Investing is a marathon

Investing is a marathon and learning how investing in stocks can help you accumulate wealth is important to your financial

Long-term investing is a marathon and is the best way, by far, to build wealth that stands the test of time. It’s how you plan for financial freedom, retirement and build a legacy to pass on to your children and grandchildren. Long-term investments require patience and time measured in decades, but have the potential to pay off with high returns.

Investing is the act of purchasing assets – such as stocks or bonds or real estate – in order to move money from the present to the future. However, the conversion of present cash into future cash is burdened by the following problems:

  • Individuals prefer current consumption over future consumption: delayed gratification is hard for most people and, all things being equal, we would rather have things now than wait for them.
  • Inflation: When the money supply increases, prices also often increase. Consequently, the purchasing power of fiat currency decreases over time.
  • Risk: The future is uncertain, and there is always a chance that future cash delivery may not occur.

To overcome these problems, investors must be compensated appropriately. This compensation comes in the form of an interest rate, which is determined by a combination of the asset’s risk and liquidity and the expected inflation rate.

The steps to investing and building wealth involve a series of small decisions that move you along a financial path, one building block at a time over a long period of time. The steps begin with believing that attaining wealth is possible, and a clear intention to start investing and attaining wealth. After all, making your money work for you and accumulating wealth is not a haphazard occurrence, but a deliberate process, journey and destination.

Once you determine that investing and attaining wealth is a priority, focus your energies on maximizing your income, and saving a portion of it. Investing and building wealth also requires you to make decisions on avoiding potentially destructive forces that erode wealth, such as inflation, taxes and overspending.

Learning to be mindful of where your money has been going and spending wisely by evaluating whether something is a need or just a want will keep more money in your pocket. The bonus from being mindful will help you stop accumulating more stuff and may teach you to repurpose already owned items.

“Successful investing and building wealth are about discipline, understanding of your tolerance for risk and, most importantly, about setting realistic financial goals and expectations about market returns,” says Certified Financial Planner Melissa Einberg, a wealth adviser at Forteris Wealth Management.

Invest in stocks.

Your first thought regarding investing in stocks and bonds may be that you don’t want to take the risk. Market downturns definitely happen, but being too cautious can also put you at a disadvantage.

Stocks are an important part of any portfolio because of their long term potential for growth and higher potential returns versus other investments like cash or bonds. For example, from 1926 to 2019, a dollar kept in cash investments would only be worth $22 today; that same dollar invested in small-cap stocks would be worth $25,688 today.

Stocks can serve as a cornerstone for most portfolios because of their potential for growth. But remember – you need to balance reward with risk. Generally, stocks with higher potential return come with a higher level of risk. Investing in equities involves risks. The value of your shares will fluctuate, and you may lose principal.

Investing a portion of your savings in stocks may help you reach financial goals with the caveat that money you think you’ll need in three to five years should be in less risky investments. Stock investing should be long-term, understanding your risk tolerance, and how much risk you can afford to take.

The power of compounding

Compound interest is what can help you make it to the finish line. Compounding can work to your advantage as a long-term investor. When you reinvest dividends or capital gains, you can earn future returns on that money in addition to the original amount invested.

Let’s say you purchase $10,000 worth of stock. In the first year, your investment appreciates by 5%, or a gain of $500. If you simply collected the $500 in profit each year for 20 years, you would have accumulated an additional $10,000. However, by allowing your profits to stay invested, a 5% annualized return would grow to $26,533 after 20 years due to the power of compounding.

Purchasing power protection

Inflation reduces how much you can buy because the cost of goods and services rises over time. Stocks offer two key weapons in the battle against inflation: growth of principal and rising income. Stocks that increase their dividends on a regular basis give you a pay raise to help balance the higher costs of living over time.

In addition, stocks that provide growing dividends have historically provided a much greater total return to shareholders, as shown below.

Invest for the long term.

Long-term investing is the practice of buying and holding assets for a period of five to ten years or longer. While investing with a long-term view sounds simple enough, sticking to this principle requires discipline. You should buy investments with the intention of owning them through good and bad markets. You should base your investment guidance on a long-term view. For your stock picks, you should typically use a five – to ten-year outlook or longer.

Long-term investments require patience on your part which is a trade-off for potentially lower risk and/or a higher possible return.

Market declines can be unnerving. But bull markets historically have lasted much longer and have provided positive returns that offset the declines. Also, market declines often represent a good opportunity to invest. Strategies such as dollar cost averaging and dividend reinvestment can help take the emotion out of your investing decisions.

No one can or has accurately “time” the market. An investor who missed the 10 best days of the market experienced significantly lower returns than someone who stayed invested during the entire period, including periods of market volatility and corrections. Staying invested with a strategy that aligns with your financial goals is a proven course of action.


References:

  1. https://www.edwardjones.com/market-news-guidance/guidance/stock-investing-benefits.html
  2. https://smartasset.com/investing/long-term-investment
  3. https://www.bankrate.com/investing/steps-to-building-wealth/
  4. https://www.cnbc.com/2021/02/04/how-we-increased-our-net-worth-by-1-million-in-6-years-and-retired-early.html

Source: Schwab Center for Financial Research. The data points above illustrate the growth in value of $1.00 invested in various financial instruments on 12/31/1925 through 12/31/2019. Results assume reinvestment of dividends and capital gains; and no taxes or transaction costs. Source for return information: Morningstar, Inc. 

