You’ve spent decades saving, investing, and building your portfolio with the goal of retiring early or achieving financial independence. But as you enter retirement, a hidden danger emerges—one that has less to do with how much your investments earn, and more to do with when those returns happen.
This is known as sequence of returns risk—and for new retirees, it can be one of the most important risks to manage.
What Is Sequence of Returns Risk?
Sequence of returns risk happens when you experience poor market returns in the early years of retirement, while you’re also making regular withdrawals from your portfolio.
Even if the average annual return over 30 years is the same, two retirees can have drastically different outcomes depending on market timing:
- Retiree A starts during a bull market, giving their portfolio time to grow before withdrawals take a toll.
- Retiree B starts during a bear market, where early losses combined with withdrawals shrink the portfolio before it can recover.
Why does this matter? Because every time you sell investments in a downturn to fund expenses, you’re locking in losses—and removing the chance for those dollars to rebound when the market recovers.

How to Reduce Sequence of Returns Risk in Retirement
The good news: Index investors have several proven ways to protect themselves against early-retirement market downturns.
1. Keep a Cash Buffer
Hold 12–24 months of living expenses in a high-yield savings account or short-term bond fund.
- During market downturns, you can draw from this buffer instead of selling stocks at low prices.
- Refill the buffer once markets recover.

2. Start With a Lower Withdrawal Rate
Instead of beginning with the classic 4% rule, consider starting at 3.5% in your first few years.
- This gives your portfolio more time to recover if markets are volatile early on.
- You can increase spending later when conditions stabilize.

3. Use a Dynamic Withdrawal Strategy
The “guardrails method” adjusts withdrawals based on portfolio performance:
- If your investments grow beyond projections, give yourself a raise.
- If they drop significantly, temporarily reduce spending.
This approach balances income stability with portfolio preservation.

4. Diversify Beyond Stocks
Adding bonds, gold, or real estate can provide assets to draw from during stock market declines.
- These asset classes often fall less than equities—or may even rise—during downturns.

5. Maintain Supplemental Income
Part-time work, consulting, or rental income during early retirement can:
- Reduce the need for portfolio withdrawals during bad years.
- Help preserve your investments for the long term.

The Key: Volatility Is Inevitable, But Panic Is Optional
Market downturns are a normal part of investing. Sequence of returns risk isn’t about avoiding volatility entirely—it’s about managing withdrawals intelligently so you’re not forced to sell at the worst possible time.
By combining a cash reserve, flexible spending plan, and diversified portfolio, you can shield yourself from the most damaging effects of bad early returns—and give your investments the time they need to recover.

