Retirement Is Where Liquidity Becomes an Investment Strategy
A weaker portfolio two years before retirement is not just an investment problem. For property owners and real estate investors, it is a timing problem, a liquidity problem, and often a behavioural problem.
The Globe and Mail recently addressed a reader concerned about market losses close to retirement, with TD Wealth senior financial planner Leslie Logan noting that this stage requires a shift from accumulation to deaccumulation. That distinction matters deeply for real estate investors. A portfolio may look strong on paper, but if income is uncertain and assets are illiquid, retirement can expose structural weaknesses quickly.
The central question is not whether markets will recover. They usually move in cycles. The better question is whether an investor has enough stable income and accessible capital to avoid selling quality assets at the wrong time.

For landlords approaching retirement, rental income can offer a useful buffer against equity market volatility. A well-located rental with dependable tenants, manageable debt, and positive cash flow may function differently from a volatile stock position. The asset value may fluctuate, but the income stream can continue to support living costs.
That said, real estate is not automatically defensive. Rising maintenance costs, insurance premiums, vacancy risk, mortgage renewals, tax exposure, and tenant turnover can erode the comfort investors expect from property income. In retirement planning, gross rent is not the number that matters. Net, predictable, after-cost income is.
Logan’s advice to consider one to two years of expected income in more stable investments is especially relevant to property owners. A liquidity reserve reduces the pressure to sell into weak conditions, refinance under stress, or draw down market investments after a correction. In real estate terms, it preserves negotiating power.
The investor who can wait is usually in a stronger position than the investor who must transact.
This is where retirement planning becomes capital allocation. Investors should map expected cash needs before they stop working. Which income sources arrive first? Rental income, pension income, CPP, Old Age Security, dividends, GICs, registered account withdrawals, or the sale of an asset? The sequence matters because it determines which assets must provide liquidity and which can remain invested for long-term value.
For investors with mortgages, the next renewal date is now a retirement planning variable. A property that looked comfortable at a low fixed rate may become less attractive if refinanced into a materially higher payment. Before retirement, owners should stress-test each property against higher rates, one month of vacancy, and a major capital repair. If the asset cannot withstand those pressures, it may not be the stabilizer the investor believes it to be.
The worst response to volatility is often forced action. Selling public equities after a decline, unloading property under cash pressure, or abandoning a long-term plan because of short-term market movement can permanently damage retirement capital. But doing nothing is not a strategy either. The right move is to review asset mix, income reliability, debt exposure, and liquidity before the decision is urgent.
For real estate-minded investors, the lesson is clear: retirement does not require abandoning growth. It requires matching growth assets with enough cash flow and reserves to survive difficult markets. The strongest retirement portfolios are not simply the largest. They are the ones structured to avoid bad sales at bad moments.
Source: The Globe and Mail


