In a recent episode of the Animal Spirits Podcast, Ben Carlson of Ritholtz Wealth Management revealed a number that should change how millennials think about their parents’ money. “In a 65-year-old couple, there is a 64% chance, so a two-thirds chance, that at least one partner will live past 90,” He said citing New York Times data. This single figure rearranges the math behind the cool retirement planning that’s going on in the minds of 35-year-olds: Mom and Dad will leave something for me, and that void will be filled.
The stakes are solid. If you are 35 today and your parents are 65, most likely one of them lives into their 90s. This pushes the inheritance into your own retirement window, not into your wealth-building years. Carlson and co-host Michael Batnick cited Wall Street Journal analysis showing most millennials will not inherit inheritances. “Until I get like most of it, I don’t know, by the 2030s and possibly the 2040s.” By then, the oldest Millennials are already receiving Social Security.
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A $300,000 inheritance loses $2 million in compounding potential at a 7% real return when reached at 65 instead of 35, leaving the inherited money too late for retirement.
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This strategy fails for Millennials who expect an inheritance to fill the retirement gap, but works as a real bonus for those who have enough independent savings to retire without it.
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The analyst who called NVIDIA his top 10 AI stocks in 2010. Get them for free here.
Verdict: Inheritance is a bonus, not a plan
Relying on an inheritance for retirement is a flawed strategy and the longevity math is the reason. The financial process understood here is time-weighted compounding. A dollar saved at 30 takes about 35 years before traditional retirement age. A dollar inherited at 65 has zeros in it. Same dollar, completely different value.
The analyst who called NVIDIA his top 10 stocks in 2010. Get them for free here.
Run the numbers on a realistic case. Let’s say a 35-year-old expects to inherit $300,000 and decides to save less today because of it. If that money comes in at age 35 and is invested at a 7% real return, it will grow to about $2.3 million by age 65. If this comes at age 65, it’s worth $300,000. That difference is full retirement.
Now layer on the longevity problem from the other side. Your parents need that money to survive. Carlson explains why retirees are tightening their grip: “People are nervous and afraid they will lose their money.” A couple planning for a 30-year retirement spends differently than one planning for a 20-year retirement. Long-term care alone can run up to six figures a year. Assisted living, in-home assistance, and memory care routinely consume what heirs assumed was their inheritance.
