Building Wealth

For the first 30 or so years of working, saving and investing, you’ll be first in the mode of getting out of the hole (paying down debt), and then building your net worth (that’s wealth accumulation.). But don’t forget, wealth accumulation isn’t the ultimate goal. Decumulation is! (a separate category here at the Hub).

The critical role of planning for Cash Flow

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Ennio Longo

By  Ennio Longo

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

Are you like so many Canadians? You have a good paying job, are in a two-income household, own a home and yet you run out money before you run out of month?

The majority of Canadians are spending more than they make.   If this sounds like you, you’re not alone.  We are trying to put some money aside for the future as we have been told we should, but we also want to enjoy today; take that trip, get a new car, renovate the kitchen. We cannot just live for tomorrow.  WE WANT TO ENJOY TODAY.

The reason we have this shared experience is that we never went to school to learn how to “handle” our finances or how to manage our CASH FLOW. With so many different companies from financial institutions to consumer goods vying for our money, managing our cash flow on a monthly basis can be very difficult for many people; myself included.

Certified Cash Flow Specialist

With a four-year business degree and a CFP (Certified Financial Planner) and CLU (Chartered Life Underwriter), one would think that I would have received a formal education in cash flow planning as well, but I didn’t; at least not until I received an actual formal education in cash flow planning and became a CCS (Certified Cash Flow Specialist). Continue Reading…

Should I invest a lump sum all at once or stagger it over time?

dollar_cost_averaging“Should I invest a lump sum now or drip it into the market over time?”  This is a question we’re getting more and more often.  As usual, the answer is not straightforward and of course … it depends.

Despite the declines last year and the early part of this year, North American stock markets seem to have continued their upward march and are now at peak levels.  European and Asian markets aren’t as close to peak levels but nonetheless investors are jittery and not sure if now is the best time to invest.

The US election is pending, Brexit implications are still playing out and the news generally tends to be doom and gloom.  It’s understandable why people might hesitate if they have a lump sum of cash sitting on the sidelines and are unsure if now is the best time to put it at risk.

It’s not only about expected investment returns

There are two distinct views on what to do with a lump sum.

The first is that it’s best to invest right away.

The second is that it’s best to spread your investment over time, engaging in what is commonly referred to as “dollar cost averaging”.  Dollar cost averaging might involve splitting your lump sum into four equal tranches and investing one tranche every three months over the course of a year.  In doing so, you’d smooth the impact of market volatility, maybe missing some good upward trends but also maybe avoiding putting all your money in at once just before a market crash.

What does the evidence say?  The academic research tells us that trying to time the markets is futile and at any given time we can expect a future positive return on investment.  After all, the market generally goes up, in fact according to Jim Yih of Retire Happy the annual return of the TSX stock index was positive 73.9 % of the time between 1920 and 2010.

So the odds are in your favour that you’ll be better off by investing now – certainly not guaranteed but expected to be positive.   Dimensional Fund Advisors (not that Nobel prize winners are always right but but this group has a strong evidenced-based approach to investments) say the following on this subject (from its website):

“Standard financial analysis says dollar cost averaging is suboptimal.  If you focus only on your investment outcome, investing a lump sum immediately lets you construct the best portfolio you can today; slowing the process with dollar cost averaging just keeps you in something other than your best portfolio until you are done.”

Sensible and supported by good math I’m sure … but not the whole picture.   They also go on to say:

“Behavioral finance provides a different perspective. Because of the difference between the way people react to errors of omission and errors of commission, dollar cost averaging may give investors a better expected investment experience.”

Essentially what this means is that while purely from an investment perspective the expectation is that one would be better off investing a lump sum today, it is not a certainty and when decisions have to be made when uncertain future outcomes are at stake psychology enters the equation in a big way.

An active decision to invest now followed by an unexpected poor outcome might scar an investor from making future beneficial investment decisions.  Surely there are many people who, scared and scarred by the market carnage in 2008/2009, sold out at the bottom and have remained on the sidelines through the subsequent rally.

Or imagine if you’d invested a large lump sum a couple of weeks before Black Monday in 1987 instead of smoothing it out over the following year or so.  You may find yourself hesitant to ever put money in the markets again!  Investors that are liable to suffer extreme regret from their own active decisions that turn out to be wrong (errors of commission) may find that spreading a lump sum investment over time eases the blow sufficiently to keep them invested and on track with their investment plan.

Figure out what kind of investor you are, make a plan and stick with it

Market crashes don’t happen very often and at any given point in time investors should expect a positive return.  This doesn’t mean that behavioural/psychological forces aren’t real and powerful.

