Will Ee Ling run out of money if she retires at 58?
RETIREMENT
REALITY CHECK™
$150KBank Savings
58Target Retire Age
$10,000Monthly Target
$2,000CPF LIFE/mo (age 65)
—CPF OA
Client Profile
Scenario 1
Scenario 2
Scenario 3
Comparison
What Changes?
▶
⚙
RETIREMENT OBJECTIVE
— wants to retire at —, with —/mo for life.
Configure client details in the Settings tab to populate this report.
RETIRE AT
—
—
Financial Snapshot
Liquid Assets
Bank Savings—
Emergency Reserve—
Available to Deploy—
Additional Assets
Add lump sums in the What Changes tab to see them here.
Current Cashflow
Take-home Income—
Total Expenses—
Monthly Surplus—
Scenario 1 — Savings Drawdown
Draw from savings to fund the gap between income and monthly need.
Status Quo
Key assumptions: Savings earn 1% p.a. interest on declining balance. Monthly need inflated at 3% p.a. Annual draw = (monthly need − income sources) × 12. CPF LIFE added from the configured start age.
Invest available savings into a dividend portfolio at 5% yield + 2% capital growth. Emergency reserve kept liquid. Add lump sums via What Changes.
Recommended
Portfolio setup:— invested from Day 1 at 5% dividend yield = —/mo initial income. Capital appreciation: 2% p.a. Surplus income reinvested. Shortfall drawn from — buffer first, then portfolio. CPF LIFE added from age —.
Emergency Reserve
—
Set aside — not invested
Covers
—
months of monthly expenses
Deployed to Portfolio
—
savings minus reserve
Pre-retirement (shaded): dividends and monthly surplus both reinvested — portfolio compounds before client draws a cent. Post-retirement: shortfall drawn from emergency reserve first, then portfolio. Dividend = 5% × portfolio ÷ 12. Add lump sums via What Changes tab.
Scenario 3 — Dividend + Growth Portfolio
Everything in Scenario 2, plus an additional monthly contribution into a separate growth portfolio during working years. At retirement, the growth portfolio folds into the dividend portfolio.
Enhanced
Growth Portfolio:—/mo contributed for 10 years (ages —–—) into a growth fund at 8% p.a. Accumulated value folds into the dividend portfolio at age —. All other assumptions identical to Scenario 2.