Stay Invested – Time in the Markets

“Time in the markets, not timing the markets.”

A common mantra in investing circles is ‘it’s about time in the markets, not timing the markets’. In other words, the best way to make money is to stay invested for the long term, rather than worrying about short term volatility or whether now is the best time to invest.

Value investing guru Benjamin Graham once quipped that “in the short term the stock market is a voting machine” that measures the popularity of companies and the sentiment of investors, whereas in “the long term it is a weighing machine” that measures each company’s fundamentals and intrinsic value.

Time in the market works because it takes this ‘guess the market bottom’ element out of the equation. By focusing on the long term, it’s easier to ignore the volatility of markets. Sure, it’s still scary watching the value of your share portfolio fall from time to time.

Time in the market is really about harnessing the power of compound interest. Compounding is the best thing about investing. Albert Einstein once said “Compound interest is the most powerful force in the universe. Compound interest is the 8th wonder of the world. He who understands it, earns it, he who doesn’t, pays it.”

With compounding, your money accumulates a lot faster because the interest is calculated in regular intervals and you earn interest on top of interest. Compounding is usually what makes investors like billionaire investor Warren Buffett wealthy. If you are able to achieve a consistently high annual rate of return over the long term, building wealth is almost inevitable. And Buffett has never tried to time a market in his life.

But pushing and pulling your money in and out of the market stymies the compounding process. And all it takes is one massive mistime to end up back at square one given the fact that market can never be timed. Investor Peter Lynch said it best: “Far more money has been lost by investors preparing for corrections, or trying to anticipate corrections, than has been lost in the corrections themselves.”

Compounding plays a pivotal role in growing your wealth. When using compounding, the results will be small at the start but over time, your wealth will accumulate fast. Warren Buffet is known to make the majority of his wealth later in his adult life and this is due to the compounding interest effect on his assets and invested capital.

Missing the best days

Timing the markets involves trying to second-guess the ups and downs, with the hope that you will buy when prices are low and sell when they are high. This can be lucrative if you get it right consistently, but this is very difficult to do and getting it wrong means locking in losses and missing out on gains.

Not only is timing the market difficult to get right, it also poses the risk of missing the ‘good’ days when share prices increase significantly. Historically, many of the best days for the stock markets have occurred during periods of extreme volatility.

Instead of trying to time the market, spending time in the market is more likely to give you better returns over the long term. It is best to base your investment decisions on the long-term fundamentals rather than short-term market noise and volatility.

Value of $10,000 investment in the S&P 500 in 1980

Source: Ned Davis Research, 12/31/1979-7/1/2020.

This chart uses a series of bars to show that from the end of 1979 until July 1, 2020, a $10,000 investment would have been worth $860,900 if invested the entire period. Missing just the 10 best days during that period would reduce the value by more than half, to $383,400.

Anybody who pulls money out in the early stages of a volatile period could miss these good days, as well as potentially locking in some losses. For instance, between May 2008 and February 2009 in the depths of the global financial crisis the MSCI World index dropped by -30.4%. By the end of 2009 it had bounced back +40.8%.


References:

  1. https://www.edwardjones.com/us-en/market-news-insights/guidance-perspective/benefits-investing-stock
  2. https://www.fa-mag.com/news/retirees-are-leading-precarious-financial-lives-42426.html
  3. https://www.tilney.co.uk/news/it-s-about-time-in-the-markets-not-timing-the-markets
  4. https://www.fool.com.au/2020/10/06/does-time-in-the-market-really-beat-timing-the-market/
  5. https://www.fool.com.au/definitions/compounding/

Tax on the Sale of a House (Primary Residence)

If you sell your home for a profit, some of the capital gain could be taxable. Capital gains are the profits from the sale of an asset — shares of stock, a piece of land, a business — and generally are considered taxable income.

The IRS and many states assess capital gains taxes on the difference (profit) between what you pay for an asset — your cost basis — and what you sell it for. Capital gains taxes can apply to investments, such as stocks or bonds, and tangible assets like cars, boats and real estate.

To minimize your tax burden, the IRS typically allows you to exclude up to:

  • $250,000 of capital gains on your primary residence if you’re single.
  • $500,000 of capital gains on real estate if you’re married and filing jointly.

You will have to meet certain criteria in order to qualify for this exclusion, so be sure to review them before you sell. You might qualify for an exception, and adding the value of home improvements you’ve made could help.

For example, if you bought a home 10 years ago for $200,000 and sold it today for $800,000, you’d make $600,000. If you’re married and filing jointly, $500,000 of that gain might not be subject to the capital gains tax (but $100,000 of the gain could be), according to NerdWallet.com. What rate you pay on the other $100,000 would depend in part on your income and your tax-filing status.

The bad news about capital gains on real estate is that your $250,000 or $500,000 exclusion typically goes out the window, which means you pay tax on the whole gain, if any of these factors are true:

  • The house wasn’t your principal residence.
  • You owned the property for less than two years in the five-year period before you sold it.
  • You didn’t live in the house for at least two years in the five-year period before you sold it. (People who are disabled, and people in the military, Foreign Service or intelligence community can get a break on this part, though; see IRS Publication 523 for details.)
  • You already claimed the $250,000 or $500,000 exclusion on another home in the two-year period before the sale of this home.
  • You bought the house through a like-kind exchange (basically swapping one investment property for another, also known as a 1031 exchange) in the past five years.
  • You are subject to expatriate tax.

