On this page
- Why Your Retirement Timeline Might Not Survive a Bear Market
- The Mechanism: Why Withdrawal Timing Destroys Everything
- Real Numbers: 2000 Versus 2010 Shows Why Sequence Matters
- The Critical Window: Five Years Before, Ten Years After
- Protecting Against Sequence Risk: Four Proven Strategies
- The Bottom Line: Plan for the Market to Crash Early
Why Your Retirement Timeline Might Not Survive a Bear Market
Two retirees retire with the same portfolio, the same withdrawal plan, and identical 7% average returns over 20 years. One has $600,000 left. The other ran out of money at 75. Neither made mistakes with fees or spending. The difference? When the market crashed—not if, but when—one experienced it early, the other late.
This is sequence of returns risk, and it is the single overlooked threat to retirement security. It does not appear in average-return calculations. It cannot be fixed by simply building a larger portfolio. It exists because portfolio math changes fundamentally once you start withdrawing money.
The Mechanism: Why Withdrawal Timing Destroys Everything
During your working years, the order of returns barely matters. You keep adding money, and compound growth smooths everything out. Whether your 7% average return comes from strong early years or strong late years, you reach the same ending wealth.
Retirement inverts this equation. Now you are taking money out, not adding it. This transforms the timing of losses from neutral to catastrophic.
A concrete example: You have $1 million, withdraw $40,000 in year one, then face a 40% market crash immediately after.
After withdrawal: $960,000 remains After crash: $576,000 remains
Compare this to a retirement where the same crash happens in year ten instead:
After ten years of 7% gains: Roughly $2 million (compounding the initial million) After the 40% crash: $1.2 million remains
Same crash magnitude. Completely opposite outcomes. The early crash obliterates 40% of principal right when it is most vulnerable—when you were already taking money out of it. The late crash strikes a much larger portfolio that had a full decade to compound. The early crash forces you to rebuild from a smaller base; the late crash lets the portfolio compound through most of your retirement.
Wade Pfau's research quantifies this asymmetry: approximately 77% of a retirement portfolio's final outcome depends on what happens during just the first ten years. That is not an exaggeration. The first decade of retirement—whether it happens to coincide with a bull market or a financial crisis—functionally determines whether you have enough.
Real Numbers: 2000 Versus 2010 Shows Why Sequence Matters
The 2000–2010 era provides a natural experiment. Investors retiring on January 1, 2000 faced a lost decade: the dot-com crash, then 9/11, then the 2008 financial crisis. The S&P 500 returned roughly negative 0.95% annualized over the decade. Yet the average return for the full 30-year period from 2000–2030 was still around 10% annualized.
A retiree with $1 million at a 4% withdrawal rate ($40,000 annually) looked very safe on paper. The 4% rule is a famous safe harbor, and 10% long-term returns should easily support it. But because the worst years came first, many of those retirees faced serious portfolio depletion by 2015. The portfolio never had a chance to recover before it was already damaged.
Someone retiring in 2010—right after the market bottom—faced the exact same long-term returns but in reverse order. By 2020, their portfolio had compounded during a roaring bull market while they withdrew the same $40,000 annually. The same returns, a decade apart, produced radically different retirement security.
Vanguard research confirms this asymmetry. Retirees who began withdrawals at major bear market onsets (like 2008) faced 81% portfolio depletion over 30 years, while those who started during strong markets faced only 50% depletion. This is despite facing identical market conditions over their entire retirement period. The culprit is permanent capital depletion. Every dollar you withdraw during a crash is gone forever. It cannot participate in recovery.
The Critical Window: Five Years Before, Ten Years After
Retirement researchers call the fifteen-year span around your retirement date—five years before and ten years after—the "retirement risk zone." This window carries disproportionate weight because portfolio balances are largest (you haven't withdrawn much yet) while vulnerability is highest (you are now taking distributions).
A 40% market decline at age 65 is far more damaging than the same decline at age 80. At 65, you may have 25+ years of withdrawals remaining; those withdrawals continue while the portfolio tries to recover, compounding the damage. At 80, you may only have 5–10 years left to live; the portfolio's recovery timeline is almost irrelevant.
This is why the decision to retire during market strength versus weakness is not just a financial event—it is fate. The retiree who happens to leave their job in January 2009 (market bottom) had roughly 70% better odds of portfolio success over 30 years than the person who retired in January 2008 (market peak), despite facing identical market conditions and following identical withdrawal strategies.
Protecting Against Sequence Risk: Four Proven Strategies
The cash bucket strategy. Hold 3–5 years of living expenses in cash, money market funds, or short-term bonds before retirement. During market crashes, you live off that cash bucket while equity portfolios recover untouched. This is not emergency savings—it is intentional sequence protection. Vanguard research shows that maintaining a 3–5-year cash buffer increases the odds of a 30-year retirement portfolio lasting to age 95 by roughly 20 percentage points.
Flexible spending. Retirees with the flexibility to reduce discretionary spending during market downturns face dramatically lower sequence risk. Instead of withdrawing a fixed 4% every year, you withdraw 3% during crashes and 5% during strong markets. Wade Pfau's research showed retirees could sustain withdrawal rates as high as 5.7% with flexibility—more than 40% above the 4% rule. Flexibility is worth approximately $400,000 in additional portfolio security on a $1 million portfolio.
Guaranteed income as a firewall. Social Security, pensions, and annuities provide income regardless of market conditions. Using guaranteed income to cover 50–75% of basic living expenses and drawing portfolio withdrawals only for discretionary spending fundamentally changes sequence risk exposure. Retirees with this structure face roughly half the sequence risk of those without guaranteed income covering basic needs.
Rising equity glide path. Enter retirement with a higher-than-usual bond allocation (say 60% bonds, 40% stocks) and gradually shift toward higher equity (70% stocks, 30% bonds) over the first 10–15 years. Bonds provide stability during critical early years when sequence risk is highest. By year ten, the portfolio is larger and more resilient, making higher stock allocation acceptable.
The Bottom Line: Plan for the Market to Crash Early
Average market returns cannot tell you whether your retirement will work. Bond allocation cannot. Your assets-to-expenses ratio alone cannot. Sequence matters because it determines whether those assets and returns actually show up in your account when you need them.
The safest retirement strategy is one that assumes sequence of returns risk will strike at the worst possible moment—early—and makes it survivable anyway. Build a cash bucket. Link basic expenses to guaranteed income. Keep discretionary spending truly discretionary. These are not optimizations. They are defenses against a risk that destroys retirements in years when average returns supposedly guarantee success.





