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By Austin Smith
A 58-year-old with a $1.2M portfolio faces sequence-of-returns risk from an equity-heavy allocation, where a 20% market drop would eliminate $240,000 before retirement starts. The bucket strategy addresses this by allocating two years of expenses to cash in money market funds yielding above 4% at Vanguard (VTI), Fidelity, and Schwab (SCHB), years three through five to bonds like the 10-year Treasury at 4.27% or I-bonds at 4.03%, and the remainder to diversified equities with five-plus years to recover.
With the VIX in the 93.8th percentile of its annual range, oil surging $23.52 in one week, and core PCE inflation at its highest 12-month reading, holding 80% equities at 58 is dangerously exposed to a forced stock sale during a downturn when immediate retirement withdrawals begin.
A recent study identified one single habit that doubled Americans’ retirement savings and moved retirement from dream, to reality. Read more here.
A financial planner sat down with a 58-year-old client who had done almost everything right. Steady contributions over three decades. A $1.2 million portfolio. A retirement date penciled in for 62 or 63. Then the planner said something that stopped the conversation cold: the way the money is invested right now could cost more than a new car before retirement even starts.
The mistake is not obscure. It is the most common one planners see in pre-retirees: staying in an aggressive growth allocation right when that strategy becomes genuinely dangerous.
Factor | Detail |
|---|---|
Age | 58 |
Portfolio Value | $1.2 million |
Core Issue | Equity-heavy allocation entering sequence-of-returns risk window |
What Is at Stake | A 20% drawdown equals $240,000 lost before retirement begins |
Time Horizon to Retirement | 4 to 7 years |
For most of a working life, a market crash is a buying opportunity. There are decades to recover. At 58, that math changes. If the market drops 20% the year before retirement, the retiree is either delaying retirement or locking in those losses by selling into a down market to cover living expenses. That is sequence-of-returns risk, and it is the single biggest threat to a near-retiree's financial plan.
Read: Data Shows One Habit Doubles American’s Savings And Boosts Retirement
Most Americans drastically underestimate how much they need to retire and overestimate how prepared they are. But data shows that people with one habit have more than double the savings of those who don’t.
A 20% drawdown on $1.2 million is $240,000 gone. A loss that size permanently reduces the income the portfolio can generate over the next 30 years. There is no riding it out when withdrawals begin immediately after.
The current environment makes this more urgent than it would have been five years ago. The VIX, Wall Street's fear gauge, sits at 27.29 as of March 12, 2026, in the 93.8th percentile of its past year's range. WTI crude oil has surged from $71.13 on March 2 to $94.65 on March 9, a $23.52 jump in one week, driven by geopolitical pressure that is feeding directly into inflation. Core PCE, the Fed's preferred inflation measure, reached its highest reading in the past 12 months at 128.394 as of January 2026, sitting near the top of its historical range. The Fed has room to cut, but not much: the federal funds rate sits at 3.75%, unchanged since December 11, 2025.
This is not a normal backdrop for holding 80% equities at 58.
The planner recommended against selling everything and hiding in cash. Instead, the recommendation was to restructure the portfolio into three buckets, each serving a different time horizon.
Bucket 1: Cash (Years 1 to 2 of retirement expenses). Money market funds at Vanguard, Fidelity, and Schwab are currently yielding above 4%. This bucket covers the first two years of living expenses without touching equities, which means a market crash in year one of retirement does not force selling stocks at the worst possible time.
Bucket 2: Bonds (Years 3 to 5 of expenses). The 10-year Treasury yields 4.27% as of March 12, 2026. I-bonds are currently yielding 4.03%. A bond ladder covering years three through five of retirement gives time for equities to recover from a downturn before drawing on them.
Bucket 3: Equities (Everything else). The remainder stays in diversified stocks, with five or more years to recover before it needs to be touched. This is where long-term growth happens. The approach does not abandon equities; it protects the near-term while letting the long-term portion do its job.
The critical move the planner described is not a complicated rebalancing exercise. It involves identifying annual retirement spending, multiplying that by two, and moving that amount into cash or money markets. The planner recommended doing the same calculation for years three through five and shifting that into bonds.
What this approach buys is time. Time for markets to recover before a forced sale. That protection is worth far more than the marginal return that might come from staying fully invested in equities for four more years.
The one mistake planners warn against: treating this as optional until retirement gets closer. Market volatility can shift fast. The VIX spiked to 52.33 on April 8, 2025, from levels that looked calm just weeks earlier. By the time a correction is obvious, the damage is already done.
At 58 with $1.2 million, a portfolio of that size represents decades of disciplined saving. The bucket strategy is one approach financial planners use to protect near-term income without giving up the long-term growth a retirement portfolio still needs.
Most Americans drastically underestimate how much they need to retire and overestimate how prepared they are. But data shows that people with one habit have more than double the savings of those who don’t.
And no, it’s got nothing to do with increasing your income, savings, clipping coupons, or even cutting back on your lifestyle. It’s much more straightforward (and powerful) than any of that. Frankly, it’s shocking more people don’t adopt the habit given how easy it is.