$450,000 Income Sleeve Targets $31,500 Annual Pay With 15% Buffered S&P 500 Protection
Updated
Updated · 24/7 Wall St. · May 24
$450,000 Income Sleeve Targets $31,500 Annual Pay With 15% Buffered S&P 500 Protection
3 articles · Updated · 24/7 Wall St. · May 24
$450,000 allocated to a 7% blended-yield income sleeve can generate about $31,500 a year, while a separate $400,000 bucket stays in buffered S&P 500 ETFs for equity exposure.
That structure splits retirement goals in two: the income sleeve funds spending, and the buffered ETFs absorb the first 15% of market losses—about $60,000 on a $400,000 allocation—though gains are capped.
Yield assumptions sharply change the capital needed for the same income: $900,000 at 3.5%, $630,000 at 5%, and roughly $262,500 at 12%, with the highest yields carrying greater risk of principal erosion.
A sample 7% mix combines covered-call equity income, preferred-stock, high-yield bond and REIT funds; Realty Income, yielding about 5.2%, is cited as a steadier component with 114 straight quarterly dividend increases.
The report argues growing payouts matter more than headline yield in retirement and urges investors to match income to actual spending needs and check a buffered ETF's remaining cap and protection before buying.
Is this high-yield retirement plan a sustainable income solution or a trap that could erode the couple's principal?
Buffered ETFs promise safety from market drops, but what is the real price retirees pay for this protection?