Market downturns are a feature of investing, not a flaw, and every long-term investor knows they are coming eventually. The problem for retirees is that a 20% drop hits differently than it does for someone still adding to a 401k.
When you are drawing from a portfolio instead of contributing to it, a bad year in the market at the wrong time can force you to sell shares at depressed prices just to cover the electric bill. This is a real risk during retirement, and it is why the sequence of returns matters so much more than the average return. The strategy a growing number of retirees use to protect against exactly this scenario is the bucket strategy. Rather than drawing from a single pool of invested assets, it separates retirement savings into distinct segments based on when the money will actually be needed.
Each bucket has its own purpose and its own risk tolerance, and the whole structure is designed to ensure that a bad stretch in the stock market never forces anyone to sell at the worst possible moment.
How the Three Buckets Work
The first bucket is the foundation of the entire approach, and its job is simple: cover the next one to three years of essential living expenses without touching the stock market at all. This money sits in high-yield savings accounts, money market funds, Treasury bills, or short-term CDs, and instruments that prioritize availability over return.
The point is not to earn a meaningful yield but to have the money there when bills arrive, regardless of what the market is doing. When a 20% drop hits, this is the bucket a retiree draws from. Stock positions remain untouched, the portfolio has time to recover, and the retiree does not lock in paper losses by selling into a decline.
The good news is that most bear markets historically resolve within 1 to 2 years. A retiree with 2 to 3 years of expenses in the first bucket can wait out the vast majority of downturns without liquidating a single share.
The Middle Bucket Handles the Bridge
The second bucket covers roughly years 3 through 10 of retirement and serves as the bridge between immediate liquidity and long-term growth. It typically holds conservative investments, including high-quality bonds, stable value funds, and, in some versions, dividend-paying stocks that generate consistent income.
The risk tolerance here is moderate, meaning this money should grow enough to keep pace with inflation while remaining far less volatile than an equity portfolio. The practical function of the second bucket is replenishment. As the first bucket is drawn down over the first few years of retirement, the second bucket steadily refills itself through interest, dividends, and periodic transfers.
This creates a self-sustaining cycle that keeps the short-term liquidity bucket functioning without ever requiring a forced sale of growth assets. A retiree spending $50,000 per year who holds $100,000 in the first bucket and $300,000 in the second has a decade-long runaway before the long-term growth bucket needs to contribute anything at all.
The Long-Term Bucket Does the Heavy Lifting Over Time
Everything beyond the ten-year horizon lives in the third bucket, and this is where equities, diversified stock funds, and growth-oriented investments belong. Money that will not be touched for a decade or more can afford to ride out the full cycle of market volatility, including the occassional 20% correction, because time is on its side.
The third bucket is also what keeps a retirement portfolio from being eroded by inflation over a 20 or 30-year horizon. Cash and bonds will not outpace rising food, housing, and healthcare costs over two or three decades. Equities historically have, and the third bucket is the mechanism that provides that inflation-beating growth, while the first two buckets protect against the need to liquidate prematurely.
When markets are performing well, gains from the third bucket flow into the second bucket and eventually the first, keeping the whole system replenished. During down markets, the first two buckets absorb the spending pressure while the third bucket is left alone to recover.
Why the Strategy Works Emotionally as Well As Mathematically
One underappreciated dimension of the bucket strategy is what it does to the psychological experience of market volatility in retirement. A retiree who knows their next two years of expenses are sitting in cash does not need to check the stock ticker every morning with a sense of dread. The volatility of the third bucket becomes largely irrelevant to daily life because it is not money that needs to be spent anytime soon.
This peace of mind is not a soft benefit, as retirees who feel financially secure during downturns are less likely to make emotionally driven decisions like panic selling or abandoning their investment plan entirely. Staying invested through a downturn is what allows the long-term bucket to recover fully, and the structure of the bucket strategy makes staying invested considerably easier than it would be otherwise.
Consider a retiree who enters a market decline with just one year of expenses in cash versus someone who enters it with three years of cash on hand. The reality is that both face the same market, but only one of them has the breathing room to let it play out without stress, and that difference in experience is exactly what the bucket strategy is designed to create.
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