5 ways to win your financial marathon | Regions Private Wealth Management

Sponsored content from Regions Private Wealth Management
Jan 31, 2017, 4:41pm EST

By making a regular habit of saving and monitoring progress toward your financial goals, you can build stamina to reach the finish line and bask in the glow of a race well-run.

Whether preparing for your first marathon or your fourteenth, you know that you can’t finish the race without preparation and discipline. With 26.2 miles to cover, it’s most certainly not a quick sprint. The same can be said for financial goals.

It doesn’t matter whether you’re establishing relatively short-term goals, such as paying down credit card debt by year-end, or taking a longer view and planning for a first home, child’s college education or retirement, Regions Bank has some healthy financial habits that can move you closer to the finish line.

1. Create a plan

Going from couch potato to long-distance runner won’t happen overnight. Just as you’d need to plan a training regimen and determine milestones before tackling a long race, you’ll need to do some research and planning to figure out how to best reach your financial target.

Maybe your goal is to buy a first home, so start with some research to determine exactly what dollar amount you’ll need and when. Online savings calculators can provide details on how much you need to set aside each month to reach your goal. Once armed with that information, develop a budget around that goal and track your spending to be sure you stay on course.

2. Create a support network

A training partner can offer motivation and support before and during a race, and it’s no different with household budgets. Spouses should work together to keep tabs on their spending and savings, as teamwork can help everyone stay on track and focused on the ultimate goal.

Even kids can play a role, such as by helping to grow a college fund. By setting aside birthday or babysitting money, children can learn about the importance — and the rewards — of sacrifice and hard work.

3. Be flexible and change things up

Training with the same workout every day can not only result in losing interest, but it can make progress stagnate. If a budget is too restrictive and resulting in frustration, then it may be time to take another look. If you’ve focused on belt-tightening, think about how you can bring in additional cash to allow for some breathing room and an occasional treat. Consider working extra shifts, selling unneeded belongings, or renting out a room or parking spot.

Once you’ve made progress, look for other ways to supplement your savings. If you’re maintaining investment portfolios to help reach your goals, periodically rebalance them to make sure they reflect changing risk environments and to free up capital to take advantage of any new opportunities.

4. Adjust for the final stretch

As a big race approaches, it’s important to maintain conditioning while being wary of regimens that could bring on an injury from which you may not have time to recover. Similarly, with savings goals, as the need becomes more immediate, your savings and investment accounts will have less time to recover from a sudden dip in value, whether it’s from a market downturn or an emergency withdrawal.

For instance, when saving for retirement while in your 20s and 30s, higher-risk investments may provide greater growth potential over time. As you near retirement, however, you’ll want to start protecting the growth achieved and consider lower-risk holdings that can help preserve value.

5. Prepare for the unexpected

Life throws us curves, and it’s not unusual for a training program to get off-track for any number of reasons. Our financial goals can also be at risk, such as from unexpected home or auto repairs, a job loss or an injury. To be able to meet these challenges head-on, prepare an emergency fund to cover expenses. Experts at Regions Bank recommend saving enough to cover three to six months of expenses. If you’re not at that level yet, consider adding this purpose to your monthly budget.

By making a regular habit of saving and monitoring progress toward your financial goals, you can build stamina to reach the finish line and bask in the glow of a race well-run.


References:

  1. https://www.regions.com/Insights/Wealth?WT.ac=VanityURL_wealthinsights
  2. https://www.bizjournals.com/bizwomen/channels/cbiz/2017/01/5-ways-to-win-your-financial-marathon.html?page=all

U.S. Economy and Stock Markets are Highly Disconnected

“The stock market isn’t the economy. The economy is production and jobs, and there are shortfalls in virtually every sector of the economy.”  -Janet Yellen, former Chair of the Federal Reserve

We remain in the midst of a global crisis as the impact of COVID-19 infections continues to spread. As a result, we are experiencing an income crisis for a wide swath of the working population. The labor market decline was most catastrophic on low-end age earners. Those jobs have been the slowest to recover and many of those jobs have been loss permanently.

financial markets reflect assessments of the value of assets today based on investors’ expectations for the cash those assets will generate.

