SmartPlan Spanish Enhances Engagement and Enrollment
A new Spanish-language version of the SmartPlan retirement educational program purports to be the first solution of its kind tailored specifically to the Spanish-speaking community.
SmartPlan Spanish supports users with a culture-conscious approach to retirement education, according to
vWise Inc., the financial software and solutions provider behind SmartPlan. The
firm hopes the SmartPlan Spanish product will enhance employee engagement and
enrollment through interactive training sessions, similar to its original counterpart.
“SmartPlan Spanish brings access to our industry-leading
technology to even more participants anytime, anywhere and on any device,” says
Tony Mingo, president and CEO of vWise.
Similar to the original SmartPlan product, SmartPlan Spanish offers easy-to-use education
formats for employees with varying degrees of reading and investment
comprehension. The result is a potentially more seamless enrollment and
decisionmaking process for plan participants and officials, vWise says.
Additionally, the solution works with a 401(k) plan provider’s existing
presence across print materials and online technology tools.
“With interactive SmartPlan in Spanish, the workplace
retirement plan is now easier to understand, more engaging and accessible to
even more employees,” adds Mingo.
A short video with additional information is available here.
Harold Evensky, chairman, Evensky & Katz/Foldes
Financial in Coral Gables, Florida, says one “bucket” strategy is based on time
or age: individuals would have a “bucket” of assets to use from age 65 to 75,
another to use from age 75 to 85, and another for after age 85, for example.
A second “bucket” strategy, according to Evensky, is based
on goals or fixed versus variable expenses. One bucket could be set aside for
basic living expenses, another for funding college savings of a child or
grandchild, and another for traveling or whatever other goal or variable
expense a retiree has.
Evensky tells PLANADVISER he is not a fan of either of these
bucket strategies. The problem with the goals-based bucket strategy is if the
goals are not prioritized chronologically, the individual may over-save and not
have money for the short term, or vice versa, Evensky says. Daniel D’Ordine,
CFP, DDO Advisory Services, LLC, in New York City, adds that food, shelter and clothing
are obviously fixed expenses, and most would say vacations are variable
expenses, but the line between fixed and variable often gets blurred by
investors.
“The time-based bucket strategy is manageable; an individual
would invest the short-term bucket in bonds and the longer-term buckets in
stock,” Evensky explains. “But as the individual gets older the tax and
transaction costs of rebalancing buckets will eat the person alive. That
strategy is cost and tax inefficient.”
Cost and tax efficiency are the reasons D’Ordine advises clients
who are working and in retirement-savings accumulation mode to fund three
buckets of assets—tax-deferred, taxable and tax-free. He tells PLANADVISER the
goal is to prevent a situation during retirement in which everything is in the
tax-deferred bucket. “If all of the assets/accounts from which retirees are
drawing are tax-deferred, then [the retirees] are at the mercy of ordinary
income tax brackets,” he notes. According to D’Ordine, in many states—such as
New York, California and Massachusetts—that can mean that to spend $100,000, a
retiree would need to withdraw $140,000 or $150,000.
He suggests three buckets for retirement income:
Tax-deferred – This would include
employer-sponsored defined contribution (DC) and defined benefit (DB) plans, individual
retirement accounts (IRAs) and non-qualified deferred annuities—all for which
retirees would pay ordinary income tax on distributions.
Taxable – This could include a taxable brokerage,
mutual fund or investment account—from which retirees would pay capital gains taxes,
which D’Ordine notes are currently more favorable than ordinary income taxes.
Tax-free – This would include Roth IRAs, Roth 401(k)
or 403(b) accounts, and cash value life insurance, if appropriate. D’Ordine
says municipal bonds fall into this category because the income is typically
tax-free.
With these buckets, if an individual needs $25,000, she
should determine the least expensive way to tap assets to get this money,
D’Ordine explains. “It could be a loan or withdrawal from a cash value insurance
policy, or it could be a withdrawal from a tax-deferred account, depending on
the individual’s tax bracket.”
He adds that some people will be in a low tax bracket, and
depending on the total amount of assets they have, having different tax buckets may not matter.
However, in general, he says, “The decisions you make while accumulating savings
can make a big impact on your experience taking distributions. Small decisions
now can make a big difference.”
The bucket approach Evensky has suggested since the 1980s is
a split between a cash flow reserve and an investment component. Some of an
investor’s portfolio needs to be invested over a long time horizon to maximize
potential returns, he explains. But, for income needed in the short-term,
investors need to minimize risk.
Evensky would suggest that individuals carve out of their
portfolios the amount they would need in the next five years and put that money
in money market accounts, short-term bond funds with a duration of one or one
and one-half years, or possibly certificates of deposit (CDs), depending on the
individual’s tax bracket. The rest of the person’s portfolio would be invested
for the long term, which D’Ordine says should be really invested, meaning in a
professionally managed, global portfolio.
Working with some academics last year, Evensky now thinks
carving out one year at a time is optimal. For example, if a person decides he
needs $40,000 per year as income in retirement, he could put that amount into a
CD and invest the rest. This strategy addresses one of the major risks in
retirement, he notes—the sequence of withdrawal risk, or risk of having to take
money from investments when markets are down.
Where do defined contribution (DC) plans and Social Security
fit into Evensky’s bucket strategy? He says these are factored in when
determining an individual’s needs in retirement. “Typically we would encourage
deferring withdrawals from DC plans as long as possible—typically it’s the last
place from which we would suggest withdrawing—so those accounts would be part
of an individual’s long-term investment bucket,” he says. However, rarely they
make an exception when a person wants to delay Social Security and needs to
access other funds in order to do that.
While often individuals are encouraged to delay taking
Social Security to get a bigger monthly payment, D’Ordine takes a different
approach. “Of course, if an individual needs the money, he should go ahead and
take it,” he says. “But, even if a client doesn’t need it right away, I tell
them they can wait, but they are giving up three or so years of income that
will take them until a certain age to recover.” He suggests individuals look at
why they would give up that income, and what will they need to do to replace it.
“They may either have to continue working or withdraw from assets, and if they withdraw
from assets, that may cost them.”
Sponsors of DC retirement plans can and should help
individuals with a withdrawal strategy and have the tools to help them set up
buckets for retirement income, says Roberta Rafaloff, vice president of institutional
annuities at MetLife in New York City. “We strongly believe that retirement
income should be the outcome of every DC plan,” she tells PLANADVISER.
She suggests plan sponsors think of income options available
for DC plans as a spectrum from maximum income flexibility to maximum income
guarantees. Systematic withdrawals are on the maximum flexibility end and
immediate or deferred income annuities are on the other end of the spectrum.
MetLife recommends plan sponsors offer partial annuitization
for DC plan participants. “Participants can build an income stream with some
portion of their assets, and the rest can remain in the plan and continue to be
invested and, hopefully, grow,” Rafaloff says.
She thinks offering participants choice is a great idea, so
plan sponsors can offer participants an opportunity to purchase an immediate
annuity that starts at age 65 as well as a longevity annuity, starting at age
85. “Some people think they can manage assets 10 or 15 years into retirement,
but they worry about having assets if they live longer,” she notes.
Rafaloff says it is really important for DC plan sponsors to
start thinking about how they are going to offer income solutions within their plans.
She suggests they consider what participants are looking for, how to measure
success of their plan to include retirement income, and what products they can
include to make sure employees are prepared for retirement.
D’Ordine concludes that every person is different and will
have different situations. “My only blanket approach is not to have a blanket
approach,” he says, suggesting financial professionals use as much information
as possible to help individuals make the right decisions.