Bill Reichenstein, Ph.D.

Professor Emeritus of Investments Baylor University

  • Waco TX

Dr. Reichenstein researches Social Security benefits, how retirees can lengthen the longevity of financial portfolios and other tax issues

Contact

Baylor University

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Biography

Dr. William Reichenstein, CFA, is Professor Emeritus of Investments at Baylor University. He is Head of Research at Social Security Solutions, Inc, a firm that developed software to help individuals decide when to begin Social Security benefits (www.ssanalyzer.com) and Income Solver, Inc., a firm that helps retirees tax-efficiently withdraw funds from their financial portfolio (www.incomesolver.com).

He has published more than 180 articles and several books, including In the Presence of Taxes: Applications of After-tax Asset Valuations, FPA Press (August 2008) and with William Meyer Social Security Strategies, 3rd Edition.

His recent work concentrates in two areas. First, when should individuals begin Social Security benefits? Second, how can we add value to client accounts using the tax code? His research advocates calculating an individual’s after-tax asset allocation that compares after-tax fund across savings vehicles (e.g., 401(k), Roth IRA, and taxable accounts). His research also has implications for the asset-location decision among other issues.

He is a member of Wall Street Journal’s “The Experts” panel.

Areas of Expertise

Financial Planning
Retirement Investing
Wealth Management

Accomplishments

Reader's Choice Award - Financial Analysts Journal Graham & Dodd Awards of Excellence

2013-02-14

The Graham and Dodd Awards were created in 1960 to recognize excellence in research and financial writing and to honor Benjamin Graham and David L. Dodd for their enduring contributions to the field of investment analysis.

Education

University of Notre Dame

Ph.D.

St. Edward's University

B.A.

Media Appearances

Avoid the 'Social Security Torpedo' and 3 Other Tips to Slash Your Tax Bill in Retirement

Barron's  online

2024-07-21

William Reichenstein, Ph.D., Emeritus Professor of Finance at Baylor, is quoted in this article about how to avoid the social security “tax torpedo” and other tips to reduce taxes in retirement.

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How Roth Conversions Can Reduce Sting Of Social Security, Medicare Hikes

Financial Advisor  online

2022-07-20

Baylor Emeritus Finance Professor and Social Security expert William Reichenstein, Ph.D., shares advice in this article about how married couples could significantly lower their joint lifetime income taxes and reduce their joint lifetime Medicare premiums by doing Roth conversions while both are alive.

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4 Key Social Security Claiming Strategies For Widows

Financial Advisor  online

2022-06-29

William Reichenstein, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of Finance at Baylor and an expert on Social Security benefits issues, offers four claiming strategies, which he said should provide guidance for financial advisors when determining the best strategy to maximize a widow’s surviving lifetime benefits.

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Articles

Tax-Efficient Withdrawal Strategies

Financial Analylsts Journal

2015

The authors considered an individual investor who holds a financial portfolio with funds in at least two of the following accounts: a taxable account, a tax-deferred account, and a tax-exempt account. They examined various strategies for withdrawing these funds in retirement. Conventional wisdom suggests that the investor should withdraw funds first from the taxable account, then from the tax-deferred account, and finally from the tax-exempt account. The authors provide the underlying intuition for more tax-efficient withdrawal strategies and demonstrate that these strategies can add more than three years to the portfolio’s longevity relative to the strategy suggested by the conventional wisdom.

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Two Key Concepts for Wealth Management and Beyond

Financial Analysts Journal

2012

Asset allocation is profoundly influenced by at least two underappreciated concepts. First, tax-deferred accounts—for example, 401(k)s—are like partnerships in which the investor owns (1 – tn) of the partnership principal and the government owns the remainder, where tn is the marginal tax rate when the funds are withdrawn. Second, the government shares in both the return and the risk of assets held in taxable accounts. The authors discuss these concepts’ implications for wealth management.

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