If it turns out that all or part of the money you made on the sale of your house is taxable, you need to figure out what capital gains tax rate applies.

  • Short-term capital gains tax rates typically apply if you owned the asset for less than a year. The rate is equal to your ordinary income tax rate, also known as your tax bracket.
  • Long-term capital gains tax rates typically apply if you owned the asset for more than a year. The rates are much less onerous; many people qualify for a 0% tax rate. Everybody else pays either 15% or 20%. It depends on your filing status and income.

References:

  1. https://www.nerdwallet.com/article/taxes/selling-home-capital-gains-tax

Black-White Inequality Wealth Gap

“Wealth is a safety net that keeps a life from being derailed by temporary setbacks and the loss of income.”  Brookings Institute

The wealth gap for African Americans remains significant. A close examination of wealth in the U.S. finds evidence of persistent and staggering racial disparities and past racist federal policies, according to the Brookings Institute findings. Specifically, the disparities include:

  • At $171,000, the net worth of a typical white family is nearly ten times greater than that of a Black family ($17,150) in 2016.
  • Gap in stock market participation between the groups persists, with 55 percent of Black Americans and 71 percent of white Americans reporting stock market investments.

This disparity means that Black Americans will have less money saved and invested for retirement, and less accumulated wealth to pass onto the next generation than their white peers.

Figure 1. White families have more wealth than Black, Hispanic, and other or multiple race families in the 2019 SCF.

Notes: Figures displays median (top panel) and mean (bottom panel) wealth by race and ethnicity, expressed in thousands of 2019 dollars.

These gaps in wealth and investments between Black and White households reveal the effects of centuries’ of accumulated inequality, discrimination and racism, as well as differences in power and opportunity that can be traced back to this nation’s inception. The Black-White wealth gap reflects a society that has not and does not afford equality of opportunity to all its citizens.

It is important to note that it was never the case that a White asset-based middle class simply emerged, according to research based on a study of historical and contemporary racial inequality. Rather, it was extraordinary government policy, and to some extent literal government giveaways, that provided Whites the financial assets, educational opportunities, land grants and infrastructure to accumulate and pass down wealth.

In contrast, blacks were largely excluded from these wealth generating benefits. When they were able to accumulate land and enterprise, it was often stolen, destroyed or seized by government complicit in theft, fraud and terror.

Federally funded racism in housing and labor unions

In the mid-twentieth century, the government subsidized builders to construct suburbs of single-family homes  in scores of developments across the country on explicit federal condition that no homes be occupied by African Americans, according to the NAACP Legal Defense Fund. Over several generations, federally subsidized white homebuyers gained a quarter million dollars in home equity or more. In contrast, the government restricted African Americans, including war veterans, mostly to segregated urban apartment rentals where no wealth appreciated.

White homeowners were able to bequeath some of this federally subsidized wealth to subsequent generations, after using it for retirements, children’s college education, care for elderly parents, or medical emergencies. African Americans had to use current income for such expenses, if they could do so at all, pushing many into poverty. Largely because of twentieth century federal segregation policy, while average African American income is about 60 percent of white income, African American wealth is only 7 percent of white wealth.

Other federal policies forced African Americans into poverty, continuing for generations. In 1935, the government gave construction and factory unions the right to collectively bargain for higher wages and benefits. As proposed by Senator Robert Wagner, the law denied that right to unions that barred African Americans. Segregated unions lobbied to remove that provision and the Wagner Act was then passed, unconstitutionally empowering unions to exclude black workers — a policy that continued for over 30 years. Denied the best blue-collar employment, African Americans participated less in the collectively bargained income boom that raised white working class incomes in the three decades following World War II.

Wealth

“Black children are less economically upwardly mobile partly because of the multigenerational effects of federal and state government racist policies that purposely segregated their grandparents and great-grandparents into low-income communities and low paying jobs from which exit was difficult.

Wealth is the sum of resources available to a household at a point in time; as such it is clearly influenced by the income of a household, but the two are not perfectly correlated.

Two households can have the same income, but the household with fewer expenses, or with more accumulated wealth from past income or inheritances, will have more wealth.

As a result, high- and middle-income white families are much wealthier than Black families with the same incomes. A few reasons are that White families receive much larger inheritances on average than Black families. Economists Darrick Hamilton and Sandy Darity conclude that inheritances and other intergenerational transfers “account for more of the racial wealth gap than any other demographic and socioeconomic indicators.”

For example, while 51 percent of white Americans say they have inherited wealth, just 23 percent of Black Americans have, according to an annual Ariel-Schwab Black Investor Survey.

All of this matters because wealth confers benefits that go beyond those that come with family income.

Wealth is a safety net that keeps a life from being derailed by temporary personal economic setbacks and the loss of income, according to Brookings Institute. This safety net allows people to take career risks knowing that they have a buffer when success is not immediately achieved.

Family wealth allows people (especially young adults who have recently entered the labor force) to access housing in safe neighborhoods with good schools, thereby enhancing the prospects of their own children.

Wealth affords people opportunities to be entrepreneurs and inventors. And the income from wealth is taxed at much lower rates than income from work, which means that wealth begets more wealth.

Education a Way to Weslth

Social science research indicates that blacks attain more years of education than whites from families with comparable resources. Essentially, blacks place a high premium on education as a means of mobility

Yet, the racial wealth gap between Blacks and Whited expands at higher levels of post secondary education. In short, Black families where the head graduated from college have less accumulated than wealth than white families where the head dropped out of high school.

