Safety first but not safety only
Getting the allocation right for regular retirement income
Bond laddering: Turning investments into steady retirement Income
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G-sec laddering
Enhancing returns without taking big risks during retirement
The tax bite: What you earn vs what you keep
For many Indian retirees, Government Securities (G-Secs) can work out to be the closest thing to a guaranteed paycheque after work stops. Backed by the government, they promise safety and predictable income, two things that matter most when regular earnings cease.But building a sound retirement strategy around G-Secs is not as straightforward as it appears. The challenge lies in balancing safety with liquidity while also ensuring your money outlasts you and keeps up with rising costs.G-Secs form the foundation of most retirement portfolios for a reason. They carry least credit risk and provide fixed, dependable income. But that strength can also become a limitation if you rely only or heavily on government securities.“A G-Sec-heavy strategy provides stability, but as interest income are fixed, the cashflows do not grow and inflation bites the value of money,” says Kshitiz Jain, CFA, FRM.This is why a G-Sec-heavy strategy works best when it is part of a broader allocation, not the entire plan.How much you allocate to G-Secs depends largely on when you retire and how long your retirement is expected to last.For those retiring early, say in their 50s, the horizon can stretch across three decades. This makes longevity risk a real concern. That’s why the balance between safety and growth becomes critical at this stage.Early retirees (retiring before 60) face longer post-retirement horizons. Hence, they require higher safety and laddered strategies for assuring sustained income. An allocation of 50-60% to G-Secs in the income bucket may be appropriate, leaving the reaming for allocation to higher yield instruments such as corporate bonds, suggests Abhijit Talukdar, Founder, Attainix Consulting.For those retiring at 60 or later, the equation shifts. With a shorter horizon and often a larger accumulated corpus, the emphasis tilts towards capital protection and income visibility.“Late retirees (retiring at 60+) on the other hand can tolerate less emphasis on ultra-safety, since they may have a higher retirement corpus. For them a 40-50% allocation to G-secs within their income bucket may be appropriate,” he adds.Therefore, allocation is not static and must evolve with age, needs, and market conditions.If G-Secs are the foundation, bond laddering is the structure that makes them work.Instead of locking money into a single long-term bond, retirees can spread investments across different maturities, ensuring that a portion of their money is available at regular intervals.Source: Abhijit Talukdar, Founder, Attainix ConsultingFor example, a retiree with ₹10 lakh corpus can split the amount into five parts and invest in G-Secs maturing over 1 to 5 years.As each bond matures, the money can be reinvested based on interest rates, into short-term bonds if rates are rising, or longer-term ones if rates are falling.This way, the investor gets regular cash flows while reducing the risk of locking all money at one rate.“A well-structured bond ladder across different maturities helps throughout—because it gives you periodic cash flows, reduces reinvestment risk, and makes the portfolio easier to manage as needs evolve,” says Nikunj Saraf, CEO, Choice Wealth.In essence, laddering brings both discipline and flexibility to a retirement portfolio. But how you build that ladder should depend on your stage of life and the interest rate environment.A bond portfolio cannot be static. It needs to evolve with age and market conditions, emphasizes Jain.“If interest rates are high, buy long-term G-Secs (10-30 years) to guarantee a high income for decades. Further, in late retirement, one can look to shift toward a "Bond Ladder." By holding bonds that mature in different years (e.g., some in 2 years, some in 5, some in 10), you ensure a steady stream of cash and reduce the risk of having to reinvest all your money at a time when interest rates might be very low,” he says.Taking this a step further, the construction of the ladder itself should be guided not by returns, but by actual cash flow needs.“The most effective ladders are liability-led, not yield-led. A staggered 3–7 year ladder with annual maturities works well for most retirees, creating predictable liquidity without locking the entire portfolio at one rate. The discipline is to recycle maturities systematically, rather than extending duration in search of marginal yield,” says Sumit Sharma, Founder, Radian Finserv.Put together, bond laddering transforms a G-Sec portfolio from a static pool of investments into a steady, self-managed income stream, one that can adapt as both markets and personal needs evolve.A common pitfall in retirement portfolios is becoming too conservative too soon.While G-Secs provide safety, relying on them entirely can limit income potential. Experts suggest measured diversification within fixed income itself.Kshitiz Jain recommends adding state government securities (SDLs) in addition to central government securities, which offer a slightly higher yield, typically 0.40–0.50% more than central G-Secs, while still retaining sovereign backing.For additional yield, AAA-rated corporate bonds can be considered. However, retirees should stick exclusively to AAA-rated papers.“The "yield pick-up" in lower-rated bonds rarely justifies the risk of a principal loss during retirement,” warns Jain.Why equity still has a place in retirement strategyOne of the biggest misconceptions in retirement planning is that equity should be avoided altogether.“Retirement today can easily last 25–30 years, and inflation doesn’t stop. So having a small allocation to equity—through relatively stable options like large-cap or hybrid funds—helps the portfolio keep up over time,” says Saraf.A small allocation of 15–25% in diversified equity or aggressive hybrid funds helps the corpus grow faster than the cost of living, agrees Jain, adding that it also protects against the risk of outliving one’s savings.G-Sec returns often look attractive on paper, but taxation can significantly reduce actual earnings.Interest income is taxed at slab rates, which means higher-bracket investors see a meaningful drop in net returns.As Saraf points out, the real comparison should not be the headline yield, but what remains after tax.A well-designed G-Sec strategy is not about maximising returns but creating stability without sacrificing sustainability.The most effective retirement portfolios use G-Secs as an anchor, supported by thoughtful allocation, disciplined laddering, selective diversification, and a touch of growth.