The U.S. economy is highly consumer-driven according to economists; our Gross Domestic Product (GDP) levels are guided primarily by consumer spending. The “V-shaped” recovery in retail sales data has been a boon to the bull market narrative. There is, however, legitimate concern over the potential impact if the Congress and Executive branch are unable to hammer out a compromise on extended unemployment benefits.

Causes of the disconnect

“Financial markets reflect assessments of the value of assets today based on investors’ expectations for the cash those assets will generate.” Vanguard Investments

Hope-ism and federal intervention are buoying up the stock market. “Hope-ism” is the wishful thinking that makes investors believe that the economy will not only recover quickly, it will snap back with vigor as the virus is quickly vanquished.

Federal intervention has been stratospheric over the past decade plus. Coming into the pandemic, the Fed had injected $5 trillion in Quantitative Easing (QE) from the 2008 recession. Now it has added another $3 trillion in the first round of COVID-19 relief and will likely add at least another $2 trillion, bringing the total to a whopping $10 trillion.

The two, the U.S. economy and equity stock markets, will reconnect again. Either the economy will recover, as the stock market predicts, or the stock market will reprice and crash. In the following we discuss the causes of the disconnect and what investors should be concerned about as the disconnect corrects.

Investors should expect a stock market correction. Greed will give way to fear. FOMO (fear of missing out) will become FOLO (fear of losing out). Also, there are plenty of other threats to the economy and stock market including a global debt crisis, cyber crime and terrorism, trade wars and socioeconomic unrest.


References:

  1. https://www.marketwatch.com/articles/the-disturbing-reality-fueling-this-bull-market-51598004009?mod=mw_more_headlines
  2. https://seekingalpha.com/article/4368901-stock-market-will-reconnect-economy-what#:~:text=There%20are%20two%20reasons%20that%20the%20stock%20market,other%20way%20to%20reconnect%20is%20a%20market%20crash.
  3. https://www.barchart.com/story/options/146523/inside-volatility-trading-august-25-2020

First-Time Investors should Stop Chasing Hot Stocks | TheStreet

“Your savings rate is…the biggest determinant of how you do financially over time.” Christine Benz, the director of personal finance for investment research firm Morningstar

As the stock markets plunged across the globe in March, a wave of Americans saw an opportunity to start investing. But chasing hot stocks like Apple, Tesla or Amazon, according to financial experts, is akin to making the same old ‘tried and true’ investment mistakes as our forefathers and foremothers.

“Individual stocks are terrible investments for people just starting out,” according to Christine Benz, the director of personal finance for investment research firm Morningstar.

Active investing strategies, such as buying and selling individual stocks on trading platforms like Robinhood, often underperforms over the long-term versus more passive investment strategies, such as investing in low cost index funds that simply follow a stock market index like the S&P 500.

While chasing hot stocks may seem thrilling in the short-term while you’re winning, the keys to financial success and security are incredibly mundane. They include:

  • Creating and following a financial plan;
  • Disciplined and deliberate savings;
  • Investing for the long-term;
  • Time in the market beats timing the market;
  • Investing in market index mutual funds and ETFs; and
  • Diversification and asset allocation.

Read more: https://www.thestreet.com/personal-finance/first-time-investors-stop-chasing-hot-stocks-do-this-instead-nw

Why would anyone own bonds now? There are at least five reasons | MarketWatch

Published on www.MarketWatch.com: Aug. 4, 2020 at 12:52 p.m. ET

By Ben Carlson

Bonds play a role in an investment portfolio, even amid historically low interest rates

What’s the better performer 2020 year to date — the red-hot Nasdaq 100 index of tech behemoths (Apple, Microsoft, Amazon and Alphabet, etc.) or boring, old long-term bonds?

The Nasdaq 100 ETF QQQ is up an astonishing 25.5%. But the long-term treasury ETF TLT is up 27.3%. Surprisingly, long-term bonds are outperforming tech stocks.

