed assets unexpectedly may create avoidable tax consequences or portfolio disruption.

Questions to consider include:

  • Do you have adequate cash reserves?
  • Are you overly reliant on a single income source?
  • Is your debt structure still efficient in the current interest rate environment?
  • Should excess cash be repositioned more strategically?
  • Are upcoming large expenses properly planned for?

Liquidity planning is not simply about holding cash; it is about helping ensure flexibility without sacrificing long-term growth objectives.

Revisit Estate and Legacy Planning

Estate planning is one of the most important and often neglected components of wealth management for HNWIs.

A mid-year check-up is an ideal time to revisit your estate strategy to help ensure your plan still reflects your intentions, family dynamics, and current laws.

Important areas to review include:

  • Wills and trusts
  • Beneficiary designations
  • Powers of attorney
  • Healthcare directives
  • Gifting strategies
  • Generation-skipping plans
  • Business succession plans

Life changes such as marriages, divorces, births, deaths, relocations, or business transitions may require updates to existing documents.

Legacy planning also extends beyond asset distribution. Many HNWIs are increasingly focused on:

  • Preparing heirs financially
  • Family governance
  • Philanthropic impact
  • Multi-generational wealth education
  • Preserving family values alongside financial assets

Effective estate planning can help provide both financial clarity and peace of mind.

Review Insurance and Risk Management

Mid-Year Financial Check-Up (2)

Wealth preservation is not only about growing assets, it is also about protecting them.

A mid-year review should include a thorough assessment of your risk management strategy, including:

  • Life insurance coverage
  • Umbrella liability insurance
  • Disability coverage
  • Long-term care planning
  • Property and casualty insurance
  • Business insurance exposure
  • Cybersecurity protections

As wealth grows, liability exposure often grows with it.

Affluent households may face unique risks related to:

  • Real estate ownership
  • Domestic employees
  • Business operations
  • Public visibility
  • Digital privacy concerns

Insurance policies purchased years ago may no longer adequately reflect current net worth, income needs, or estate planning objectives.

Additionally, rising healthcare and long-term care costs continue to create financial uncertainty even for affluent retirees. Reviewing long-term care strategies early may help provide greater flexibility and lower costs than waiting until health concerns emerge.

Prepare for Economic and Market Uncertainty

Economic uncertainty is inevitable. While no one can predict markets with certainty, HNWIs can benefit significantly from preparing for multiple scenarios rather than reacting emotionally to short-term headlines.

A mid-year review is an opportunity to stress test your financial strategy against:

This does not necessarily mean making dramatic investment changes. Instead, it means evaluating whether your current strategy remains resilient across varying market conditions.

Affluent investors often benefit from disciplined, long-term planning rather than emotionally driven decision-making during uncertain periods.

Strategic preparation may include:

  • Diversification reviews
  • Defensive asset positioning
  • Income stability analysis
  • Tax diversification
  • Contingency liquidity planning

Confidence in your financial strategy often comes from preparation, not prediction.

The Value of Professional Guidance

Mid-Year Financial Check-Up (2)

For high-net-worth individuals, financial complexity often requires coordination across multiple areas:

A mid-year review with an experienced financial advisor can help identify opportunities and blind spots that may otherwise go unnoticed.

Rather than addressing financial decisions in isolation, comprehensive planning creates a more integrated strategy designed to help support long-term financial confidence.

At Agemy Financial Strategies, we help high-net-worth individuals and families coordinate the many moving pieces of wealth management through thoughtful, personalized planning designed to support long-term financial clarity and confidence.

Final Thoughts

The middle of the year offers more than a calendar milestone; it offers an opportunity.

An effective mid-year financial check-up allows high-net-worth individuals to evaluate progress, adapt to changing conditions, and position themselves strategically for the months and years ahead.

Whether your goals involve protecting generational wealth, optimizing taxes, strengthening retirement readiness, or creating a lasting legacy, proactive planning can help ensure your financial strategy remains aligned with what matters most.

Financial success is not solely defined by how much wealth you accumulate. It is also defined by how effectively you manage, preserve, and align that wealth with your long-term vision.

The second half of the year starts now. Contact us to schedule a complimentary consultation. 

Investment advisory services are offered through Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, a Registered Investment Advisor and fiduciary to its clients. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. is a franchisee of Retirement Income Source®, LLC. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC are associated entities. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC are not associated with Retirement Income Source®, LLC. This content is for informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as individualized investment, tax, or legal advice.

It was George Santayana who famously said, “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” In the world of finance, Andrew and Daniel Agemy—the father-son duo behind Agemy Financial Strategies—prefer a slightly more pointed version: Those who don’t know history are doomed to repeat history.

