Depression risk could derail your retirement portfolio
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[May 14, 2019]
By Beth Pinsker
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Retirement savings can
suffer from interest rate moves, market volatility and other financial
risks, but depression can be just as damaging.
The transition to retirement itself is enough to trigger mood problems
if you are emotionally unprepared, said Jamie Hopkins, director of
Retirement Research at Carson Group.
"What we typically see is photos of retiree couples on the beach, and
they look happy," Hopkins said.
But others feel isolated when suddenly separated from meaningful work.
"Some people don't know what they are supposed to be doing," Hopkins
said.
Catalysts such as declining health can be depressing as life gets more
limited. Caregivers often become widows or widowers, and are at
high-risk without a significant other to care for them.
"Lots of widows refer to it as jello brain," said Kathleen Rehl, author
of "Moving Forward on Your Own: A Financial Guide for Widows," and for
years a financial planner primarily for widows. "You just can't think
straight, and it shuts down some of your normal functions."
FINANCIAL IMPACTS
Depression can have a real and lasting financial impact, so mental
health must be a factor in retirement planning.
"We talk about diversifying your portfolio and your life," said Neal Van
Zutphen, a certified financial planner from Tempe, Arizona, whose
clients include those who wildly spend to fill a void.
Consider just healthcare costs: depression lowers immune system
responses, strains the heart, limits the ability to care for yourself,
and depletes energy.
A home health aide or assisted living facility costs more than $4,000
month in most parts of the country, and a shared room at a nursing home
can run more than $7,000, according to Genworth's 2018 Cost of Care
survey.
"It just knocks the socks off any other expense," said Debra Newman, a
recent retiree who spent her consulting career selling long-term care
insurance to reduce such risks.
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A couple sit on the beach and look out to sea on the August bank
holiday weekend in Worthing, Britain, August 26, 2017.
REUTERS/Russell Boyce/File Photo/File Photo
Hopkins assesses clients' happiness and finances when creating retirement
projections. The key question: Where will you find your meaning? Then Hopkins
prompts people to think about goal-based planning.
Retirees planning to go on a cruise or buy a second home need to do more than
rely on their general savings, said Hopkins.
Phased retirement, with shorter work hours, helps clients ease into a new
lifestyle. "This gives you the ability to test-drive retirement, as opposed to
cold turkey," Hopkins said.
DUE DILIGENCE
Depressed retirees are also vulnerable to scams targeting those desperate for
help, experts said.
Rehl worked with one widow who handed over a chunk of her life savings to buy
the Iraqi currency and lost it all. Many widows she works with fall prey because
of financial illiteracy. Complicated insurance products with suspect terms can
wreck retirement plans, Rehl noted.
Financial education is the best bet, but for people experiencing grief and
possible depression, a thick, jargon-filled report can be daunting.
Graphics are Rehl's answer. She divided up widow Liz's $1.5 million into colored
blocks, including for inheritance, charity and spending (to create memories with
family). Each area was tied to a goal-based investment strategy.
"She'd bring this graphic to meetings," said Rehl, and they worked together to
plot out the rest of her financial life.
(Editing by Lauren Young and Richard Chang)
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