this post was submitted on 30 Nov 2024
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That's extremely conservative.
The longer you're in, the more "risk" transforms into volatility.
Any day or year may be up or down, but as years become decades, that up and down becomes background noise to the general march upward.
Agreed. IMO, there's no reason have much of anything in bonds until you're close to retirement. 10% is fine if you want some bonds to even out returns a bit, but the only reasons I can think of to have any significant amount in bonds are:
The only bonds I have are part of my emergency fund (half in t-bills, half in money market fund), and I don't intend to buy any more than that until I'm about 10 years from retirement. And even then, I'm considering a bond tent, meaning I'd buy bonds just before retiring (5-10 years) and then draw them down to zero over a longer term (10-20 years) and then be 100% stocks. The idea here is that my stocks will grow enough over that bond tent period that I won't need to worry about sequence of returns risk anymore since the stocks will more than make up for it. But even loading up to 40% or whatever in the 10 years prior to retirement is pretty reasonable (switch contributions to all bonds), if you want that security of a larger bond position.