Register For Our Mailing List

Register to receive our free weekly newsletter including editorials.

Home / 233

Welcome to the Summer Series 233 with Guest Editor, Jeremy Cooper

  •   5 January 2018
  •      
  •   

Retirement is different

As Cuffelinks celebrates five years of publishing, I have chosen five of my favourite articles over that time, all of which deal with the ‘retirement income challenge’ one way or another.

To illustrate what the articles were about, consider the example of the age pension. Age pension payments arrive every 14 days. They are exact in amount and unambiguously spendable. Twice a year, the payments are adjusted to ensure that they meet inflation, wage and living standard benchmarks, but are otherwise stable. The age pension is risk-free (from investment markets, although it is susceptible to policy changes) and lasts for life.

The Cuffelinks articles deal with the myriad issues that flow from the fact that the most common retirement-phase products have precisely none of those features.

The Yin and Yang of retirement income philosophies, written in conjunction with the American College’s Professor of Retirement Income Wade Pfau, outlines two schools of thought on the retirement income challenge: probability-based and ‘safety-first’. The safety-first approach is about securing essential spending needs in retirement, with room for more probability-based approaches for discretionary spending.

In the article, Three crucial mistakes about life expectancy, former Co-Chair of global consulting for Russell Investments, Don Ezra, pinpoints the common pitfalls that people make about life expectancy. People have difficulty understanding the arithmetic. Also, it is not just that we are living longer, but the fact that we don’t know exactly how long we will live that complicates retirement income planning.

Nobel Laureate Robert Merton picks up on the theme of income certainty in retirement. His thoughts were recorded by Alan Hartstein in Deriving an effective retirement income, following Merton’s visit to Australia in 2016. Merton argued that super funds need to focus on strategies that manage income risks throughout the retirees’ life. He characterised these as largely consisting of interest rate risk and inflation in the years leading into and in retirement.

Some super funds have woken up to this challenge. How VicSuper evolved its retirement income model was a timely piece from CEO, Michael Dundon, on how VicSuper implemented an income layering approach as a protection against longevity risk and sequencing risk. The approach involves identifying needs and wants and creating a secure layer of income above the age pension to meet essential spending needs.

We round out our retirement journey by looking at aged care. In a very personal account, Lessons from my Dad, in and out of aged care, Alex Denham provides a poignant and evocative window into the human impact of aged care and how even being a recognised expert in the area sometimes isn’t enough to avoid some of the pitfalls.

Importantly, this selection of articles highlights that genuine retirement income solutions must always have the end customer in mind. The authors consistently reinforce this reality, rather than getting stuck on investments and products that are just a means to an end, rather than the end itself.

Jeremy Cooper is Chairman, Retirement Income at Challenger Limited, former Deputy Chair of ASIC including Chair of a comprehensive review of Australia's superannuation system (the Cooper Review).

 

Edition 233 | 5 Jan 2018 | Editorial | Newsletter

 


 

Leave a Comment:

banner

Most viewed in recent weeks

Maybe it’s time to consider taxing the family home

Australia could unlock smarter investment and greater equity by reforming housing tax concessions. Rethinking exemptions on the family home could benefit most Australians, especially renters and owners of modest homes.

Supercharging the ‘4% rule’ to ensure a richer retirement

The creator of the 4% rule for retirement withdrawals, Bill Bengen, has written a new book outlining fresh strategies to outlive your money, including holding fewer stocks in early retirement before increasing allocations.

Simple maths says the AI investment boom ends badly

This AI cycle feels less like a revolution and more like a rerun. Just like fibre in 2000, shale in 2014, and cannabis in 2019, the technology or product is real but the capital cycle will be brutal. Investors beware.

Why we should follow Canada and cut migration

An explosion in low-skilled migration to Australia has depressed wages, killed productivity, and cut rental vacancy rates to near decades-lows. It’s time both sides of politics addressed the issue.

Are franking credits worth pursuing?

Are franking credits factored into share prices? The data suggests they're probably not, and there are certain types of stocks that offer higher franking credits as well as the prospect for higher returns.

Are LICs licked?

LICs are continuing to struggle with large discounts and frustrated investors are wondering whether it’s worth holding onto them. This explains why the next 6-12 months will be make or break for many LICs.

Latest Updates

A nation of landlords and fund managers

Super and housing dwarf every other asset class in Australia, and they’ve both become too big to fail. Can they continue to grow at current rates, and if so, what are the implications for the economy, work and markets?

Economy

The hidden property empire of Australia’s politicians

With rising home prices and falling affordability, political leaders preach reform. But asset disclosures show many are heavily invested in property - raising doubts about whose interests housing policy really protects.

Retirement

Retiring debt-free may not be the best strategy

Retiring with debt may have advantages. Maintaining a mortgage on the family home can provide a line of credit in retirement for flexibility, extra income, and a DIY reverse mortgage strategy.

Shares

Why the ASX is losing Its best companies

The ASX is shrinking not by accident, but by design. A governance model that rewards detachment over ownership is driving capital into private hands and weakening public markets.

Investment strategies

3 reasons the party in big tech stocks may be over

The AI boom has sparked investor euphoria, but under the surface, US big tech is showing cracks - slowing growth, surging capex, and fading dominance signal it's time to question conventional tech optimism.

Investment strategies

Resilience is the new alpha

Trade is now a strategic weapon, reshaping the investment landscape. In this environment, resilient companies - those capable of absorbing shocks and defending margins - are best positioned to outperform.

Shares

The DNA of long-term compounding machines

The next generation of wealth creation is likely to emerge from founder influenced firms that combine scalable models with long-term alignment. Four signs can alert investors to these companies before the crowds.

Sponsors

Alliances

© 2025 Morningstar, Inc. All rights reserved.

Disclaimer
The data, research and opinions provided here are for information purposes; are not an offer to buy or sell a security; and are not warranted to be correct, complete or accurate. Morningstar, its affiliates, and third-party content providers are not responsible for any investment decisions, damages or losses resulting from, or related to, the data and analyses or their use. To the extent any content is general advice, it has been prepared for clients of Morningstar Australasia Pty Ltd (ABN: 95 090 665 544, AFSL: 240892), without reference to your financial objectives, situation or needs. For more information refer to our Financial Services Guide. You should consider the advice in light of these matters and if applicable, the relevant Product Disclosure Statement before making any decision to invest. Past performance does not necessarily indicate a financial product’s future performance. To obtain advice tailored to your situation, contact a professional financial adviser. Articles are current as at date of publication.
This website contains information and opinions provided by third parties. Inclusion of this information does not necessarily represent Morningstar’s positions, strategies or opinions and should not be considered an endorsement by Morningstar.