
Episode 461:  Transitioning To Forever Plans, SCHD And Bitcoin, Our Purpose For Value, And When To Make Adjustments (Probably Never)
In this episode we answer emails from Tyson, Patrick, and Shuchi.  We discuss the basics of transitioning, SCHD as a value fund choice, bitcoin vs. gold, why "only works for 30 years" is a fake problem, the difference between our use of value funds vs. Paul Merriman's, and when would me make adjustments to our plans in retirement.
Links:
Bigger Pockets Money Podcast #1:  The Secret to a 5% Safe Withdrawal Rate | Frank Vasquez
Bigger Pockets Money Podcast #2:  We Built a 5% SWR Retirement Portfolio Using Fidelity in 48 Minutes (Golden Ratio Portfolio)
Morningstar Analysis of SCHD:  SCHD Stock - Schwab US Dividend Equity ETF | Morningstar
Golden Ratio Portfolio on Portfolio Charts:  Golden Ratio Portfolio – Portfolio Charts
Retirement Spending Calculator:  Retirement Spending – Portfolio Charts
Drawdowns Calculator:  Drawdowns – Portfolio Charts
Michael Batnick Critique of CAPE Ratio "Predictions":  Stocks Are More Expensive Than They Used to Be
Breathless AI-Bot Summary:
A plan that survives contact with the market looks different from the one you sketch on a napkin. We break down the 80 percent FI pivot—why shifting from an aggressive accumulation mix to a retirement-ready allocation a few years early can defuse sequence risk without surrendering growth—and show how to decide when to pull that lever without second-guessing every blip.
We also tackle one of the most popular questions right now: can Bitcoin replace gold? Short answer: not for core diversification. Gold’s role as a Basel III Tier 1 reserve asset and its central bank demand make it a unique stabilizer in a way that risk-on assets can’t duplicate. Bitcoin behaves more like a levered tech proxy, which is interesting for satellite bets but insufficient as an anchor. On equities, we explain why splitting the stock sleeve between growth and value—think a broad growth-leaning fund paired with a true value fund like SCHD—creates the performance dispersion that fuels rebalancing gains during stress, raising durability without betting on factor outperformance.
If the 30-year rule worries you, breathe. Withdrawal rates flatten as horizons extend, and real-world retiree inflation typically runs 1 to 2 percent below CPI, offsetting the longer timeline. Add simple guardrails—pausing raises, trimming discretionary spend in bad years—and you can boost sustainability by about a percentage point. The key is to know your portfolio’s historical drawdown depth and length, set bright lines for action, and avoid valuation-based fortune-telling. Diversification and disciplined rebalancing beat crystal balls.
If you found this helpful, follow the show, leave a review, and share it with a friend planning their FI transition. Your support helps more DIY investors build portfolios designed to last for life.
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