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Financial planning the Monte Carlo way
By
Laura Bruce Bankrate.com
You wouldn't ordinarily confuse your
financial planner with a Las Vegas odds maker, but if he or she starts
talking about probabilities and outcomes and running your portfolio
through some Monte Carlo simulations, you might wonder.
A Monte Carlo simulation is a mathematical tool that
offers a way to evaluate a retirement portfolio to see if it will
last a lifetime. With the help of computer software, a planner can
simulate hundreds or thousands of market-condition scenarios and
learn the probability that your portfolio would last your expected
lifetime.
If your portfolio is run through 10,000 simulations,
projecting 10,000 separate retirement scenarios, and it works 8,000
times, it means there's an 80 percent probability that the portfolio
won't run out of money. If 80 percent seems too risky and you'd
like to increase the odds to 85 percent or 90 percent, you could
tweak the portfolio by adding more money to your investments or
taking out less.
Simple calulations misleading
A more traditional way to analyze a portfolio might be to look at
the individual investments in the portfolio and give each one an
expected rate of return. For example, stocks should average 10 percent
a year. Over the course of 20 or 30 years you could expect the portfolio
to appreciate by a certain amount.
"We think projecting a future based on a flat
rate is misleading in a worse way than Monte Carlo simulations can
be misleading," says Dan Moisand, certified financial planner
with Spraker, Fitzgerald, Tamayo & Moisand in Melbourne, Fla.
"It ignores the variability of assumptions that
are made. You can pick any number -- if you average X percent each
year, this is what it will look like. But in reality it doesn't
work out that way. Monte Carlo helps bring in that variability and
paints a more dynamic and realistic picture.
"The average rate of return has a 50/50 chance
of happening. No one wants their retirement to come down to a flip
of a coin. They want something bigger than a 50 percent chance of
success."
Monte Carlo not infallible
The math formula behind Monte Carlo has been around a long
time. Supposedly it was developed during the Manhattan Project,
the U.S. military effort to develop an atomic weapon during World
War II. While Monte Carlo simulations have been available to financial
planners for many years, the forecasting method only recently caught
on with the advent of high-powered personal computers that could
speedily handle the calculations.
"There's nothing magical about it or any other
type of analysis," says Dan Candura, certified financial planner
with ING Financial Horizons in Boston.
"The future is unknowable, and short of the Oracle
of Delphi, it's been a long time since anyone predicted the future.
"These tools give you possible scenarios of the
future. They help us make better decisions but not perfect decisions....
There's a lot of usefulness, but it's not new technology even though
there's a lot of buzz about it."
Candura uses Monte Carlo in conjunction with other
forecasting techniques, as do most financial planners who run Monte
Carlo simulations.
The retirement
income calculator that investment management company T. Rowe
Price makes available on its Web site uses Monte Carlo simulations.
Christine Fahlund, vice president of T. Rowe Price
Investment Services, says it's important to be very conservative
in projections, especially in terms of how much money you'll withdraw
from the account during the early years of retirement.
"We looked at bear markets in the first years
of retirement. We knew our investors would be fine if they didn't
lose any money early in retirement -- actually growing the pool
of money, spending some but it keeps growing. Eventually, you might
be able to take out more than you planned, but we focused on what
if there's a bear market early on. What you're taking out and what
the market is doing to your portfolio are two major factors."
Just as with almost any other financial projection,
it's garbage in, garbage out. You need to be realistic in estimating
your expenses during retirement. If you underestimate and need to
withdraw more than you planned, the probability that your portfolio
will last your lifetime goes out the window.
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