|
Become A Record Millionaire Using Cash
Money
Debt Consolidation: A Rising Industry
Asset Classes Guide
Asset Protection Options
Asset Management 101
Australian Superannuation - Hot Tips to
Grow Your Super
A Vision Plan For Wealth Building
Bad Credit Debt Consolidation and Credit
Card Debt Consolidation Tips
Bankruptcy and Debt Consolidation Options –
For Dummies
Being a Landlord
|
It’s important to recognize, as well, that you do
not need a fancy computer program or a glossy presentation with
economic scenarios, inflation estimators, and stock market
projections to get yourself lined up properly with your target. You
need common sense, reasonable expectations, patience, discipline,
soft hands, and an oversized driver. The K. I. S. S. Principle needs
to be at the foundation of your Investment Plan; an emphasis on
Working Capital will help you Organize, and Control your investment
portfolio.
Planning for Retirement should focus on the
additional income needed from the investment portfolio, and the
Asset Allocation formula [relax, 8th grade math is plenty] needed
for goal achievement will depend on just three variables: (1) the
amount of liquid investment assets you are starting with, (2) the
amount of time until retirement, and (3) the range of interest rates
currently available from Investment Grade Securities. If you don’t
allow the “engineer” gene to take control, this can be a fairly
simple process. Even if you are young, you need to stop smoking
heavily and to develop a
growing stream of income… if you keep the
income growing, the Market Value growth (that you are expected to
worship) will take care of itself. Remember, higher Market Value may
increase hat size, but it doesn’t pay the bills.
First deduct any guaranteed pension income from
your retirement income goal to estimate the amount needed just from
the investment portfolio. Don’t worry about inflation at this stage.
Next, determine the total Market Value of your investment
portfolios, including company plans, IRAs, H-Bonds… everything,
except the house, boat, jewelry, etc. Liquid personal and retirement
plan assets only. This total is then multiplied by a range of
reasonable interest rates (6%, to 8% right now) and, hopefully, one
of the resulting numbers will be close to the target amount you came
up with a moment ago. If you are within a few years of retirement
age, they better be! For certain, this process will give you a clear
idea of where you stand, and that, in and of itself, is worth the
effort.
Organizing the Portfolio involves deciding upon
an appropriate Asset Allocation… and that requires some discussion.
Asset Allocation is the most important and most frequently
misunderstood concept in the investment lexicon. The most basic of
the confusions is the idea that diversification and Asset Allocation
are one and the same. Asset Allocation divides the investment
portfolio into the two basic classes of investment securities:
Stocks/Equities and Bonds/Income Securities. Most
Investment Grade
securities fit comfortably into one of these two classes.
Diversification is a risk reduction technique that strictly controls
the size of individual holdings as a percent of total assets. A
second misconception describes Asset Allocation as a sophisticated
technique used to soften the bottom line impact of movements in
stock and bond prices, and/or a process that automatically (and
foolishly) moves investment dollars from a weakening asset
classification to a stronger one… a subtle "market timing" device.
Finally, the Asset Allocation Formula is often
misused in an effort to superimpose a valid investment planning tool
on speculative strategies that have no real merits of their own, for
example: annual portfolio repositioning, market timing adjustments,
and Mutual Fund shifting. The Asset Allocation formula itself is
sacred, and if constructed properly, should never be altered due to
conditions in either Equity or Fixed Income markets. Changes in the
personal situation, goals, and objectives of the investor are the
only issues that can be allowed into the Asset Allocation
decision-making process.
Here are a few basic Asset Allocation Guidelines:
(1) All Asset Allocation decisions are based on the Cost Basis of
the securities involved. The current Market Value may be more or
less and it just doesn’t matter. (2) Any investment portfolio with a
Cost Basis of $100,000 or more should have a minimum of 30% invested
in Income Securities, either taxable or tax free, depending on the
nature of the portfolio. Tax deferred entities (all varieties of
retirement programs) should house the bulk of the Equity
Investments. This rule applies from age 0 to Retirement Age – 5
years. Under age 30, it is a mistake to have too much of your
portfolio in Income Securities. (3) There are only two Asset
Allocation Categories, and neither is ever described with a decimal
point. All cash in the portfolio is destined for one category or the
other. (4) From Retirement Age – 5 on, the Income Allocation needs
to be adjusted upward until the “reasonable interest rate test” says
that you are on target or at least in range. (5) At retirement,
between 60% and 100% of your portfolio may have to be in Income
Generating Securities.