Yet, according to Deutsche Bank, we’re now experiencing the lowest government bond yields in well over 200 years:

Fixed income assets, such as bonds, typically provides regular cash and lower volatility when markets hit turbulence.  And, bond prices often are uncorrelated to equities. Stocks typically do well in periods of economic growth, whereas bonds typically do well in periods of declining economic activity and recessions.  Additionally,  bonds offer downside protection and moderate upside potential as investors tend to seek out the safety of U.S. government and investment-grade corporate bonds amid stock market uncertainty.

Many investors have been saying for years that bond coupon rates and yields can only go up from here, and yet, they’ve done nothing but fall more. And maybe they’ll fall even further and possibly go negative like in Europe and Japan (something we should not rule out in the U.S. if the pandemic worsens).

But eventually short-term movements in rates will wash out and the long-term returns will be based more on the current bond yields. When you consider how paltry those yields are, investors in fixed-income are guaranteed to see minuscule returns from here over the long haul.

So why own bonds at historically low yields? Some reasons:

  1. Bonds hedge stock-market volatility
  2. Bonds can be used to rebalance
  3. Bonds can be used for spending purposes
  4. Bonds protect against deflation
  5. There are other asset class options, but there aren’t many

Although bonds and bond funds have done extremely well in 2020, the bottom-line regarding bonds and bond funds…you can either earn less income from low yielding bonds to better protect your capital or earn more income from dividend paying stocks to accept more risk in your portfolio.

Read the entire opinion article at: https://www.marketwatch.com/story/why-would-anyone-own-bonds-now-there-are-at-least-five-reasons-2020-08-04


References:

  1. https://www.fidelity.com/insights/investing-ideas/bond-funds-portfolio-protection

Options Trading Mistakes | Trades Of The Day

Most individual investors and traders know that they need to have a plan, manage risk, and put in the work learning and practicing. If they do that, they are well on their way to success.

What follows are six option trading and stock investing “don’ts” that will help keep you out of trouble and deliver returns when you trade.

Don’t place market orders – Use limit orders, which set the maximum price you are willing to pay to buy, or the minimum price you are willing to accept to sell. A market order tells your broker to execute your buy or sell order as soon as possible and at the current bid or ask price. That strategy works for liquid stocks where the bid-ask spread is highly competitive and you are likely to get the best price. However, most options are far less active and have fewer traders wanting to buy and sell.

Don’t chase a trade – Sometimes you will not be able to buy your option at your desired price. When this happens, do not keep raising your limit price. If you do, you may end up buying that option at too high of a price for the expected result or target price to be profitable. There will always be other trades coming your way, so stick to your plan.

Don’t over-trade – While adding to a winning position is often warranted, you should never add more than you are willing to risk. Never think that you can make up for a losing streak with one big score. That’s how gamblers get into trouble. If you even find yourself with a string of losers, stop trading. Take a breath. Think about what might have been the problem. After all that, you can consider making your next trade.

Don’t wait until the last minute to make your trade – Set a “good-til-canceled” limit price based on your profit target, rather than trying to time it near expiration. In other words, sell when price reaches your target, no matter when that happens before expiration. Strange things can happen at the end of a day. Especially at options expiration. Liquidity can easily dry up, and that means you may not be able to get a price anywhere close to what you were expecting. In addition, the time decay factor embedded in an option can cause its value to crater at the last minute.

Don’t trade without a plan – This is exactly the same as the “do” mentioned earlier. You’ve got to know your trading goals, expected profit and allowable risk. And you have to know what will have to happen to make you cut your trade short before a small loss turns into a big loss.

Don’t bet the farm – We’ve already discussed this in a few ways, but it is that important. Do not take such big risks that one losing trade will drain your account. And never think that you can make up for a string of losers with that one big win. Keep your position size between 2% and 5% of your portfolio. If the market gets exceptionally volatile, make that even smaller. You want to be sure you live to trade again tomorrow.