So what are investors to do? To begin with, investors would be very wise to spend some time considering how they might react to various market scenarios – what kind of investor are you?  Are you unphased by market volatility and immune to external pressures like the press and market pundits?  Do you feel really nervous making a decision under uncertainty?

Try taking a risk survey or two to help gauge your willingness to take risk relative to other investors – a sort of investing gut check.  Try to imagine yourself in these situations and practice how you might feel and react.

Lastly, put a plan in place ahead of time – take the decision out of your hands – blaming the plan might be psychologically easier than blaming yourself if things don’t turn out exactly as expected.

Decide now what the best course of action is for you and document it in a well thought-through plan.  Then make sure to remember it’s often when the plan feels most uncomfortable that it’s most important to stick with it!

grahambodelGraham Bodel is the founder and director of a new fee-only financial planning and portfolio management firm based in Vancouver, BC., Chalten Fee-Only Advisors Ltd. This blog is republished with permission: the original ran on August 12th on Bodel’s blog here.

 

 

 

 

Sorry Boomers, as FinTech rises, Millennials now main focus of financial industry

Millennials word on a product or package box to illustrate marketing and advertising to the youth in Generation Y

As I recount on page FP3 of today’s Financial Post, the baby boomers are fast becoming supplanted by the Millennial generation when it comes to attracting the attention of the financial services industry and in particular the rise of the fintech industry.

For online version, see Sorry boomers, the focus is shifting: Millennials are fast becoming new apple of financial industry’s eye.

Certainly, much of the action around so-called “Fin-Tech” is oriented to the Millennial market, with many of the firms also founded or cofounded by Millennials. The big three fintech categories are online lending, robo-advisers and payment technology.

Note the New York Times had an interesting piece this week on fintech and blockchain: Envisioning Bitcoin’s Technology at the Heart of Global Finance. Also note my Hub review of Don Tapscott’s groundbreaking book on blockchain, with a link to a video: Book Review: Blockchain Revolution.

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YOLO: the new Millennial motto?

Also in the FP package today is a review of a book written by a Millennial that addresses Millennials: You Only Live Once, otherwise known as the popular millennial slogan YOLO.

Continue Reading…

Is your investing style to preserve or perform?

Many investors tell me they want the highest returns for the least risk. However, savvy investors know that to be a myth.

A periodic reassessment of the facts is time well spent for every investor. One where plenty of frankness prevails.

For example, step back and revisit your investor style. Even rethink if it truly fits the financial goals you seek.

My question helps:
“What drives your investing style: “preserve” or “perform ?

Let’s define these two types:

1.) “Preserve” investors care first about risks they incur. They lean toward capital conservation.

2.) “Perform” investors seek high returns with less concern for risks. They prefer more exciting growth strategies.

Rightly or wrongly, my observation is that the majority are clearly driven and sold by performance. Their exuberance too often chases fleeting past performance, a mugs game at best.

Wise investors know that some portfolio preservation is desirable strategy. However, performance just has far more cachet and always will.

Every family needs to find their acceptable investing balance. That is, between becoming too conservative and throwing caution to the winds.

Establishing your profile

Continue Reading…

Slap Shot: How pro athletes can (legally) “skate by” high tax rates

Cartoon-style illustration: a shooting hockey player Uniform similar to Montreal's oneBy Trevor R. Parry,  M.A., LL.B,LL.M (Tax), TEP

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

For many Canadians, the state of our beloved national game reached a nadir when none of the seven NHL franchises qualified for last year’s playoffs. This wholesale failure has given rise to the over-analysis and questioning that only a nation of amateur general managers could produce.

What’s the armchair consensus about the source of Canada’s poor performance? Some would-be GMs decry economic maladies they believe are unique to the Canadian franchises, while others bemoan the current lacklustre state of the Canadian dollar — while still others point to punitive rates of taxation introduced by federal and provincial governments in recent years.

While the first two factors may be the likely cause in the delay in awarding an expansion franchise to Québec City — which, as a Habs fan, I am particularly distressed by as we await the return of our primordial enemy — the latter factor, whilst a reality, can largely be eliminated through recourse to a financial strategy that has now existed for fully 30 years.

Introducing the RCA

In 1986 the federal government amended the Income Tax Act to include the Retirement Compensation Arrangement rules. Better known as an “RCA,” this is the only structure available in Canada that allows supplemental retirement benefits to be funded on a tax-deductible basis. Continue Reading…