One take-away…better mindsets regarding wealth and money alone can’t fix the legacy of unconstitutional and racist federal and state sanctioned economic policy.


References:

  1. https://www.brookings.edu/blog/up-front/2020/02/27/examining-the-black-white-wealth-gap/
  2. https://www.aboutschwab.com/ariel-schwab-black-investor-survey-2021
  3. Source: Federal Reserve Board, 2019 Survey of Consumer Finances.
  4. https://www.marketwatch.com/story/heres-why-black-families-have-struggled-for-decades-to-gain-wealth-2019-02-28
  5. https://www.epi.org/blog/is-poverty-a-mindset/

Bitcoin and Risky Investing

Volatility isn’t always bad, and it’s important to be cautious about applying leverage

Bitcoin is a new currency that was created in 2009 by an unknown person using the alias Satoshi Nakamoto. Transactions are made with no middle men – meaning, no banks! Bitcoin can be used to book hotels on Expedia, shop for furniture on Overstock and buy Xbox games.

Bitcoin has become an asset class of great interest to many investors and speculators across the world. But recently a few leading asset managers have recommended that investors direct a small allocation of their capital to cryptocurrency as part of their investments and retirement savings.

Where does Bitcoin fit in?

“Bitcoin is neither intrinsically valuable, nor is it a reliable store of wealth,” said Stuart Trow, a credit strategist at the European Bank for Reconstruction & Development, in a Bloomberg Opinion article. “It certainly does not produce an income. It does, however, possess two characteristics that could make it a good fit for even the most conservative portfolio”…volatility and it is not leveraged.

Volatility

Many investors and financial advisors view Bitcoin’s volatility with horror. Between Dec. 2017 and Dec. 2018 the price of Bitcoin fell by almost 85%. But since that meltdown it has risen more than tenfold, demonstrating that volatility can cut both ways. The greater an investment’s volatility, the larger the losses but the larger the potential returns.

Bitcoin’s volatility offers a greater possibility of meaningful gains, while committing a relatively small, manageable sum. Since over the past year, its price has more than quadrupled. Had you invested one percent of your capital to Bitcoin, it would have contributed much to your portfolio. Thanks to Bitcoin’s volatility, as long as you don’t bet the ranch, there remains the possibility of making a real gain without too much loss.

Leverage

Bitcoins other key characteristic is that it is not a leveraged investment. Unlike leveraged trading strategies, which traders apply leverage (or debt) to trading financial instruments such as option and future contracts, your losses with Bitcoin are limited to your initial stake. Most other get-rich-quick schemes, including contracts for derivatives, rely on debt to some degree.

Fear of Missing Out (FOMO)

“Fear of missing out” and viewing cryptocurrencies as an alternative safe have to gold were just a few of the reasons that were heard when new Bitcoin investors were asked to explain their purchases in a month when the cryptocurrency had reached historical record highs.  Especially when conventional investing wisdom would advise against buying the elevated prices, and these investors knew that the cryptocurrency might lose value.

Yet, Bitcoin is not for everyone, as underlined by its recent short term $10,000 fall in early January 2021.  But, if you have a couple of dollars that you can afford to lose, there are probably worse things to buy right now than the world’s most popular cryptocurrency.


Reference:

  1. https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2021-01-30/personal-finance-what-bitcoin-teaches-us-about-risky-investing
  2. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/newsletters/2021-01-21/bitcoin-investing-why-people-are-buying-the-cryptocurrency-now

Just Buy Low Cost Index Funds

“The less you spend on investing, the more you get to keep.”. Rick Ferri

When investors who don’t manage their costs, they pay a significant price for their inaction and inexperience. As John Bogle has famously said, “In investing, you get what you don’t pay for.” The primary issue is that investment product providers, especially annuities and actively managed funds, and financial intermediaries are selling commission-based products that take advantage of unsophisticated investors by marketing high-fee, high-commission funds that earn low returns. 

Cost Matters Hypothesis.

It costs money to try to beat the market, according to Bogle, and you pay whether or not the manager succeeds. When a group of financial people try to out perform the market, some will win and be successful, some will lose, but collectively they will get the market’s return—before fees. After fees, they will get much less. Bogle once calculated that “active stock investors lose close to 3% a year in fees, trading costs and taxes.”

“Costs matter. They matter more than past performance.” John Bogle

Occasionally, you might get lucky for a year or five or ten. Eventually, though, your luck will run out. With each passing year it becomes more likely that you will be overtaken by the law of averages.

Buffet advice to investors

Billionaire investor Warren Buffett recommends that most investors should buy low-cost index funds. In his sage opinion, buying index funds would go a long way toward solving this serious problem of overpaying for investments. Buffett’s recommends inexperienced investors and investors without time or inclination to conduct research buy index funds. His view is that index funds, such as those that mimic the S&P 500 benchmark, are a smart investment that almost anyone can follow.

“Costs really matter in investments,” Buffett says in a CNBC interview. “If returns are going to be 7 or 8 percent and you’re paying 1 percent for fees, that makes an enormous difference in how much money you’re going to have in retirement.”

The appeal of index investments is their low cost compared to most actively managed mutual funds and ETFs. With active funds and ETFs, according to Fidelity Investment, a manager attempts to deliver performance that outpaces a chosen index, often referred to as a benchmark. Passive ETFs and mutual funds, on the other hand, try to match the performance of a benchmark.

