Title: Roadmap for Investing Wisely
1- Roadmap for Investing Wisely
- Leslie Lum
- llum_at_bcc.ctc.edu
- www.bellevuecollege.edu/financialeducation
2The Roadmap
- Save
- Focus on financial goals
- Understand returns
- Understand risk
- Evaluate and asset allocation
- Monitor your investments
3You are the influencers
- Many of you can directly benefit from this
presentation - Many of you have successfully navigated the
financial journey - We need you to be the influencers of those
around you
4Rule 1 You can make more money saving
aggressively than you can investing aggressively.
5How much does a typical family make?
6What happens to your income over your life?
7How are we doing at savings?
8Could we save more?
9Rule 2 If you dont have goals, you wont
achieve them.
10Lay out your goals(Yours/your kids/your
grandkids)
- Down payment on house
- Wedding
- College tuition
- Starting your own business
- Retirement
- Estate (Inheritance or charity)
11Rule 3 Know how to measure returns (it will
make you less susceptible to fraud.)
12Returns
- Always calculate returns on an annualized basis
13Calculate the return
- You will get your paycheck next week but you need
100 now. You arrange for a payday loan paying a
fee of 15 for the use of 100. The payday loan
company will collect the 100 electronically from
your bank account when your pay check is
deposited next week. What is the annual rate
charged?
14Calculate the lost return
- You are a typical employee in your 20s who when
you left your job in 2005 cashed out (66 do)
your 401K account of less than 10,000. What is
the cost of cashing out your account if your
balance was 8000?
15Rule 4 Understand risk
16Investment Risks
- Market risk
- Business risk
- Interest rate
- Inflation risk
- Political risk
- Fraud risk
17Cash
18Bonds
19Stocks
20Return versus Risk
Lessons to learn If you want a higher return,
you need to invest in riskier assets (stocks) The
more return, the more risk. 322 gain
guaranteed? Only if 322 loss guaranteed!
21Given the same return, the investment with less
risk is better
22The Northwest is the best.
www.riskgrades.com For advanced analysis of risk
return
23How do you get both a good return and low risk?
24Risk of loss in stocks is high year to year
25Over 5 years, risk of loss is lower
26Over 10 years, risk of loss is small
27Buy low, sell high or Buy high, sell low?
Source John Bogle testimony to US Senate 11/3/03
28Lesson?
- Buy and hold market index funds (doesnt work for
individual stocks) - Have an emergency fund (3 to 6 months) to tide
you over - Have other sources of income so you dont have to
cash out during down markets
29 30All eggs in one basket?
- 34.6 percent of families had stock in only one
company - 59.5 percent had stock in three or fewer
companies - 9.5 percent had stock in fifteen or more companies
Source 2004 Consumer Finance Survey
31Two investments double risk?
The key is having two investments which arent
correlated.
32Adding a riskier investment to your portfolio
33If you allocate the right amount you reduce risk
and increase return!
34Pension Fund Portfolio
35Millionaires Portfolio
36401K Allocations by Age
Source Investment Company Institute
37Lessons learned
- Dont try to time the market
- Allocate between asset classes based on your
income requirements, your financial goals and
your time horizon - Ladder your fixed income investments
- Rebalance your portfolio (at least annually) to
sell at highs and buy at lows
38Rule 6 Always watch your money.
39Evaluating funds
- Fund company/manager reputation
- Fund expenses
- Past performance (asset class)
- Fund risks
- For information, check out www.morningstar.com
40Use indices to monitor your portfolio
41Investment Advice
- According to the Consumer Federation about
one-third of mutual fund investors rely
completely on their advisors to choose
investments and do not read about or research
their investments - Is this good?
42Investment Advice
- Spend time and take care in choosing your advisor
- Read all your statements, keep good records, and
check for errors - Only invest in what you understand (Warren Buffet
rule 1) - Assess your portfolio at least once a year
against your cash requirements, financial goals
and time horizon
43The Roadmap
- Save
- Focus on financial goals
- Understand returns
- Understand risk
- Asset allocation
- Monitor your investments