If for some reason you want your app to behave on iPhone 5 the way older apps do -- automatically letterboxed by the OS to 3.5-inch screen dimensions, just don't include a Default-568h@2x.png in your app. However, Apple expects new apps submitted to the App Store to support 4-inch screens, so you might not get very far with this strategy if you're expecting to distribute your app that way.
If you want to "support" iPhone 5 (and iPod touch 5th generation) screens, but keep most of your UI at older screen sizes... well, your users may not like it (and the App Store reviewers might not either), but it's possible using Auto Layout. The catch is that the root view in your window's (or rather, your view controller's) view hierarchy is always automatically resized to fit the screen -- but there's no saying that has to be the main container for your actual UI content.
In IB, with the editor in 3.5 inch screen mode, drop a new UIView into your view controller's root view. It should automatically size to fill the screen (460 points high).
Add a Pin > Height constraint so the view stays 460 points high no matter how its superview gets resized.
Add an Align > Vertical Center in Container constraint so the view stays centered when the height of its superview changes.
Put all of your UI inside this view.
Now you'll get white bars (change the color of the root view if you like) above and below your UI when on iPhone 5.
Note this only works as long as your UI doesn't rotate to landscape. I don't think you can do this kind of artificial letterboxing for both orientations using only one set of constraints, so if you want to support rotation you'll need to respond to an orientation change by switching out constraints programmatically -- pin height and center vertically in portrait, pin width and center horizontally in landscape.