This concept is the bedrock of their financial philosophy because, while the world changes, the fundamental driver of the markets—people—remains exactly the same. If you look at a chart of the S&P 500 spanning the last 150 years, it looks like a glorious, uninterrupted climb to the heavens. It is often presented as a “mountain” of wealth, suggesting that the stock market is a one-way ticket to prosperity if you simply wait long enough. But when you hone in on that mountain, the view changes drastically. The “mountain” reveals treacherous cliffs, deep valleys, and long, flat plateaus where money goes to die for decades at a time.

Welcome to the Retirement Trap. It’s the hidden danger lurking in “average” returns and the “buy-and-hold” strategies pushed by mainstream Wall Street. It is the trap that catches retirees who forget that while technology changes—from the combustion engine to the radio, the internet, and now AI—human emotions do not.

The Illusion of the “Ever-Upward” Market

Most retail investors operate on a dangerous mix of optimism and amnesia. We see the long-term upward trend and assume that “time in the market” solves all problems. But retirement isn’t “long-term” in the same way your 20s were. When you are 25, a 15-year market stagnation is a blip in your journey. When you are 65, a 15-year stagnation is a catastrophe.

Retirement is a specific window of time—perhaps 20 to 30 years—where you no longer have the luxury of waiting out a decades-long flat market. A full stock market cycle typically lasts between 30 and 40 years. Within that cycle, you have “Bull” markets that charge ahead for 15 to 20 years, followed by “Bear” markets that sleep for 15 to 20 years. If you enter retirement at the start of a sleeping bear, your entire lifestyle is at risk.

History Doesn’t Repeat, But It Rhymes

Mark Twain’s famous observation that history “rhymes” is the cornerstone of the Agemy Financial Strategies approach. Why does it rhyme? Because human emotion is the only constant. * The Euphoria of “New Eras”: In 1929, people were convinced that the radio would change the world forever, justifying astronomical stock prices. In the late 90s, it was the internet. Today, it is Artificial Intelligence. While the technology is indeed revolutionary, the way people buy into it—driven by FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out)—remains identical.

  • The Leverage Trap: During the run-up to 1929, investors were so certain of the “new era” that they leveraged everything they had. When the crash happened, they didn’t just lose their savings; they lost money they didn’t even have. We see rhymes of this today in high-margin trading and the treating of the S&P 500 as a high-interest savings account.
  • Panic and Forced Selling: Investors typically jump on board at the peak and sell at the bottom. Why? Because they are forced to. Whether it’s a “fiscal physical” emergency or the simple need to pay for groceries in retirement, the lack of a liquid income strategy forces investors to sell their assets at the worst possible time.

The Lost Decades: A Historical Reality Check

Retirement Traps

To understand the Retirement Trap, you have to look at the periods where the market did nothing for nearly a generation. These aren’t anomalies; they are part of the natural cycle of human greed and fear.

1900 – 1920: The Twenty-Year Sideways Walk

For twenty-one years, the market essentially went nowhere. While there were ups and downs, an investor who put money in at the turn of the century found themselves with the same principal two decades later.

1929 – 1954: The Quarter-Century Recovery

This is perhaps the most sobering statistic in market history. After the 1929 crash, the stock market did not recover its previous highs and stay above them until 1954. That is 25 years of waiting. By the time the market “recovered,” an entire generation of retirees had passed away, many in poverty, because they followed the growth-only model. This is the era that created the “Greatest Generation’s” fear of the market—they didn’t want stocks; they wanted the safety of the bank.

1966 – 1982: The Industrial Stagnation

For 16 years, as the world transitioned through social upheaval and the Vietnam War, the market remained flat. It wasn’t until the bull market of the 1980s (when the Dow was at a measly 700) that the modern upward trend truly began.

2000 – 2013: The Modern “Lost Decade”

This is the one many of us remember, yet many have already forgotten. Between the dot-com bubble and the 2008 financial crisis, the market provided zero net gain for 13 years. If you retired in 2000 with $1,000,000, and you were relying on “growth,” you essentially wasted the first decade of your retirement waiting for your portfolio to get back to even.

The 6-Foot Man and the 4-Foot River

Retirement Traps

One of the most profound analogies is the story of the six-foot-tall man who drowned in a river that was, on average, only four feet deep.

“How could that be? Because he entered at the 10-foot mark. He didn’t know that the specific area was deep, and he couldn’t swim. The ‘average’ didn’t save him.”

