I’ve been diving into the Permanent Portfolio strategy — the classic allocation of 25% stocks, 25% bonds, 25% gold, and 25% cash — and I really appreciate its simplicity, resilience, and balance across market conditions.
That said, most of the information I find focuses on the accumulation phase. I’d love to hear thoughts from those who are already retired, semi-retired, or just planning for the withdrawal phase. Specifically:
• Is it mostly age-based (e.g., at 60 or 65)?
• Or do you wait until the portfolio hits a certain value (e.g., 25x or 33x your annual expenses)?
• Anyone doing barista FIRE or early retirement with it?
• Do you take money proportionally from all four assets?
• Or withdraw from the most overperforming asset and rebalance at the same time?
• Do you follow a fixed percentage (like 4% rule), or adjust withdrawals based on performance?
• How do gold and cash behave in practice during decumulation?
• What kind of rebalancing schedule works best during retirement?
• Does anyone use buckets or laddering strategies inside the Permanent Portfolio framework?
• Any good tools, spreadsheets or simulators that work for this kind of setup?
I know this strategy is more conservative than most, but for those of us who like peace of mind over chasing high returns, it seems like a great long-term fit.
Would love to hear from anyone who has experience, theory, or even just ideas on how to make the most of the Permanent Portfolio in retirement. All input is welcome!
Thanks in advance!