Retirement mistake: winning then losing
A new YouTube piece argues accumulation success often masks distribution risk—many retirees are ‘winning’ on paper but vulnerable during withdrawal phases, making distribution review a potent prospecting hook. (youtube.com)
MetLife’s February 2026 study found 50% of retirees fear running out of money and reported that pre-retirees seeking guidance on what to do with defined-contribution balances rose from 86% in 2022 to 95% in 2026 (MetLife, Feb 2026). (metlife.com) Historical sequence-of-returns analyses show two retirees starting with identical $1 million portfolios and a 4% withdrawal rate can face “vastly different outcomes” solely because one experienced early-market losses, illustrating the concrete depletion risk during distribution. (mutualfunds.com) Capital Group’s recent commentary reframes the hazard as “sequence-of-withdrawals” risk, noting that withdrawal timing and behavior can matter more than average long-term returns when retirees begin taking income. (capitalgroup.com) More than 100 million Americans participate in defined-contribution plans holding roughly $12 trillion in assets, while Cerulli’s 2025 reporting shows 63% of active 401(k) participants do not work with a financial advisor — a measurable pool for distribution-focused outreach. (advisorperspectives.com) An advisor–client communications gap amplifies the opening: an Alliance for Lifetime Income study found 62% of advisors say they discuss secure income but only 27% of investors recalled those conversations, while Cerulli reports about 48% of advisors currently offer comprehensive financial planning. (benzinga.com) MetLife’s research also shows retirees who hold annuities report higher measures of financial security—94% say annuities increase financial security and 92% cite more predictable budgets—data that quantifies why guaranteed-income solutions feature in distribution planning conversations. (metlife.com) LIMRA and PlanSponsor analyses document growing demand for retirement-income services from both plan sponsors and participants, and asset managers flag retiree-assets retention as a distribution-era business opportunity, creating a quantifiable justification for distribution-review prospecting campaigns. (limra.com)