This is the Retirement Trap in a nutshell. The “average” return of the S&P 500 might be 9% over a century, but if you retire the year the market hits a “10-foot hole,” the average is irrelevant. You are drowning in what professionals call Sequence of Returns Risk.

The Failure of the 4% Rule

Wall Street loves the “4% Rule”—the idea that you can withdraw 4% of your portfolio annually, adjusted for inflation, and never run out of money. But look at what happens when the market drops 50% right as you start your journey:

  1. Year 0: You have $1,000,000. You plan to take $40,000 (4%).
  2. Year 1: The market crashes 50%. Your balance is now $500,000.
  3. The Dilemma: To get that same $40,000 to maintain your lifestyle, you are now withdrawing 8% of your remaining principal.

This is what is called cannibalizing your assets. You are selling double the shares at the bottom of the market just to pay your bills. You cannot recover from an 8% withdrawal rate in a flat or declining market. This is how retirees run out of money before they run out of life—a fate that often leads to the one place nobody wants to go: a state-funded convalescent home.

Breaking the Formula: G = I + CA

To escape the trap, you have to understand how “Growth” is actually calculated. Most people think growth is just the number on their statement going up. In reality, the formula for total growth is:

G = I + CA

  • G (Growth): The total return on your portfolio.
  • I (Income): The “Known Growth”—dividends and interest that are paid to you regardless of the share price.
  • CA (Capital Appreciation): The “Unknown Growth”—the hope that someone will buy your stock for more than you paid for it.

The Shift from Growth to Income

Your investment strategy should change as you “mature.” When you are 30, you want CA (Capital Appreciation). You have time to ride the roller coaster. You actually want the market to be volatile because you are buying shares every paycheck (Dollar Cost Averaging).

However, when you are 65, you need I (Income). You need a “paycheck” from your investments. If your portfolio generates 6% in dividends and interest, some investors may be able to supplement retirement income through dividends and interest payments, depending on portfolio construction and market conditions. If the market goes down 20%, the “value” of your holdings drops on paper, but your income may be less impacted than a portfolio dependent solely on selling appreciated assets. It’s like owning an apartment building. If the market value of the building drops, you don’t care, as long as the tenants keep paying rent. You only care about the value if you are trying to sell the building. In retirement, you shouldn’t be trying to sell; you should be trying to live.

The Professional’s Toolkit: Finding the “Known” Growth

Retirement Traps

One of the biggest mistakes retirees can make is staying in a “Growth Model” because their advisor told them to “just keep doing what you’ve been doing.” Transitioning to an income specialist allows you to customize your “Known Growth.”

Imagine these two scenarios for a $1,000,000 portfolio over a 13-year flat cycle (like 2000-2013):

Strategy Known Growth (I) Unknown Growth (CA) Result after 13 years
All Growth 0% 0% (Flat Market) $1,000,000 (No income taken)
Income Strategy 6% ($60k/year) 0% (Flat Market) $1,780,000 total value ($780k in cash collected + $1M principal)

In the second scenario, you lived a high-quality retirement for 13 years, took out $780,000 in total “paychecks,” and still have your original million. In the first scenario, you took nothing and ended up with nothing to show for those 13 years. This illustrates how income-focused strategies may help support retirement cash flow during flat market periods

Where Does This Income Come From?

This isn’t just about standard savings accounts or low-yield government bonds. An income specialist looks for “treasure” in areas the average retail investor ignores:

  • Business Development Companies (BDCs): These are the backbone of middle-market America. They lend to businesses that are the engine of the US economy and are required by law to pay out 90% of their taxable income to shareholders. Today, some pay double-digit dividends.
  • Preferred Stocks: These function like a hybrid between stocks and bonds. They offer a fixed contractual payment. It is often “death to the company” if they miss a preferred dividend payment, providing a layer of security that growth stocks lack.
  • Energy and Commodity Dividends: Some companies pay dividends tied to the price of oil or gold. In an inflationary environment, these provide a natural hedge, allowing your income to rise as the cost of living rises.
  • Corporate Bonds: These are direct contracts. Unlike a stock, which is a “hope” for profit, a bond is a legal obligation for a company to pay you interest and return your principal.

Why Isn’t Your Advisor Talking About This?

If this strategy is so resilient, why does the mainstream financial media—and most local advisors—focus almost exclusively on the S&P 500? Generally, there are three primary reasons:

  1. The Conflict of Interest

Large asset management firms are public companies. Their primary duty is to their stockholders, not necessarily the retiree. It is much easier and more profitable for them to sell a “passive” fund that tracks an index than it is to do the active “treasure hunting” and research required to find high-quality, income-producing assets.

