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Like most investors, I learned early about the elegance of the 60/40 portfolio.
Sixty percent stocks for growth. Forty percent bonds for stability.
I studied why it worked. Stocks historically delivered long-term returns, bonds reduced volatility, and periodic rebalancing enforced discipline. 60/40 has proved itself as a durable framework. It wasn’t exciting, but it was resilient.
I understood its importance. It shaped how I thought about diversification, risk, and balance—and it still does.
For many investors, 60/40 remains a perfectly reasonable default, particularly for those saving steadily, reinvesting dividends, and not yet drawing on their portfolios.
When 60/40 feels incomplete
The issue wasn’t whether 60/40 worked. It clearly had. The issue was what happens when a portfolio shifts from accumulating wealth to supporting spending. When markets fall, the textbook advice is straightforward: rebalance. Sell bonds. Buy stocks.
That’s sound in theory. It’s harder in practice when:
At that point, the central question isn’t about expected returns. It’s more basic: Where does my spending money come from when markets misbehave? That question led me to buckets.
Buckets: a spending framework
The bucket approach organizes money by time.
Buckets made immediate sense. By separating spending from growth, they reduce the risk of selling stocks at the wrong time and provide emotional comfort during market declines.
Buckets work—and they work well—especially for managing sequence-of-returns risk early in retirement. But over time, I noticed a limitation.
Buckets answered when money would be spent. They didn’t fully explain why I owned each investment. That realization pushed me toward sleeves.
Sleeves: a portfolio framework
At first, sleeves sounded like semantics. Aren’t sleeves just buckets with a different name?
In practice, they aren’t. Buckets are time-based. Sleeves are function-based.
Instead of organizing assets by years of spending, I began organizing them by roles:
Each sleeve has a purpose. Each earns its place. Most importantly, each sleeve is judged differently.
Why sleeves work better for me
With sleeves, I stopped asking whether an investment was “good” or “bad.”
Instead, I ask: “Is this investment doing the job I hired it to do?”
Growth assets don’t need to produce income. Income assets don’t need to be exciting. Cash doesn’t need to outperform anything.
This shift changed how I respond to markets. Volatility in one sleeve doesn’t feel like failure—it’s simply that sleeve doing its job.
A framework, not a verdict
This isn’t an argument against 60/40 or buckets. 60/40 still matters as a foundational lesson in diversification and discipline. Buckets remain a powerful tool for clarifying spending.
Sleeves simply work better for me because they move beyond spending and toward understanding—understanding what each part of the portfolio does, why it’s necessary, and how the pieces work together.
My evolution wasn’t from right to wrong, but from theory to application:
Today, I think less in percentages and more in jobs—and that has made me more disciplined, and more comfortable with uncertainty.
Thanks for a great article that clearly explains the issues and outlines how you use each concept. Your differentiation of buckets and sleeves is most helpful.
A very sophisticated and elegant strategy. Shifting from ‘when do I need it’ to ‘what job does it do’ would definitely change your relationship with a portfolio. The role-based logic makes evaluation clearer and removes artificial timing pressure, it would serve people well. Having said all that, as I commented in a different post: personally I will walk my own path with the plan I created for my retirement.. I’m just pig headed!.
Which article are you referring too
The maximising lifetime income article
You are right. No one should feel compelled to make changes based on a single article that’s simply offering a different way of looking at things. Still, it can be a worthwhile exercise to step back and ask a simple question: What role is each investment meant to play?