Benchmarks may include familiar indexes such as the S&P 500, as well as custom benchmarks created by a fund’s managers. Passive investments may not offer the potential to outperform an index, but they typically offer lower costs than active funds managed against a similar index or benchmark.

When evaluating cost, most investors focus on the expense ratio—the annual percentage of assets that mutual funds and ETFs charge investors to cover services such as investment management, recordkeeping, compliance, and shareholder services. In general, these costs are much lower for passive strategies than for active ones. And, even this expense that can vary dramatically even among seemingly similar passive index funds and ETFs.

Labor Secretary Thomas Perez said during a Senate panel meeting: “The problem with our [financial] system in the U.S. is it incentivizes complexity when simplicity is all too frequently what’s called for. … It incentivizes complexity because complexity generates more fees.”

The solution and best defense against those who prey on investor ignorance, according to Rick Ferri, is investor education and requiring financial literacy in our schools and colleges. Perhaps we need to scream continuously, “Just buy low-cost index funds!” every time an investor is pitched a hyped-up mutual fund advertisement or a high-cost fund.

Investing in index mutual funds and ETFs can be an outstanding low-cost strategy. And, like any other investment strategy, investing in index funds requires that you understand what you are investing in. You need to ensure that you are investing in a low-cost product that tracks a benchmark that fits with your investing strategy.


References:

  1. https://rickferri.com/forewarned-is-forearmed-on-investment-expenses/
  2. https://www.cnbc.com/2018/01/03/why-warren-buffett-says-index-funds-are-the-best-investment.html
  3. https://www.fidelity.com/viewpoints/investing-ideas/how-to-shop-smart
  4. http://johncbogle.com/wordpress/

Long-Term Investors Have Almost Always Experienced Positive Returns

S&P 500 rolling returns have been almost always positive over the long-term.

One of the best ways to invest is over the long term and it’s more important than ever to focus on long-term investing. It’s long-term investing strategy where investors can accumulate wealth. By investing long term, you can meet your financial goals and increase your financial security.

94% of 10-year rolling returns have been positive since 2000.

Rolling returns are measured over consecutive periods starting with the earliest period and finishing with the most recent. For example, the period of measure for a 10-year rolling return for an investment as of the end of February, would be 03/01/2010 through 02/29/2020.

Source: Bloomberg Finance L.P. as of 02/28/2020. Past performance does not guarantee future results. The referenced index is shown for informational purposes only and is not meant to represent the Fund. Investors cannot directly invest in an index.

Investing and learning to think long-term

While many investors of all ages think of investing as trying to time the market to make a short-term return on their investment, investing for the long-term investing is one of the best ways and a proven strategy for investor to accumulate wealth over time and achieve financial security. But the first step is learning to think long term, and avoiding obsessively following the markets daily ups and downs.


References:

  1. https://oshares.com/long-term-investors-have-almost-always-experienced-positive-returns/
  2. https://www.bankrate.com/investing/best-long-term-investments/

Creating a Comprehensive Financial Life Plan

A Financial Life Plan can help you get on the path to financial freedom.

A comprehensive life financial plan provides a picture of your current finances, financial goals and any strategies you’ve set to achieve those goals. The plan should include details of your cash flow, savings, debt, investments, and other elements of your financial life.

Creating a life financial plan can help bring things into focus—it’s like a roadmap to help you figure out how to reach your financial goals. a clear picture of what you want to accomplish, but the details of how to make it happen.

Financial planning involves identifying financial goals you want to achieve and making sure you have the “what-ifs” covered. This can help guide you through key decisions in life and make you less vulnerable to setbacks and financial hardships down the line. You can feel more confident about financial decision-making when you have a comprehensive plan to guide you. Your financial plan might cover a number of areas, from managing debt and saving for the future to building wealth and protecting your money.

Financial Life Planning connects our financial realities with our values and the lives we dream to live. It helps both pre-retirees and retirees identify their core values and connect them with their financial decisions and life’s financial, health and emotional goals.

It is a financial planning and investing approach which helps people align their investment portfolio with their values and with the things which are important to them. Think of it like a holistic roadmap for your financial well-being.

Financial life plan focuses on the emotional side of financial planning. It considers people’s anxiety, habits, behaviors and other emotions (e.g., fear and greed) tied to investing money and accumulating wealth. People struggling with retirement and other finances really need a plan that helps them manage their attitudes, habits, behaviors, goals and resources.

“The right plan, executed faithfully, can be the difference between success and failure in any endeavor.” Brett N. Steenbarger, Ph.D., author of The Psychology of Trading

Whether you need to reduce spending and eliminate debt, increase your savings, or just refine the details, once you understand your financial mindset and associated behaviors; once you know where you are and where you need to go financially—a financial life plan can provide a more coherent sense of direction.

Market downturns and investment risk management

During periods of high market volatility and declines, financial life planning, when done correctly, assumes there will be these periods of volatility, panic selling and downturns like the equity markets are experiencing today as a result of COVID-19 pandemic. Any actions taken to significantly reduce or eliminate equity allocation could result in investors coming up short in retirement.

The risk of outliving their assets might be the biggest risk that retirees face today. With many of Americans living longer and the rising costs of healthcare in retirement, most retirees need a level of exposure to stocks in their portfolio for growth and to maintain their standard of living.