These 6 simple stock option trading rules can help keep your trading on track because the market owes you nothing and can be a ruthless teacher. Respect the market, and you will do just fine.

  1. https://tradesoftheday.com/2020/07/11/the-6-biggest-options-trading-mistakes-to-avoid/

A Dividend-Growth Investment Strategy

“Dividend stocks can provide investors with predictable income as well as long-term growth potential.”  Motley Fool

Dividend stocks have faced strong headwinds, including payout cuts and suspensions as efforts to fight the pandemic have hampered corporate cash flows.

Yet, investors who have a moderate risk tolerance should consider pursuing a proven dividend-growth investment strategy for income and return in volatile markets.  In volatile markets, protecting current income becomes more important than ever for investors.  But you also want to satisfy your need for current income and capital growth.

Dividend-paying stocks tend to provide more defensive protection in adverse market environments and they tend to grow over time and protect your real purchasing power. Dividend-paying stocks also tend to have more of a value orientation.

When dividend stocks go up, you make money. When they don’t go up — you still make money (from the dividend). When a dividend stock goes down in price, it’s not all bad news, because the dividend yield (the absolute dividend amount, divided by the stock price) gets richer the more the stock falls in price.

Historically, stocks with rising dividends greatly outpaced the dividend cutters or non-dividend-paying stocks. Further, if you focused on rising-dividend stocks over non-dividend-paying stocks, you would have increased your investment by an average of 4.3% per year over this nearly 48-year study.

pexels-photo-164527

So, a $10,000 investment in non-dividend-paying stocks made at the beginning of this study, growing at an average annual return of 8.57%, would be worth over $500,000 today.

However, the same $10,000 investment in dividend growers over the same period at a 12.87% average annual return would be worth an incredible $3.24 million!

That’s not the only benefit. Returns from dividends have also exhibited a lower standard deviation, or variability, over time. Since the overall volatility of a stock’s total return is typically dominated by its price movements, dividends contribute a component of stability to that total return.

Looking for good dividend-paying stocks

Despite challenging economic times, certain companies have grown their dividends during previous downturns; there may be precedent for their willingness and ability to grow their dividends again.  While much remains uncertain, the highest-quality companies have proven their ability to grow their dividends over time.  They have demonstrated an ability to survive through a range of market environments, even raising dividends during and after previous recessions.

These companies prioritize sustaining dividends in challenging times. They are dividend-paying royalty.  However, it’s advised to avoid stocks with very high yields since they could be prone to dividend cuts or suspensions.  Seek dividend stocks with a fortress balance sheet providing solid cash flow, reasonable dividend payout yield, above average earnings growth and little to no debt.  Avoid companies with heavier debt loads, as measured by net debt (debt minus cash) to earnings-before-interest-taxes-deprecation-and amortization (EBITDA) ratios.

Investors seeking dividend sustainability need look no further than the Dividend Aristocrats: a list of companies within the S&P 500 index that have increased their dividend payouts consecutively for 25 years or more.  The 64 S&P 500 Dividend Aristocrats have raised their dividends in an era that spans the Iraq wars, the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the Great Recession, and now the novel coronavirus pandemic.

But while the Dividend Aristocrats list is a great place to start for identifying dividend stalwarts, you are advised to avoid the highest-yielding stocks—some of which can be value traps or worse.  It is okay to look for companies that are paying a decent amount of their earnings back in the form of income, but if the price moves too high and their dividend yield drops, then you’ll sell the stock and capture the gains.

Additionally, under the recently passed 2020 CARES Act, “companies that borrow money from the federal government may not repurchase stock, pay a dividend, or make any other capital distributions until 12 months after the loan is repaid in full,” according to Goldman Sachs.

Investors should always consider their investment objectives, their comfort level and risk tolerance before investing. And, they should keep in the forefront of their mindset that investment plans do not need to change in periods of high volatility since they should be based on five years or longer time horizon.

