The post Playing It Safe at 63 With $850,000 in Cash and Bonds Is Quietly Costing This Retiree About $34,000 a Year appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
The scenario looks like this: a 63-year-old has built up $850,000 over a working lifetime, watched 2022 and a few scary headlines since, and parked almost all of it in CDs, money market funds, and short Treasuries paying roughly 4%. That throws off about $34,000 a year in interest. It feels prudent. It is also quietly expensive.
Versions of this exact post show up weekly on Reddit’s r/retirement and r/Bogleheads, and Clark Howard regularly tells callers the same thing he told one in a 2018 episode: a sensible retirement core is “60% stocks, 40% bonds“ in a low-cost balanced index, not 100% cash. The fear is understandable. The math is unforgiving.
The Fed funds upper bound sits at almost 4%, down from 4.5% a year ago after three consecutive 25 basis point cuts. The 10-year Treasury yields almost 5%. That looks fine on a statement. It looks worse next to CPI, which sits at 332.4 and has climbed steadily over the past year.
Long-run capital markets assumptions from firms like Vanguard and Morningstar generally put a balanced 60/40 portfolio several percentage points ahead of cash over a multi-decade horizon. Apply a conservative 4 percentage point differential to $850,000 and the implied opportunity cost is roughly $34,000 a year in forgone expected growth. That figure is an assumption, not a promise, and any real path will include drawdowns. Over 25 years, though, the gap compounds into hundreds of thousands of dollars of purchasing power.
The relevant rules in 2026 reinforce the long horizon: RMDs don’t begin until age 73 under SECURE 2.0, full Social Security retirement age is 67, and qualified dividends are taxed at 0%, 15%, or 20%, often lower than the ordinary-income rate that hits CD interest.
First, write down the actual annual spending number. If $34,000 of interest covers it with Social Security, the urgency is lower, but the inflation problem still applies; at 3% inflation, that $850,000 loses roughly half its purchasing power over 25 years. Second, move in tranches, not all at once. Shifting 5% per quarter into a diversified equity sleeve over a year removes the “I bought at the top” regret that keeps people frozen. Third, avoid the most common mistake here, which is treating any equity exposure as gambling. The real gamble, at 63, is assuming inflation will be polite for the next 30 years. It will not.
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The post Playing It Safe at 63 With $850,000 in Cash and Bonds Is Quietly Costing This Retiree About $34,000 a Year appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