Steps to creating a Comprehensive Financial Life Plan

  1. Develop a Positive Financial Mindset
    The most important step in developing and following a financial life plan is to examine your mindset about money.
    – Are you ready to accept responsibility for changing your financial situation?
    – Do you believe that you can and will change the way you make financial decisions?
    – Can you identify at least one benefit you hope to gain by changing your financial behavior?
    Financial mindset consists of a predetermined set of beliefs, thoughts, habits and behaviors an individual has about saving by paying yourself first, investing for the long-term and accumulating wealth for financial well-being.
    Every person has a set of financial beliefs, thoughts, habits and behaviors about money and personal finance. Even if they can’t express what their thoughts and mindset are, they still exist both consciously and subconsciously. Just by observing your own financial reality and outcomes, you can begin to better understand your financial mindset, behaviors and habits.
    Thus, it becomes important to develop and nurture a positive financial mindset. Since, it is difficult to develop the good financial habits and behaviors that will be necessary to lead to an improved financial outcome and overall financial well-being without a positive financial mindset.
  2. Write down your goals
    One of the first things you should ask yourself is what you want your money to accomplish. Financial goals will differ in the length of time needed to achieve them. Be sure every goal has a specific purpose, a dollar amount that it will cost, and a realistic target date. Make sure your goals are realistic and not set too high, or frustration may keep you from reaching them.
    – What are your short-term needs? Short-term goals are priorities that can be accomplished within two years.
    – Mid-term goals are priorities that can be accomplished within two to five years.
    – What are you saving for long term? What do you want to accomplish in the next 5 to 10 years? Long-term financial goals are priorities that may take more than five years to accomplish. Most long-term goals require investing.
    It’s easy to talk about goals in general, but get really specific and write them down. Which goals are most important to you? Identifying, prioritizing and aligning your goals with your values, your goals will act as a motivator as you dig into your financial details.
  3. Create a net worth statement
    Achieving your goals requires understanding where you stand today. So start with what you have.
    – First, make a list of all your assets—things like bank and investment accounts, real estate and valuable personal property.
    – Now make a list of all your debts: mortgage, credit cards, student loans—everything.
    – Next, subtract your liabilities from your assets and you have your net worth.
    If you’re in the plus, great. If you’re in the minus, that’s not at all uncommon for those just starting out, but it does point out that you have some work to do. But whatever it is, you can use this number as a benchmark against which you can measure your progress.
  4. Know your cash flow
    Cash flow simply means money in (your income) and money out (your expenses). It will show you if you’re spending more or less than you earn.
    – How much money do you earn each month? Be sure to include all sources of income.
    – Now look at what you spend each month, including any expenses that may only come up once or twice a year. Do you consistently overspend? How much are you saving? Do you often have extra cash you could direct toward your goals?
  5. Your budget and manage your expenses
    A budget is telling your money where to go instead of wondering where it went.” John C. Maxwell
    For most people, financial success depend solely on how much they spend. This, it is important to find out where your money is going. Your budget will let you know how you’re spending.
    – Write down your essential expenses such as mortgage, insurance, food, transportation, utilities and loan payments. Don’t forget irregular and periodic big-ticket items such as vehicle repair or replacement costs, out of pocket health care costs and real estate taxes.
    – Then write down nonessentials—restaurants, entertainment, even clothes.
    Does your income easily cover all of this? Are savings a part of your monthly budget? Examining your expenses helps you plan and budget when you’re building an emergency fund. It will also help you determine if what you’re spending money on lines up with what is most important to you.
  6. Start (or build up) your emergency fund.
    Building a strong financial foundation starts with saving for emergencies. When you have a safety net for unexpected expenses, you don’t have to worry about throwing your budget out of whack. You can be confident that you’re ready for a car breakdown, home repairs, medical expenses or other emergencies that pop up. It’s OK to start small—saving $50 in an account you’ve designated for emergencies is a good starting point. You might work up to saving $1,000 and then eventually aim to save enough to cover three to six months’ worth of living expenses in an emergency fund. An emergency fund is essential because you need to absorb life’s surprises without making things worse. Without a stash of cash, you may have to take on debt for unexpected car troubles or surprise medical expenses. And, the fund can be kept in a savings account kept separate from your regular checking account. It’s not an account that should be dipped into often — unless there’s an emergency.
    If you already have an emergency fund, consider giving it a boost. An emergency fund should consist of three to six months’ worth of expenses, which is a different different amount for everyone. If you don’t think you’d survive financially if you missed a paycheck, then your an ideal candidate for needing an emergency fund.
  7. Focus on debt management
    Debt can derail you, but not all debt is bad. Yet, freedom from debt is an achievable goal for everyone.
    Some debt, like a mortgage, can work in your favor provided that you’re not overextended. It’s high-interest consumer debt like credit cards that you want to avoid. Try to follow the 28/36 guideline suggesting no more than 28 percent of pre-tax income goes toward home debt, no more than 36 percent toward all debt. Look at each specific debt to decide when and how you’ll systematically pay it down. Do you know how much debt you currently have (credit cards, student loans, auto loans, mortgage, etc.) and how long it will take to pay off each debt at your current rate of payment? It’s important to make a long-term plan for debt repayment so you can focus your efforts on the most efficient ways to reduce your debt. This might include tackling high-interest rate debts first or loan consolidation. Create a running list of all your loan balances and interest rates so you can see where you stand today and identify ways to make a dent in your debt. For example, you might make extra payments on your loan with the highest interest rate. A financial advisor can help you review your debt and create a debt elimination plan. Use our Debt Roll-Down Calculator to find the best way to pay off your credit cards.
    If you’ve been struggling with old debt, such as credit cards, student loans or medical bills, now is the time to pay them off for good. If you’re not sure which debt to pay off first, consider the one with the highest interest. High-interest debt, like credit cards, can compound through hefty interest charges, late fees and other penalties. pay down the principal of your student loan. The sooner you pay it all off, the less burden you carry.
  8. Get your (retirement) savings and investing on track by paying yourself first
