First - Happy New Year.
Long time lurker - Ive been reading all the OGs (JL Collins, MMM, Mad Fientist, White Coat Investor, Physician on FIre) voraciously since my husband passed, to ramp up so I can steward our family's money to meet the goals we had set as a family (my husband was the de facto money guy in our family). I have had a financial advisor because I didnt want to make any mistakes, but am feeling confident enough now to try it myself and am planning to slowly move the money over to my care after RE. Thank you taking the time to give me feedback. I really appreciate it.
Life Situation: 52 F, IRS filing status - single, 2 kids - 24 and 22 - older has a job and lives out of state. younger is a senior in college.
Gross Salary/Wages: $200K including RSU and bonus, Take home after pre tax deductions - 9K/m
Dividends: 50-75K incl syndicate income
RE date: Q1 2024
Retirement expenses: 120K/year (110K todays + 10K health insurance/health expenses) + mortgage (40K)
Mortgage - 40K on year 2 of 5 year ARM. About 800K debt left. 1.2M equity in VHCOL area
Fixed costs incl insurance, property tax, subscriptions (internet etc), utilities - 36K
Travel - 15K
discretionary/fluctuating expenses - groceries, entertainment, services, eating out, gas, auto maintenance, healthcare - 50K
Misc - 10K
healthcare (ACA) - 10K additional
Assets: 7 ish M
Vanguard brokerage - 2.3M allocation 70/30
Fidelity brokerage - 2.9M allocation 80/20
cash - 200K
IRAs + 401Ks - 600K
RSUs - 1M ~15% of total assets
syndicate RE - 200K - locked till 2025
Liabilities: no other loans. Cars paid off. College tuition from 529
Specific Question(s):
My SWR is between 2.6 and 2.9% so Im theoretically ready to RE. My plan is as follows -
1. Move 900K into a "mortgage" account and allocate it as 50/25/25 (ETF/Bonds/Cash) and the idea is to generate at least 5% annually which will pay the annual mortgage. In 2027 when the ARM rate resets, I will evaluate whether to refinance or sell and buy another property (this is not my final home) or decide to stay on and if the rates are too high, use this brokerage account to pay off the loan. (Havent figured out yet, how I would liquidate the holdings in a tax efficient way)
2. I have 200K in cash and will use this in case of emergencies - roof replacement, car buying etc. I will also direct all dividends here. So I will effectively have about 2 years in this account.
3. I plan to get a HELOC as an additional source of emergency funds before I resign from my job.
4. I plan to move my Fidelity to 70/30. As I do this, I will move my year1 funds into checking. My 401K/IRAs are also at 70/30. My Vanguard is 70/30 already, and if I combine my mortgage account with my RSUs and my cash, that is also about 70/30. so overall, the allocation is 70/30.
5. I plan to withdraw once a year. Im undecided whether a 70/30 allocation seems too conservative or too aggressive given that I would like to maintain the principal and even grow it, to set up a DAF and create legacy. I'm also not sure about how to withdraw-
a. use bucket strategy - meaning, when the market is down, to draw down from my cash and not rebalance (and when the market is up, replenish the cash and checking accounts from long term gains) OR
b. rebalance every year - if the market is up, sell stocks, if it is down, sell bonds and get back to 70/30
What would you do recommend if you were in my shoes?
Another item Im not sure about - I would like to spend on the kids grad schools so they can be debt free from education. That would be an outlay of perhaps 100K each year for 4 years perhaps starting 2025. How should I plan to fund this? Give the RSUs to the child and have them sell them at a lower tax rate for their grad school? or harvest losses in brokerage account? or something else Im not even seeing?
When would it make sense to leverage the HELOC?