Investing
As discussed on our Financial Planning page, we believe that proper investing is done with a process, not a product. After you have documented your goals (step 1), the next step is to assess your personal (family's) risk tolerance (step 2) and then select suitable investments (step 3).
In the absence of assessing one's risk tolerance, most people just look at the historical returns of a stock or mutual fund and make their decisions from that limited information. Many people do not realize that numerous studies have been done and proven that less than 20% of investment managers can repeat their top performance from one 5-year period to the next. In a large study performed on the investments within many pension and endowment funds (organizations with a required distribution flow, much like a family), it proved that over 90% of the investment return of a portfolio comes from asset allocation: ![]()
Asset Allocation
So, what exactly is asset allocation. Asset allocation is the single most contributing
With this information it should become obvious that the object of the game is not to pick the best performing class or manager but to pick the most consistent performers; ones that are disciplined and perform well compared to their peer group and the relative benchmark; and ones that have an investment path that is suitable for your specific
Step 1 - Review Your Personalized Financial Goals & Objectives Whether or not you complete our customized Financial Life Planner™ or some other document, the best way to plan your finances going forward is to make the best attempt you can at documenting your cash flows throughout your life. If done properly, it will conclude the investment rate of return required to meet all these goals. Without preparing such a model could result in you pulling cash out of an investment portfolio at an inopportune time in the market or leaving large amounts of cash on hand without being properly in the market. Any investment advisor worth their salt would want to see these goals, flows and results before making a proper recommendation for investing. Step 2 - Assess Your Personal Risk Tolerance Once you have completed a financial model and have determined the required rate of return, you have a decision to make: do you invest to a rate of return equal to, greater than or less than that required rate. Of course nobody wants to leave money on the table by under-investing but very few people properly screen themselves to determine what the rate of return of a portfolio would be based on the volatility that they can handle. Let's face it, if the portfolio moves up and down to an uncomfortable level, you will exit and never achieve its long-term rate of return. Completing a properly worded risk tolerance questionnaire will help you determine what volatility level is appropriate for you. Step 3- Create a Suitable Investment Portfolio Now that you have documented your goals (step 1), and assessed your risk tolerance (step 2), you can get started on creating an investment portfolio. Ideally, your target investment rate of return should be between the rate you need/require (as determined in the financial model) and your risk tolerance level rate (as determined in step 2 above). Unfortunately, this too is a very overlooked, underanalyzed area. Most people in fact often skip the model and risk tolerance process and just jump right into picking investments. Investing, if done properly, has many issues to consider. Of course, remember that future returns cannot be predicted. The most marketed form of investing is done to sell mutual funds. That industry spends an enormous amount of marketing dollars to bring in billions of dollars of assets.This is normally a suitable product for certain investors with small amounts to invest. There are, however, several pitfalls and issues when investing in a mutual fund that many people are not aware of. Click on the image to the right here for a comprehensive summary.
Step 4 - monitor the ongoing investment process
Once an investment portfolio is crafted and implemented, the process is far from over. In fact, it is NEVER over. If done properly, your advisor should monitor not only your investments but should make sure that issues that would effect your financial model, income taxes and other financial issues are periodically being addressed to make sure these investments remain suitable for you. If not, there should be changes. But these changes should not be market driven!
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