    Whatever your age, retirement saving needs to be part of your financial plan. The earlier you start, the less you’ll likely have to save each year. You might be surprised by just how much you’ll need—especially when you factor in healthcare costs. But if you begin saving early, you may be surprised to find that even a little bit over time can make a big difference.
    Spending time today to plan your path to retirement can provide you peace of mind in the future. Getting started is the most important step you can take—it’s never too early or too late to save for retirement! The key is to continue saving consistently and make retirement savings a priority in your budget. Individual retirement accounts (IRAs) and employer-sponsored retirement plans, such as 401(k)s, offer tax benefits that can help your savings grow faster. As you near retirement, you’ll want to set a strategy for tapping retirement assets.
    Your financial plan should outline your retirement savings goals and ways to boost your savings (e.g., increasing your contributions every year or when you get a bonus or raise). Run the numbers using our Retirement Planner Calculator or review your retirement plans with a financial advisor.
    Calculate how much you will need and contribute to a 401(k) or other employer-sponsored plan (at least enough to capture an employer match) or an IRA. Save what you can and gradually try and increase your savings rate as your earnings increase. Whatever you do, don’t put it off.
    And, make the savings a priority by paying yourself first. This means that instead of saving what remains after paying your monthly expenses, individuals should pay themselves first by setting aside at least 10% to 15% of their monthly income as their first expense, and then pay the rest of their monthly expenses. Paying yourself means that your savings and other financial goals are taken care of before you allow yourself to spend money on less important items.
  9. College Savings.
    Parents and guardians face the challenge of balancing multiple financial demands, including your own retirement and future health care costs as well as education expenses for your dependents. Having a financial plan helps ensure you’re taking the right steps to address all areas of your financial life. Choosing the right college savings vehicle and planning ahead to take advantage of financial aid, loans and scholarships can help make college more affordable.
    Determine how much you want to save for college and the best way to grow your savings. Our College Savings Calculator can help you estimate how much you’ll need to save.
  10. Stay invested in the market for the long-term and check-in with your portfolio regularly.
    If you’re confident in your financial life plan and investment strategy, leaving your investments alone during short-term market corrections and Bear markets could help you accumulate wealth over the long-term and help ensure your retirement nest egg.
    When was the last time you took a close look at your portfolio? There are no guarantees when it comes to investing, but it seems that fear and uncertainty tends to put investors on the sidelines when markets plunge and become highly volatile.
    Markets go up and go down down in the short-term which can have a real effect on the relative percentage of stocks and bonds you own—even when you do nothing. And even an up market can throw your portfolio out of alignment with your feelings about risk. Don’t be complacent. Review and rebalance on at least an annual basis.
  11. Make sure you’re adequately insured
    Having adequate insurance is an important part of protecting your finances and family. Insurance is essential to protect your family and your financial future. Having health insurance, auto insurance and homeowners or renters insurance protects you when you need it. You may consider options for life and disability insurance, which can help protect your family’s finances if something happens to you. Review your insurance coverage and beneficiaries, especially if you’ve had any major changes in your family and life. A total risk assessment with an insurance professional can make sure you have the right level of coverage.
    We all need health insurance, and most of us also need car and homeowner’s or renter’s insurance. While you’re working, disability insurance helps protect your future earnings and ability to save. You might also want a supplemental umbrella policy based on your occupation and net worth. Finally, you should consider life insurance, especially if you have dependents. Review your policies to make sure you have the right type and amount of coverage. You never know what the future may hold—but it helps to be prepared for anything. What if you or a loved one experienced major medical issues or needed assisted living or nursing home care? Making decisions about long-term care can be stressful and emotionally difficult, and the costs can drain your family’s finances.
    You may want to explore options for long-term care insurance to help pay for long-term care needs such as nursing home care. You may also decide to write an advance care directive regarding your wishes for medical care and name a power of attorney to make financial decisions on your behalf if you’re unable to do so.
  12. Know your income tax rate
    Taxes are one of the most insidious destroyers of wealth, along with debt. You should make sure you’re prepared for the annual tax season and review your withholding, estimated taxes and any tax credits you may have qualified for in the past. The IRS has provided tips and information; take advantage of tax deferred accounts like IRAs and 401(k)s can help you save money on taxes and accumulate wealth more efficiently.
  13. Create or update your will and estate plan
    At the minimum, have a will—especially to name a guardian for minor children. Also check that beneficiaries on your retirement accounts and insurance policies are up-to-date. Complete an advance healthcare directive and assign powers of attorney for both finances and healthcare. Medical directive forms are sometimes available online or from your doctor or hospital. Working with an estate planning attorney is recommended to help you plan for complex situations and if you need more help.
  14. Invest in yourself and continue to learn
    “An investment in knowledge pays the best interest.” Benjamin Franklin
    While college is a great self-investment, there are other ways you can invest in yourself. Consider taking courses in a field or industry you’re interested in pursuing.
    If you’ve been contemplating a career change, use your money to invest in that switch. If you need capital to start your own business, this could be your chance. Also consider using it to give yourself a much-needed break. Whether this is a vacation fund or simply money for a massage or spa day to recharge, reset and refocus. Focused on what would improve your well-being in the long-term, not a quick fix. Continuous learning and growth are the key.
  15. Three Pillars (financial wealth, physical health and emotional well-being)
    Financial assets like stocks, bonds and real estate are forms of personal wealth. However, Americans need to also focus their attention on staying emotionally and physically healthy. Self-care is paramount in all three facets of life which include financial wealth, physical health and emotional well-being. Eating a balanced diet, exercising, getting enough sleep and connecting regularly with family and friends, are essential to live a purposeful and fulfilling life.
  • Take control of your future with a financial plan for the next five, ten or more years.
  • Insurance Protection. Ensure you have adequate Medical insurance and consider purchasing Long-Term Care insurance.

