Global Markets
At 65, Amy’s Retirement Viability: Cash‑Flow vs Asset Liquidity Breakdown
724FinanceGökberk Uçar
At 65, Amy holds a $2.2 million San Francisco home and $915,000 in retirement accounts, asking whether she can finally retire.
Illiquidity Trap: Real Estate Not Generating Cash Flow
Amy’s total assets amount to $3.4 million, yet most of this is locked in two properties—a non‑rental wine country second home and her primary residence with a $320 k mortgage at 3%—leaving liquidity constrained.Cash‑Flow Bridge: $100 K Annual Draw From Rollover IRA
Jill Schlesinger recommends pulling $100 k per year from the rollover IRA to cover Amy’s $9 k monthly spending; after tax this nets roughly $8.3 k per month, providing a temporary bridge until Social Security kicks in at age 70.Debt‑Payment Strategy: 3% Mortgage vs 4.6% Treasury Yield
Schlesinger advises against paying off the mortgage early; instead, deploying cash into the 10‑year Treasury yielding %4.6 beats the %3 mortgage cost, delivering a positive spread.Social Security Bridge: $51 K Annual Income at Age 70
At 70, Amy’s Social Security benefit will be $51 k per year (≈ $4.25 k/month), aligning with the exhaustion of the IRA drawdown and stabilizing long‑term cash flow.Advisor Network for Personal Financial Planning
SmartAsset’s free advisor‑matching tool connects users with up to three fiduciary advisors who can craft a personalized retirement target, model cash‑flow needs, and optimize asset allocation.Gökberk Uçar: Amy’s asset structure highlights a heavy‑real‑estate liquidity risk; a cash‑flow‑focused rebalancing—systematic rollover IRA withdrawals, shifting mortgage pay‑downs to low‑risk Treasuries, and advisor‑guided asset allocation—can reliably extend her retirement horizon.