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If you’re already retired or planning to in just a few years, I'm sure you're excited about this phase of your life. 

However, for most retirees to enjoy retirement fully will depend, at least partially, on the resources you can draw from your investment portfolio. 

So it's always a good time to ask yourself if you’re comfortable with your portfolio’s risk level.

Your relationship with risk can change noticeably over time. 

When you started saving for retirement, you may have been willing to take on more investment risk, which translated into a relatively high percentage of stocks and stock-based mutual funds in your investment portfolio. 

As you know, stocks offer the potential for greater returns than other assets – such as bonds and certificates of deposit – but they are also typically more volatile and carry more risk. 

But when you were many decades away from retirement, you had sufficient time to recover from market fluctuations. Of course, there are no guarantees – it’s possible that some stocks will lose value and never regain it.

Now, fast forward to where you are now. 

Even at this stage of your life – and, in fact, throughout your retirement – you will need some growth-oriented investments to help stay ahead of inflation. 

Over time, even a low inflation rate, such as we’ve had the past several years, can erode your purchasing power.

So, the issue isn’t this: “Should I get rid of all my risk?” 

You shouldn’t – and, in fact, you couldn’t, because all investments, even the ones considered most “conservative,” contain some type of risk, even if it isn’t the risk of loss of principal. 

For instance, some investments run the risk of not keeping up with inflation. 

Instead, ask yourself these questions: “How much risk should I take within my portfolio?” “How much risk do I actually need to achieve my goals in retirement?”

Of course, there are no one-size-fits-all answers. 

We would recommend working with a financial advisor to manage your investment portfolio to ensure it’s always positioned to provide you with the income you’ll need in your retirement years and positioned properly to align with your personal comfort level with risk. 

You might have initially based your financial strategy on a specific type of retirement lifestyle, but now that you’re in or nearing retirement, perhaps you’ve changed your mind. 

Your anticipated new lifestyle might require either more or less income than you had originally projected – and if that’s the case, you may need to adjust the risk level in your portfolio or make other adjustments.

For example, suppose you had initially envisioned a rather quiet retirement, sticking around your home, volunteering and spending time with your grandchildren. 

But in recent years – and especially since the confinement many of us have felt during the COVID-19 pandemic – you may have thought that you’d now like to travel extensively. 

To achieve this goal, which will likely cost more than your original one, you may have to work longer, or invest more each year until you retire, or seek a higher return on your investments – which means accepting more risk.

As you can see, managing risk is a balancing act – and you may need to make some tough choices. 

A good financial advisor can help you with those choices and always be aware of how much risk you're comfortable taking, and how much risk you may need to take to reach your goals in order to develop a tailored strategy that aligns with your objectives through all phases of retirement.

Colby Lyles

Financial Advisor

Edward Jones Investments

933 Park Avenue

Roanoke Rapids, NC 27870

Office: 252-541-2031

www.edwardjones.com/colby-lyles