References:

  1. https://www.brownleeglobal.com/financial-life-planning/?preview=true&frame-nonce=60592dd178
  2. https://www.schwab.com/resource-center/insights/content/10-steps-to-diy-financial-plan?SM=uro#sf228155652
  3. https://www.cnet.com/personal-finance/how-to-invest-your-tax-refund/
  4. https://www.moneymanagement.org/credit-counseling/resources/financial-literacy-month

Net Worth Statement

The process of calculating personal net worth may well be the only exercise in financial planning that savers and investors actually enjoy. It, with a personal cash flow statement, provides savers and investors with a financial scorecard of where you stand along the path of financial security.

“A personal income and expense statement [cash flow] goes hand-in-hand with a net worth statement because it allows you to see sources of income and expenses while working and retired,” David Bizé, a financial professional in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, said. “It helps you determine how much can reasonably be saved for financial goals as well as project whether your financial goals will be satisfied long term.”

Calculate your net worth

A net worth statement is a list of what you own (assets) and what you owe (liabilities).

Your assets would include any possessions of value, including:

  • Bank and brokerage accounts
  • Real estate
  • Retirement accounts (IRAs and 401(k))
  • Pension plans
  • Stock options
  • Cash value life insurance
  • Other property, such as artwork

To estimate the value of the personal property in your home, a good rule of thumb is to use 25 percent to 30 percent of its fair market value.

Into the liability column falls any debt you may have, such as:

  • Mortgage
  • Car loans
  • Student loans
  • Credit card balances
  • Child support
  • Alimony
  • Back taxes
  • Medical debt

To calculate your net worth, simply subtract what you owe from what you own. If you own more than you owe, your net worth will be positive. If you owe more than you own, it’s negative.

Appearances can be deceiving, the numbers never lie. Your neighbor with the big house and the luxury cars, for example, may exude a high net worth lifestyle, but if they’re up to their nose in debt, or not saving for their retirement, they may have a smaller net worth than the family next door who lives more modestly.

As a rule of thumb, your net worth should be roughly equal to six times your annual salary by age 60, or that your net worth by age 72 (the new age at which required minimum distributions from your IRA must begin) should be 20 times your annual spending. Other financial pundits suggest that you should aim to be net worth positive by age 30, and have twice your yearly salary socked away for retirement by age 40.

According to the U.S. Federal Reserve, the average net worth of all families in the U.S. rose 26 percent to $692,100 between 2013 and 2016, the most recent year for which data are available.  But the average net worth by age group breaks down as such:

  • Younger than age 35: $76,200
  • Ages 35-44: $288,700
  • Ages 45-54: $727,500
  • Ages 55-64: $1,167,400
  • Ages 65-74: $1,066,000
  • Ages 75 and older: $1,067,000

The ideal net worth differs for everyone and depends on your lifestyle, geographic location, income potential, and investment returns. The age at which you plan to retire also plays a role. The longer you work beyond your full retirement age, the less you need saved.

At the end of the day, all that matters is that your net worth is appropriate for your future financial plans, your financial goals and your lifestyle.


References:

  1. https://blog.massmutual.com/post/net-worth-calculate?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social_pd&utm_campaign=brand_traf_contentsyndication&utm_content=static_election_6200129223294_learn&utm_term=demo_fin_int_all&fbclid=IwAR1x-0otWLiM1UTNrFC5pLTEcXYkRr-wls4qucKmW6VfVjCjSry1dZr4Frg
  2. U.S. Federal Reserve, “Changes in U.S. Family Finances from 2013 to 2016: Evidence from the Survey of Consumer Finances. Table 2: Family median and mean net worth, by selected characteristics of families, 2013 and 2016 surveys,” September 2017.

The stock market is not the economy

The stock market is not the economy, rather it is one variable that indicates how the economy is doing and may perform down the road.

“The stock market is a market where stocks, a type of investment that represents ownership in a company are traded,” said Jessica Schieder, a federal tax policy fellow at the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy. The stock market is where investors attempt to predict what’s going to happen in the economy or with a company’s stock price.

In contrast, the economy is a sum of goods and services, all of the things produced measured by gross domestic product (GDP).

“The stock market can be moody,” explains Laura Gonzalez, associate professor of finance at California State University, Long Beach. “Sometimes the stock market is positive about the future and sometimes it’s negative about the future.”

So remember, the stock market is not the economy. And the economy is not the stock market. But they are related.


References:

  1. https://www.marketplace.org/2019/09/30/the-stock-market-is-not-the-economy/