COLUMNIST: Stop chasing a 'magic number' for retirement | Arkansas Democrat Gazette
A column in Arkansas Democrat Gazette argues that retirement planning should not hinge on chasing a single “magic number” for how much money someone needs to retire. The author says that regardless of whether a target is $5 million, $1 million, or $50,000, a number alone cannot show whether a person is truly on track, nor how much spending flexibility they will have each month. Instead, the piece emphasizes the goal of generating steady income throughout retirement, which differs from simply accumulating wealth by a date. It notes risks such as “duration mismatch,” where annuity and long-term bond prices can move unpredictably relative to typical portfolios of stocks and short-term bonds. The column provides an example: converting $1 million into an income strategy for 20 years of inflation-protected income would have yielded about $53,000 per year in 2016, $47,000 in 2020, and $65,000 if done this year. It concludes that managing this risk may require investing for income well before retirement.