  1. The “Straight Line” Bias

Many advisors working today are young. They started their careers after 2010. For their entire professional lives, the market has essentially gone in a straight line up. They haven’t lived through a 25-year sideways market or a 50% crash that takes a decade to recover. They believe “the market always comes back” because, in their limited experience, it always has—and quickly. They are teaching what they know, but what they know is a historical anomaly.

  1. The Euphoria Factor

It’s easy to sell a “roller coaster” when it’s going up. It’s exciting to see a tech stock jump 20% in a month. But a mature investor realizes that excitement is the enemy of a stable retirement. You don’t want the thrill; you want the security of a paycheck.

The Retirement Readiness Report (RR)

Navigating the world of BDCs, preferred stocks, and bond ladders requires professional management. They advocate for a Retirement Readiness Report (RR)—a 15-minute conversation to see if a portfolio is truly “resilient.”

A resilient portfolio is one that can withstand the “worst-case rhymes” of history. It asks the hard questions:

  • Can you live if the market stays flat for the next 10 years?
  • Are you taking more than your portfolio is earning in interest and dividends?
  • Are you prepared for Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs)?

RMDs are a part of the trap many forget. Once you hit a certain age, the government forces you to take money out of your IRA or 401(k), whether the market is up or down. If your money is in a growth-only model and the market crashes, the government is essentially forcing you to cannibalize your assets at the bottom. An income-oriented strategy may help retirees better manage RMD obligations during volatile markets.

How Agemy Financial Strategies Helps You Navigate the Trap

Retirement Traps

Understanding the “Retirement Trap” is one thing; building a bridge over it is another. This is where Agemy Financial Strategies steps in. Andrew Agemy (affectionately known as Triple A) and Daniel Agemy aren’t just financial advisors; they are Income Specialists who have dedicated their careers to the specific needs of the “mature” investor—those who are within ten years of retirement or are already there.

Here is how the Agemy team helps you move from the uncertainty of “hope” to the security of a more predictable income-focused strategy:

1. The Retirement Readiness (RR) Conversation

Most financial reviews focus on a “pile of money.” The Agemy team focuses on resilience. They offer a 10–15 minute “RR Conversation” designed to stress-test your current plan. They look for the “10-foot holes” in your personal river, asking:

2. Transitioning from Growth to Income

The biggest mistake retirees make is using a 401(k) “Growth” mindset during their distribution years. Agemy Financial Strategies flips that switch. They help you transition your portfolio from a reliance on Capital Appreciation (which you can’t control) to Income (which is contractual).

By focusing on the “I” in the G = I + CA formula, they aim to create a portfolio that pays you a “paycheck” regardless of whether the S&P 500 is charging like a bull or sleeping like a bear.

3. Active “Treasure Hunting” Management

Navigating the complex world of Business Development Companies (BDCs), Preferred Stocks, and Corporate Bonds requires deep research and active management.

  • Agemy Financial Strategies acts as your professional portfolio manager, hunting for “on-sale” income assets that offer high yields with institutional-level security.
  • They provide Active Management, meaning they don’t just “buy and hold” and hope for the best. They monitor the economic cycles to help ensure your income remains robust and is designed to help address inflation risk.

4. A Commitment to Education

Andrew and Daniel believe that an educated retiree is a happy and stress-free retiree. They don’t want you to just hand over your money; they want you to understand why your plan works. Through their radio show, Financial Strategies, and their library of resources—including the book Stop the Financial Insanity and their RMD Readiness Checklist—they empower you to take control of your future.

5. Fiduciary Responsibility

As a father-son team, the Agemys operate with a fiduciary obligation. This means their interests are legally aligned with yours. Unlike the “conflict of interest” found at large Wall Street firms that answer to stockholders, the Agemy team answers to you. Their goal is simple: to ensure you retire, stay retired, and never have to worry about running out of money before you run out of life.

Take the First Step

Don’t wait until the next market “rhyme” catches you off guard. If you’re wondering if you’ve truly saved enough to retire, or if you’re worried that your current advisor is leading you into the Retirement Trap, it’s time for a second opinion.

Call Agemy Financial Strategies at 800-725-7616 to request your free copy of the RMD Readiness Checklist or to schedule your own Retirement Readiness (RR) Conversation.

As Andrew Agemy says, “Hoping and wishing and praying is not a retirement plan.” Let Agemy Financial Strategies help you build a plan based on history, logic, and reliable income strategies.