References:

  1. https://www.fool.com/investing/stock-market/types-of-stocks/dividend-stocks/
  2. https://www.aaiidividendinvesting.com/subscribe/diLP.html?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=Facebook_Desktop_Feed&utm_campaign=all_leads&utm_content=DI%20Long%20Form%20DCO&adset=di_bundle&fbclid=IwAR1enL0oTxkF5E5phIBVJ1dGk4VYQ_OV6a2RCXNDh-lgeNOFtkxcoXWLJn0

Asset Allocation Strategy

Asset allocation is designed to help an investor take short-term fluctuations more in stride.

When you divide your money among a variety of asset classes — stocks, bonds, real estate and cash — you can potentially smooth the ups and downs of financial markets. Diversifying your investments within the major asset classes and investment styles can help balance out a portfolio.

Asset allocation enables you to own a wide selection of investment types to potentially benefit when one asset class does well and limit the downside when another asset class does not. Once you create an asset allocation strategy as part of your comprehensive financial plan, it helps to keep a long-term perspective when the inevitable financial market volatility occurs.

It’s important to note that asset allocation and diversification do not ensure a profit or protect against loss. However, it makes sense to remember your long-term financial plan and asset allocation strategy, and stick with it, no matter how great short-term economic challenges may seem.

A long-term commitment to your asset allocation strategy doesn’t mean you shouldn’t take action during periods of uncertainty. The key is taking the right action. You may discover the original percentages you allocated to different asset classes and types of investments are not in sync with your strategy due to shifts in the market.

Your portfolio may be overly concentrated or under-represented in one area. If so, you can reallocate your assets and ensure your long-term asset allocation strategy is back on track.

Of course during times of market volatility and economic uncertainty, many investors are tempted to move out of stock investments, into the safety of cash positions. Yes, cash is an asset for investors, but understand that you earn nothing with this asset class…no return from cash.

As a result, investors tend to stay on the sidelines until financial turbulence settles, but this may be a costly mistake. One thing previous recessions and bear markets have taught us is that life goes on. In each of the most recent five bear markets since 1987, sell-offs and correction were ultimately followed by economic and market recoveries.

Thus, once stock markets unexpectedly rebound, as they typically have done in the past, you may end up getting left behind during what could have been a good opportunity to benefit from market rapid recovery and gains.

We live in a world fraught with headline risk and conflict, something that will be ever-present. This fact will always be an integral part of the investment landscape. Those who exit or try to “time the market” tend to miss a significant rally. Those who remained invested or rebalanced towards equities tended to boost their returns during a market rally.

The length of time an investor is in the market can make a difference in the amount they will save and invest to potentially grow their investments. If you sell assets while the market is declining, you risk missing upward trends that have historically followed. If you want to retire someday, start saving and investing now. It takes decades of long-term financial planning, saving and investing to get there. 

Always remember…

Learning to manage money. You need to learn and understand core principles of financial planning — long-term investing, risk management, diversification, asset allocation, retirement, estate and tax planning.

Asset allocation and diversification do not ensure a profit or protect against loss in declining markets.

All investments involve risk including loss of principal. Certain investments involve greater or unique risks that should be considered along with the objectives, fees, and expenses before investing.


References:

  1. https://im.bnymellon.com/us/en/individual/articles/letter-from-the-lion/spring-2020/stick-with-a-plan-in-uncertain-financial-markets.jsp

Most explosive stock market rally in history

We’re witnessing the most explosive stock market in history. We’re seeing a spectacular stock market rally.

We’ve witnessed the greatest 50-day rally in the history of the S&P 500. The S&P 500 has increased 37% over the past 50-days.

Ten weeks ago, March 23, 2020, the Dow dropped all the way to 18,591 points. The biggest gain ever in such a short timeframe. Today, June 4, 2020, the Dow Jones index has peaked above 26,274 points.

Why…T.I.N.A. (There is no alternative to stocks)

There are fewer publicly traded companies to invest in today than thirty years ago. In the 1990’s, there were about 8,000 companies listed on American stock exchanges. Today, there are about 4,000 publicly traded companies on American stock exchanges which represents a fifty percent cut.

