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Retirement Planning

Retirement Isn’t a Date — It’s a Financial Shift

Retirement is often thought of as a milestone you reach at a specific age—62, 65, or 67. Those ages may determine when you can access certain benefits like Social Security or Medicare, but they don’t define what retirement actually is.

From a planning perspective, retirement is better understood as a transition in how your money works.

You move from earning income through work to generating income from the assets you’ve built over time.

That change sounds simple, but it often requires a meaningful shift in how investors think about their portfolios, risk, and decision-making.

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

Two Phases of Investing Most People Experience

Most investors naturally move through two distinct phases: accumulation and distribution. The challenge is that the rules change significantly between the two, and many portfolios are never formally adjusted for that shift.

Retirement Planning

The Accumulation Phase: Building Wealth Over Time

During your working years, the focus is typically on growth.

You may hear this referred to as the “401(k) mindset,” or what’s also called the accumulation phase.

In this stage, the priorities often include:

  • Growing account balances over time
  • Contributing regularly to retirement accounts
  • Staying invested through market cycles
  • Allowing compounding to do the heavy lifting

Time can be the most powerful asset in this phase. Market downturns, while uncomfortable, are generally viewed as temporary—because there is often time to recover and continue contributing.

The primary goal is simple: build wealth.

The Distribution Phase: Turning Assets Into Income

Retirement introduces a different question entirely: How do I turn what I’ve built into income I can rely on?

This is the distribution phase.

Instead of adding money to your portfolio, you begin withdrawing from it. That shift can change the entire structure of the plan.

Key priorities often become:

In this phase, markets still matter—but timing and sequence can matter more than long-term averages alone.

Why This Transition Matters More Than Most Investors Realize

Retirement Planning

A portfolio built for accumulation is designed with a long runway and ongoing contributions.

In retirement, that runway changes.

Withdrawals begin. Contributions typically stop. And market declines may have a more immediate impact because money is being actively removed from the portfolio.

This is where planning often needs to evolve—not because the portfolio is “wrong,” but because the purpose has changed.

Income Planning: Structuring the Retirement Paycheck

One of the central goals in retirement planning is turning an investment portfolio into a reliable income system.

That may involve a combination of:

The objective is not to eliminate market participation, but to help support withdrawals in a more structured and sustainable way, recognizing that outcomes will vary.

Sequence of Returns Risk: Why Timing Matters

Most investors are familiar with the idea that markets fluctuate. What is less commonly understood is how the timing of those fluctuations can impact retirement outcomes.

This is known as the sequence of returns risk.

It refers to the impact that early negative returns can have when withdrawals are also being taken from a portfolio.

Two investors can experience the same average return over time—but the one who encounters early market declines while withdrawing income may experience a very different long-term outcome.

This is why retirement planning often focuses not just on returns, but on how and when money is being withdrawn.

Understanding Withdrawals: The Reverse of Accumulation

During your working years, your portfolio is typically funded by contributions.

In retirement, that process reverses.

Instead of adding money during market downturns, you may be withdrawing from assets that have temporarily declined in value.

This creates an important planning consideration:

  • In down markets, withdrawals may require selling more shares
  • In strong markets, withdrawals may be more efficient

Over time, how withdrawals are structured may influence the durability of a portfolio.

Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs)

For tax-deferred accounts such as traditional IRAs and 401(k)s, the IRS requires minimum withdrawals beginning at a specific age.

These Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs):

  • Must be taken annually once they begin
  • Are calculated using IRS life expectancy tables
  • Are taxed as ordinary income
  • Apply regardless of market performance

Because RMDs are mandatory, they often become an important part of broader tax and income planning in retirement.

Coordinating withdrawals in advance may help reduce surprises and may improve overall tax efficiency.

Fixed Income: Not All Income Is Structured the Same

Retirement Planning

Fixed-income investments can play an important role in retirement, but they are not all structured the same way.

Individual Bonds

  • Held to maturity if not sold
  • Provide defined interest payments
  • Return principal at maturity (assuming no default)

Bond Funds

  • Hold a diversified pool of bonds
  • Do not have a set maturity date
  • Fluctuate in value as interest rates change

Each approach may serve different purposes depending on liquidity needs, income preferences, and market conditions.

Bond investments are subject to risks including interest rate risk, credit risk, and inflation risk.

The Importance of Clear Communication in Planning

One of the most overlooked parts of retirement planning is language.

Terms like “conservative,” “moderate,” or “growth-oriented” can mean very different things depending on perspective.

For one investor, “conservative” may mean minimizing downside risk. For another, it may mean prioritizing income stability.

If these definitions are not clearly aligned, expectations can drift away from how a portfolio is actually structured.

That’s why clarity around goals, risk tolerance, and income needs can be an important part of the planning process.

Building a Retirement Income Strategy

A well-structured retirement plan is typically centered around a few key questions:

  • How much income is needed each year?
  • Where will that income come from?
  • How should withdrawals be structured over time?
  • How should taxes and RMDs be managed?
  • How does the portfolio respond to market changes?

Rather than focusing only on growth, retirement planning emphasizes sustainability, with the goal of aligning assets with long-term income needs.

How Agemy Financial Strategies Can Help With This Transition

Retirement Planning

Moving from the accumulation phase to the retirement income phase is one of the most important financial shifts an investor can experience.

While the concepts are straightforward, the implementation often requires coordination across investments, taxes, income needs, and risk considerations.

At Agemy Financial Strategies, we work with individuals who are approaching or already in retirement to help provide clarity around this transition and support the development of a more structured income-focused plan.

This process may include:

  • Reviewing how your current portfolio aligns with retirement income needs
  • Identifying gaps between expected income and the current structure
  • Evaluating how withdrawals, taxes, and market conditions may interact over time
  • Exploring approaches that may help organize income more efficiently
  • Aligning your investment strategy with your personal goals and definition of financial independence

The goal is not to predict markets, but to help you better understand how your financial strategy may function under different retirement scenarios.

For many investors, this is not about starting over—it’s about refining what already exists so it is better aligned with the next phase of life.

Final Thoughts: A Shift in How You Think About Money

Retirement is not just a financial milestone—it is a change in how your portfolio is used.

The focus shifts from building wealth to supporting income, from accumulation to distribution, and from long-term growth alone to long-term sustainability.

A thoughtful plan recognizes both market behavior and personal income needs, helping ensure that financial decisions remain aligned with life after work.

Educational Resources

Agemy Financial Strategies provides educational materials designed to help individuals better understand retirement income planning.

Learn more at agemy.com or call 800-725-7616. 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.

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