Investment advisory services are offered through Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, a Registered Investment Advisor and fiduciary to its clients. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. is a franchisee of Retirement Income Source®, LLC. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC are associated entities. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC entities are not associated with Retirement Income Source®, LLC. This content is for informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as individualized investment, tax, or legal advice. Any review, reliance or distribution by others or forwarding without the express permission of the sender is strictly prohibited. To the extent permitted by law, Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, and Retirement Income Source, LLC do not accept any liability arising from the use or retransmission of the information in this article. 

When it comes to retirement planning, most Americans aren’t missing motivation; they’re missing perspective. And that gap in understanding could have serious financial consequences.

A recent study from the TIAA Institute and the Global Financial Literacy Excellence Center (GFLEC) highlights a critical issue: people simply don’t know how long retirement may actually last. Only 33% of U.S. adults can correctly identify how long a 65-year-old will live on average.  That misunderstanding shapes everything, from how much people save to how they prepare for income in retirement.

The Problem: Planning for the Wrong Timeline

If you believe retirement will last 10–15 years, your financial strategy will reflect that. But the reality is very different.

On average:

  • A 65-year-old man will live to about 84
  • A 65-year-old woman will live to about 87

And there’s more:

  • About 30% of men and 40% of women who reach 65 will live to age 90

That means retirement could easily span 20–30 years, or longer. Yet many people are unknowingly planning for a much shorter horizon.

This “blind spot” can lead to a ripple effect: less saving, less planning, and a higher risk of running out of money later in life.

The Savings Gap: How Expectations Shape Behavior

Retirement Blind Spot

Your expectations about longevity directly influence your financial habits.

Among workers expecting fewer than 10 years in retirement, only 48% save regularly and just 11% save more than 10% of their earnings. By contrast, among those expecting 30 or more years in retirement, 71% save regularly and 41% save more than 10%. 

This contrast is telling. When people understand the true potential length of retirement, they tend to take more proactive steps to prepare for it. 

The Income Planning Disconnect

Retirement Blind Spot

Underestimating longevity doesn’t just impact savings—it also affects how people think about income.

Among those expecting fewer than 10 years in retirement:

  • Over 60% haven’t seriously considered how they’ll turn savings into income
  • Many assume they’ll rely primarily on personal savings or Social Security

This lack of planning can create significant challenges later on. Retirement isn’t just about building a nest egg—it’s about turning that nest egg into a sustainable income stream that lasts as long as you do.

The Reality: Planning for the Unknown

Here’s the truth: none of us knows exactly how long we’ll live. But that uncertainty isn’t a reason to plan less; it’s a reason to plan smarter.

At Agemy Financial Strategies, we encourage clients to shift their mindset: Don’t plan for the minimum, plan for the possibility.

That means preparing for a retirement that could last 25, 30, or even 40 years. It means stress-testing your financial plan for longevity risk. And it means building flexible income strategies that can adapt over time.

What This Means for Your Retirement Plan

If you take one thing away from this, let it be this: Your retirement timeline is likely longer than you think.

And that changes everything. A well-structured retirement plan should:

How Agemy Financial Strategies Can Help

Retirement Blind Spot

Planning for a retirement that could last 20, 30, or even 40 years isn’t something you should navigate alone. At Agemy Financial Strategies, we help clients move beyond guesswork and build a plan rooted in clarity, confidence, and long-term sustainability.

Our approach starts with understanding your unique goals, lifestyle expectations, and concerns. From there, we design a personalized strategy that accounts for longevity risk, so your money is structured to last as long as you do.

We help clients:

Most importantly, we help shift the mindset from “hoping it works out” to having greater clarity around the plan in place. 

Because retirement isn’t just about reaching a number; it’s about creating a strategy that supports your life for decades to come.

Final Thoughts 

Retirement Blind Spot

People aren’t falling short in retirement because they didn’t work hard or care enough. They’re falling short because they were aiming for the wrong finish line.

When you understand that retirement could last decades, your approach shifts from short-term thinking to long-term strategy.

And that shift can make all the difference.

Ready to build a plan that’s designed to last as long as you do?
Agemy Financial Strategies is here to help you prepare for a longer, more secure retirement—no matter what the future holds. Contact us today. 

Investment advisory services are offered through Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, a Registered Investment Advisor and fiduciary to its clients. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. is a franchisee of Retirement Income Source®, LLC. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC are associated entities. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC entities are not associated with Retirement Income Source®, LLC. This content is for informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as individualized investment, tax, or legal advice. Any review, reliance or distribution by others or forwarding without the express permission of the sender is strictly prohibited. To the extent permitted by law, Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, and Retirement Income Source, LLC do not accept any liability arising from the use or retransmission of the information in this article.