Furthermore, there are fewer shares of company stocks available to be traded. Share buy-backs by U.S. companies have taken 20% of companies’ shares off the market.

Essentially, the number of available shares have been dramatically cut, yet the demand for share have been vastly increased the demand for shares. The market is awash in cash from the Federal Reserve loose monetary policy and trillions of dollars from 401K plans.

Economics 101 reveals that cutting the supply of stocks while increasing the demand for stocks cause the price of stocks to go up.

And don’t forget about investor psychology, the economy has entered the return to work phase and the economy is on the move again. Animal Spirits are on the rise again.

Regarding the S&P 500 index, 159 stocks in the index are up for the year an average of 13% / 350 are down year-to-date an average of 20%. And, there are $4 trillion still sitting on the sidelines in money market accounts.

FOMO (Fear of missing out)

Fear of missing out can be extremely expensive. When the equity market has explosive moves where it goes up this high and this fast, an investor can feel that they’re “being left out and left behind”. As a result, they start paying top dollar for expensive and overbought stocks. That is no longer investing…investors are buying high hoping for higher.


Sources: CNBC and Fox Business News

Principles for Investing Success | Vanguard Investment Management Company

Whatever financial challenge you’re facing, you can put yourself in a better financial position by setting goals, planning now and investing for the long term. The sooner you start, the sooner you’ll get on track.

Investing for the long term in order to grow your money is a marathon, not a sprint. An investment’s annual return provides perspective and growth over time.

https://vgi.vg/2Kyh3a3

Goals: Create clear, appropriate investment goals. Create appropriate investment goals you can measure and attain. Defining your goals clearly and planning realistic ways to achieve them can help protect you from common mistakes that could derail your progress.

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Balance: Develop a suitable asset allocation using broadly diversified funds. Create a sound investment strategy by choosing an asset allocation in line with your financial objectives. Build your allocation based on reasonable expectations and diversify your portfolio to avoid exposure to unnecessary risks. Balance is the key:

https://vgi.vg/3f7Qh6u

Costs: Minimize costs. Markets are unpredictable. Costs are forever. The lower your costs, the greater your share of an investment’s return. And research suggests lower-cost investments outperform higher-cost alternatives. You can’t control the markets, but you can control your costs and tax liability:

https://vgi.vg/2z6fQEv

Discipline: Maintain perspective and long term discipline. Investing can provoke strong emotions. During times of market uncertainty, you may find yourself tempted to make impulsive decisions or you may experience “paralysis by analysis,” unable to decide on how best to implement an effective investment strategy or when to rebalance your portfolio. Discipline and perspective can help you remain committed to a long-term investment philosophy through periods of market uncertainty.

https://vgi.vg/3c8ihFg


References:

  1. https://www.vanguard.com.au/adviser/en/article/cec-investment-philosophy/vanguards-principles-for-investing-success

6 habits of successful investors| Fidelity Investment

Planning, consistency, and sound fundamentals can improve results.

FIDELITY VIEWPOINTS – 03/19/2020

For most people, achieving success as an investor means reaching their financial goals, like owning a home, paying for college, or having the retirement you want.

What separates the most successful investors from the rest are habits. It is the reason why some individuals successfully accumulate wealth while others seem unable to save and invest successfully. Essentially , it can be traced back to daily habits.

Here are the 6 habits of successful investors that we’ve witnessed over the years—and how to make them work for you. Read more: https://www.fidelity.com/viewpoints/investing-ideas/six-habits-successful-investors?immid=100864&imm_pid=272043316&imm_aid=a466972197&dfid=&buf=99999999

Investing can be complex, but some of the most important habits of successful investors are pretty simple. If you build a smart plan and stick with it, save enough, make reasonable investment choices, and be aware of taxes, you will have adopted some of the key traits that may lead to success.


References:

  1. https://grow.acorns.com/7-daily-rich-habits-anyone-can-adopt/