Tuesday, October 29, 2019
Being Smart with $$ -- Money Not Earned is Money Lost
Saturday, October 19, 2019
Being Smart with $$ -- Save Now to Have More Later
Client Priority Financial Advisors LLC
www.clientpriority.com
Sunday, September 8, 2019
Being Smart with $$ - Stocks Go Up Because Companies Make Money
Are you tempted to bet against stocks? It’s a little like betting you can win in a casino. You might win in the short term but will likely lose in the end. A diversified portfolio of stocks provides a return from annual dividend payments or rising share prices because companies make money every year. Yes, it is true stocks don’t go up every year even though companies are generating profits. But how long do you want to bet against this annual creation of new value? Many smart investors have tried to time the market and predict a crash and many of those found themselves sent to the loser’s table. Similarly, casino operators know that when millions of dollars change hands at the tables, some gamblers will win but the house will ultimately collect a percentage of the total because the odds are in their favor. Some people will be lucky in casinos and some will be lucky making short-term bets against stocks. But most will experience what the odds predict: they will lose the bet. This year alone, many financial advisers have gambled with their clients’ money and reduced stock allocations only to watch the U.S. market rise over 18% since New Year’s. They bet wrong and might need the market to fall quite a bit now just to get back in at the same price where they sold. (Note that stock investments are appropriate for those with a long-term time horizon and the money allocated to stocks should be for your needs in the distant years ahead. Investments earmarked for near-term needs should be invested in less volatile assets.)
Larry Pike, CFA
Client Priority Financial Advisors LLC
Hourly financial advice. No commissions, No automatic, recurring adviser fees.
www.clientpriority.com
Blog: clientpriority.blogspot.com
Thursday, August 22, 2019
Being Smart With $$ - Financial Advisers Act Emotionally and Shouldn't
Financial advisers buy and sell at the wrong time based on emotion says legendary billionaire investor Ron Baron and he takes advantage of this and increases his purchases when they are panicking. Don’t let your financial adviser manage your portfolio with emotion rather than rationality. A proper long-term investment plan does not include panic selling.
https://www.cnbc.com/2019/08/20/ron-baron-says-he-tripled-normal-stock-buys-during-recent-wild-swings.html?__source=iosappshare%7Ccom.apple.UIKit.activity.Mail
Larry
Pike, CFA
Client
Priority Financial Advisors LLC
Monday, August 19, 2019
Timing was the subject of an old Steve Martin joke where he said it is the basis of success in comedy. Of course, in his bit he said the word all wrong with the accent on the second syllable as if it referred to an ancient Chinese dynasty. If you get timing wrong in comedy, the joke doesn’t work. If you get timing wrong in your portfolio, you lose money. The best timing with investing involves not timing the market at all and staying invested in a proper allocation for your needs. Most investors will find that their total time in the market is what matters in the long run and not when to dart in and out of it. Some investors believe they can jump out of the stock market before a crash and avoid losses. The problem here is that expected crashes often don’t come and then you are sitting out the market as it marches higher. Then it is hard to get back in when you intended to avoid losses but instead lost money by sitting it out. And if you do dump stocks and the market subsequently falls, the next hurdle is to figure out when to get back in. Investors often make the mistake of expecting further declines and then miss all the upside. The long-term trend for stocks is always higher as prices will reflect all the profits generated by global companies every year even though there will be corrections now and then. Many have been predicting a crash for years and they have been punished by missing a 3-year return in large-cap stocks of over 13% annually! In comedy, you have to get your timing right and in investing the best timing strategy is not to time the market at all.
Larry Pike, CFA
Client Priority Financial Advisors LLC
www.clientpriority.com
Tuesday, July 16, 2019
Being Smart with $$ -- Vape or Have $1 Million. You Choose.
Vaping or $1 MILLION. You
choose. Maybe your kids will ignore your
health warnings and sneak off to vape behind the school when no one is
looking. But what if they knew the true
long-term financial cost? An average
user may go through a pod per day at $4 each.
So let your kids know that if they throw that $4 per day into the stock
market, instead of vaping, from their senior year of high school through all
their working years, it will likely be worth almost $1 MILLION which they can
spend in retirement. Lighter users might be looking at less but
still substantial money. Vaping or $1 million.
It seems like an easy choice. (Assumes 8.5% annual stock-market returns
which are below long-term averages, over 50 years. Past results may not be a predicter of future
results.)
Larry Pike, CFA
Client Priority Financial Advisors LLCwww.clientpriority.com
Blog: clientpriority.blogspot.com
Sunday, July 14, 2019
Being Smart With $$ - Don't Let Your Get Adviser Get Cute with Your Money
Does your financial adviser time the
market? Many do believing they can avoid losses when the market is falling or
grab profits right before the market will rise. The problem is that so much
research shows that market timing fails more than it wins. A new client of mine
showed me their portfolio before they moved from another adviser and I asked
why their stock allocation was so low compared to an appropriate position for
someone with their profile. The answer was that their soon-to-be former adviser
was predicting a market decline. Well guess what? The market is now at all-time
highs and substantially higher than when that adviser sold all their clients’
stocks and that decision has cost the clients a fortune. Can the market crash
in the weeks or months ahead? It’s always possible. But what if it doesn’t? Over
the long term, the market marches higher as companies keep generating new
profits. The adviser is hoping to pick
up a few percentage points in the short term but instead may potentially be
costing their clients a quadrupling of their stock values over the next couple
of decades if they keep waiting for a crash that never comes. Don’t let your
adviser get cute with your portfolio. A steady and consistent long-term plan is
the path to success.
Larry Pike, CFA
Client Priority Financial Advisors LLC
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