Controlling, or Implementing, the Investment Plan
will be accomplished best by those who are least emotional, most
decisive, naturally calm, patient, generally conservative (not
politically), and self actualized. Investing is a long-term,
personal, goal orientated, non- competitive, hands on,
decision-making process that does not require advanced degrees or a
rocket scientist IQ. In fact, being too smart can be a problem if
you have a tendency to over analyze things. It is helpful to
establish guidelines for selecting securities, and for disposing of
them. For example, limit Equity involvement to Investment Grade,
NYSE, dividend paying, profitable, and widely held companies. Don’t
buy any stock unless it is down at least 20% from its 52 week high,
and limit individual equity holdings to less than 5% of the total
portfolio. Take a reasonable profit (using 10% as a target) as
frequently as possible. With a 40% Income Allocation, 40% of profits
and dividends would be allocated to Income Securities.
For Fixed Income, focus on Investment Grade
securities, with above average but not “highest in class” yields.
With Variable Income securities, avoid purchase near 52-week highs,
and keep individual holdings well below 5%. Keep individual
Preferred Stocks and Bonds well below 5% as well. Closed End Fund
positions may be slightly higher than 5%, depending on type. Take a
reasonable profit (more than one years’ income for starters) as soon
as possible. With a 60% Equity Allocation, 60% of profits and
interest would be allocated to stocks.
Monitoring Investment Performance the Wall Street
way is inappropriate and problematic for goal-orientated investors.
It purposely focuses on short-term dislocations and uncontrollable
cyclical changes, producing constant disappointment and encouraging
inappropriate transactional responses to natural and harmless
events. Coupled with a Media that thrives on sensationalizing
anything outrageously positive or negative (Google and Enron, Peter
Lynch and Martha Stewart, for example), it becomes difficult to stay
the course with any plan, as environmental conditions change. First
greed, then fear, new products replacing old, and always the promise
of something better when, in fact, the boring and old fashioned
basic investment principles still get the job done. Remember, your
unhappiness is Wall Street’s most coveted asset. Don’t humor them,
and protect yourself. Base your performance evaluation efforts on
goal achievement… yours, not theirs. Here’s how, based on the three
basic objectives we’ve been talking about: Growth of Base Income,
Profit Production from Trading, and Overall Growth in Working
Capital.
Base Income includes the dividends and interest
produced by your portfolio, without the realized capital gains that
should actually be the larger number much of the time. No matter how
you slice it, your long-range comfort demands regularly increasing
income, and by using your total portfolio cost basis as the
benchmark, it’s easy to determine where to invest your accumulating
cash. Since a portion of every dollar added to the portfolio is
reallocated to income production, you are assured of increasing the
total annually. If Market Value is used for this analysis, you could
be pouring too much money into a falling stock market to the
detriment of your long-range income objectives.
Profit Production is the happy face of the market
value volatility that is a natural attribute of all securities. To
realize a profit, you must be able to sell the securities that most
investment strategists (and accountants) want you to marry up with!
Successful investors learn to sell the ones they love, and the more
frequently (yes, short term), the better. This is called trading,
and it is not a four-letter word. When you can get yourself to the
point where you think of the securities you own as high quality
inventory on the shelves of your personal portfolio boutique, you
have arrived. You won’t see WalMart holding out for higher prices
than their standard markup, and neither should you. Reduce the
markup on slower movers, and sell damaged goods you’ve held too long
at a loss if you have to, and, in the thick of it all, try to
anticipate what your standard, Wall Street Account Statement is
going to show you… a portfolio of equity securities that have not
yet achieved their profit goals and are probably in negative Market
Value territory because you’ve sold the winners and replaced them
with new inventory… compounding the earning power! Similarly, you’ll
see a diversified group of income earners, chastised for following
their natural tendencies (this year), at lower prices, which will
help you increase your portfolio yield and overall cash flow. If you
see big plus signs, you are not managing the portfolio properly.
Working Capital Growth (total portfolio cost
basis) just happens, and at a rate that will be somewhere between
the average return on the Income Securities in the portfolio and the
total realized gain on the Equity portion of the portfolio. It will
actually be higher with larger Equity allocations because frequent
trading produces a higher rate of return than the more secure
positions in the Income allocation. But, and this is too big a but
to ignore as you approach retirement, trading profits are not
guaranteed and the risk of loss (although minimized with a sensible
selection process) is greater than it is with Income Securities.
This is why the Asset Allocation moves from a greater to a lesser
Equity percentage as you approach retirement.
So is there really such a thing as an Income
Portfolio that needs to be managed? Or are we really just dealing
with an investment portfolio that needs its Asset Allocation tweaked
occasionally as we approach the time in life when it has to provide
the yacht… and the gas money to run it? By using Cost Basis (Working
Capital) as the number that needs growing, by accepting trading as
an acceptable, even conservative, approach to portfolio management,
and by focusing on growing income instead of ego, this whole
retirement investing thing becomes significantly less scary. So now
you can focus on changing the tax code, reducing health care costs,
saving Social Security, and spoiling the grandchildren.
Steve Selengut
http://www.sancoservices.com/
Professional Portfolio Management since 1979 Author of: "The
Brainwashing of the American Investor: The Book that Wall Street
Does Not Want YOU to Read", and "A Millionaire's Secret Investment
Strategy" |