If investors trade often, it could mean they have lots of great investment ideas and lots of profits to take. But probably not.
NO. 28: WE SHOULD nurture investment compounding—by buying stocks for the long run, minimizing costs and taxes, and avoiding risky investments where we could lose big.
NO. 50: SHORT-TERM bonds typically give you much of the yield of longer-term bonds, but with far less price volatility. Because venturing into longer-term bonds doesn’t greatly boost a portfolio’s expected return, you might opt to play it safe with bonds and instead allocate more money to stocks—potentially boosting your portfolio's long-run results.
DOLLAR AVERAGING. If you put, say, $300 into stocks every month, you're dollar-cost averaging. Because you invest the same sum, you buy more shares when the market falls, thus lowering your average cost per share. Dollar averaging supposedly improves the odds of making money. Its real virtue: It helps investors to get started and then stay the course.
SETTLE ON ASSET allocation targets for your long-term investment portfolio. How do you want to divide this money among stocks, bonds, cash and alternative investments? Also consider how you’ll diversify within these asset classes, such as your mix of large-cap U.S. stocks, smaller U.S. shares, developed foreign markets and emerging markets.
NO. 28: WE SHOULD nurture investment compounding—by buying stocks for the long run, minimizing costs and taxes, and avoiding risky investments where we could lose big.
We often hear about the power of compounding returns—how investments grow exponentially over time. But there’s a lesser-known side to compounding: the cost of ongoing financial advisor fees.
Consider a $1,000,000 portfolio growing at 7% annually. Over 10 years, that could grow to about $1,967,151—if left untouched. But add a seemingly modest 1% annual advisory fee, and your ending value drops to roughly $1,779,056. That’s a $188,000 difference.
Why such a large gap?
Each year, the fee reduces your balance before it compounds.
THERE ARE CERTAIN things in life that remind you you’re getting old: You receive mail from companies offering their cremation services. You realize your house was made for a younger person. You have this urge to throw and give away things as if you won’t be here tomorrow. You feel it’s time to hire a financial advisor.
Actually, I’m not sure hiring a financial advisor is a sign of getting old, but that’s the way it struck me.
I’M A MORNINGSTAR subscriber. I find that the site provides investing and personal finance information that’s sensible and useful for the average person, and that it promotes good investing and planning behaviors. Still, I was taken aback by a recent article, which discussed four funds that investors have been buying.
In terms of deciding what I buy, I don’t really care what others have been purchasing. Still, it’s interesting to see, so I checked it out.
Suzie and I present a microcosm of the debate around financial advisors. I choose to use Vanguard and keep my costs low, whereas Suzie uses a former long-time colleague from her days in the banking sector who happens to be an independent wealth manager to operate her portfolio. To me, the portfolio seems unnecessarily complicated with an average fund fee of slightly over 1.5% in addition to a 0.5% advisor fee. This seems exorbitant in my eyes.
Let’s play a hypothetical – a married couple 60 and 58, with a net worth of $10M. No debt, no children.
What roles does a financial advisor play, assuming the couple is content on how they invest?
What role might a tax expert play for planning and managing cost avoidance over time?
Question: If someone has a relatively small IRA—say, around $54,000—do they need to be as diversified as someone managing a much larger retirement portfolio?
Here’s what prompted the question.
My neighbor recently lost his wife. She had taken the lead on their finances, working closely with an advisor at a national investment firm. Now he’s on his own, trying to navigate retirement decisions without much guidance.
I tried to help by simply asking questions—not giving advice.
I’ve decided to put my opinions to good use. I’m going to become an advice columnist. You know, like Ann Landers, Dear Abby, Miss Manners.
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