It's critical that advisers educate clients about the benefits
and trade-offs related to claiming Social Security at various ages
Aug 27, 2019 @ 11:55 am By Katherine Roy
Deciding when to
retire is very personal and depends on a number of factors, including a clearly
defined vision for how and where time and financial resources will be spent, health
and health-care insurance options, family longevity, and penalty-free or
mandated withdrawals from retirement accounts. Another key piece in this puzzle
is access to Social Security benefits.
It's critical that
financial advisers educate clients with the facts early — before their decision
is formed by less informed sources. Even for affluent clients, lifetime Social
Security benefits can be a significant percentage of their retirement wealth if
viewed as a lump sum.
According to an
analysis by the Urban Institute, a couple with combined annual earnings of
$133,400 who turn 65 in 2025 will receive $821,000 in Social Security benefits
in their lifetime.
In my discussions
with both advisers and individuals, I've witnessed that the Social Security
claiming decision can be overwhelming. Present bias — the overvaluing of
short-term gains rather than long-term rewards — is powerful and
is not helped by the fact that most Americans significantly underestimate how
long they might live.
The result?
Confusion about when and why to claim Social Security benefits.
Here are three key
areas advisers should focus on when helping their clients navigate Social
Security.
1. Understand Social
Security timing trade-offs
Surprisingly, few
Americans understand the benefits and trade-offs related to claiming Social
Security at various ages. The Social Security program is structured to pay
higher benefits to those who delay claiming — in other words, beneficiaries
have a choice of smaller checks earlier or bigger checks later.
Financial advisers
play a pivotal role in helping clients understand that when they claim Social
Security will have a permanent impact on the benefit they receive. Claiming
before full retirement age can significantly reduce benefits, while delaying
increases it.
For example, a
client who is 65 or older with a full retirement age of 66 can receive 32% more
in a benefit check if they delay until age 70 instead of claiming next year.
Advisers should
work with their clients to run different scenarios showing how each claiming
age and benefit will fit into their overall plan, and help them make a decision
that best suits their personal circumstances.
2. Maximize Social
Security benefits
To combat present
bias and life expectancy naysayers, advisers should help every client
understand his or her "Social Security break-even age" — how long
they need to live to make waiting to collect a bigger benefit actually give
them more in total value than claiming smaller benefits earlier.
An important
follow-on is to highlight the odds that he or she may reach that age or beyond.
In the case of a married couple with a wide earnings difference, the primary
earner also needs to understand the odds that just one spouse may live to those
ages, because his or her claiming decision will be what the survivor will
receive when one spouse passes away.
The chart below
illustrates this for a median earner — but the results are the same for all
individuals.
Cumulative individual median benefit by claim
age
Full Retirement Age (FRA) = Age 66 & 6
months. Break-even ages are highlighted below. Hover over the bars to compare
the benefits.
At age 62, probability of living to at least
age:
62
|
66
|
70
|
76
|
80
|
90
|
|
Single
male
|
100%
|
94%
|
87%
|
73%
|
60%
|
21%
|
Single female
|
100%
|
97%
|
92%
|
81%
|
71%
|
32%
|
Couple
|
100%
|
99%
|
99%
|
95%
|
88%
|
47%
|
Source: Social
Security Administration, Current Population Survey, J.P. Morgan Asset
Management.
*Couple assumes at
least one lives to the specified age or beyond. Break-even assumes the same
individual, born in 1957, earns the median individual income, retires at the
end of age 61 and claims at 62 & 1 month, 66 & 6 months and 70,
respectively. Benefits are assumed to increase each year based on the Social
Security Administration 2018 Trustee's Report "intermediate"
estimates (annual benefit increase of 2.7% in 2020 and 2.6% thereafter).
Monthly amounts without the cost of living adjustments (not shown on the chart)
are: $1,080 at age 62; $1,491 at FRA; and $1,908 at age 70. Exact break-even
ages are 76 & 4 months and 80 & 5 months.
3. Consider all
unique personal circumstances
Advisers should
encourage clients to consider all personal circumstances that can dictate the most
appropriate Social Security decision. For example, for individuals whose health
is poor or who have chronic conditions that are very likely to shorten life
expectancy, it may be a higher priority to receive benefits sooner than delay and
not achieve the relevant break-even age.
Likewise, depending
on their financial situation, some retirees may not be eager to tap into their
savings to pay for living expenses and may elect to take Social Security early
to protect their assets.
If delaying
claiming and using their portfolio would cause them to change their investment
strategy in an overly negative way (i.e., move more heavily into cash or
selling out of equities all together), this may be prudent decision as long as
they understand the trade-offs they are making. If, however, it is because they
think they can "out-invest" Social Security, advisers should explain
to them that this is virtually impossible to do over normal life expectancies
and given the market outlook for at least the next 10 to 15 years.
Advisers should
also warn their clients against taking Social Security benefits early out of
fear that the program will run out of money. While it's true that the trust
fund is projected to run out by 2035, it's highly likely that Congress will act
to shore up the system before then, and any major changes to claiming ages or
benefit amounts are most likely to affect much younger Americans who will have
more time to adjust for the changes.
Social Security is
an important component of retirement income for everyone who's eligible to
claim a benefit, regardless of the wealth level of the individual.
Financial advisers
play a critical role in assessing the unique personal circumstances of their
client to successfully guide them to make the right, informed decision about
which Social Security claiming age works best for their unique retirement
income plan.
Katherine Roy is chief retirement
strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset Management.
https://www.investmentnews.com/article/20190827/BLOG09/190829950/helping-clients-crack-the-code-on-social-security
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