Why Spending Should Be Discussed by Financial Advisers
2 pages
English

Why Spending Should Be Discussed by Financial Advisers

-

Le téléchargement nécessite un accès à la bibliothèque YouScribe
Tout savoir sur nos offres
2 pages
English
Le téléchargement nécessite un accès à la bibliothèque YouScribe
Tout savoir sur nos offres

Description

http://joinwestern.com/ - As a financial adviser – whether you work through Western International or as an independent securities broker – how much time do you spend talking with your clients about their spending habits? According to one prominent expert, spending is something advisers do not spend enough time talking about. He makes the case that things need to change.

Informations

Publié par
Publié le 31 août 2017
Nombre de lectures 2
Langue English

Extrait

Why Spending Should Be Discussed by Financial Advisers
As a financial adviserwhether you work through Western International oras an independent securities brokerhow much time do you spend talking with your clients about their spending habits? According to one prominent expert, spending is something advisers do not spend enough time talking about. He makes the case that things need to change.
MorgaŶ StaŶleLJ’s BeŶ HuŶekerecently told the assembled groupat the annual conference of the Investment Company Institute that spending among clients is a more pressing issue than the performance of their portfolios. At first, his comments seem counterintuitive to what financial advisors and brokers are trying to accomplish. And perhaps it is, if their primary motivation is to maximize their own profits. However, advisers and brokers genuinely concerned with proteĐtiŶg their ĐlieŶts’ fiŶaŶĐial futures should also ďe ĐoŶĐerŶed aďout speŶdiŶg.
HuŶeke’s ĐoŵŵeŶts foĐused ŵaiŶlLJ oŶ iŶǀestiŶg for retireŵeŶt. He outliŶed hoǁ the ďest iŶǀestŵeŶt plaŶ that provides maximum retirement income will still fall short if said retirees spend more than they earn. As financial advisors, we tend to focus only on return without working with clients to help them understand spend. We give them the financial tools for retirement but we do not help them learn how to use those tools.
Ever Dwindling Value
We ĐaŶ take HuŶeke’s ĐoŵŵeŶts aŶd edžpaŶd theŵ ďeLJoŶd just theretirement arena. The principles he sets forth actually pertain to all sorts of investors whose sole concentration is growth. A growth-only focus leads to two problems, starting with the ever-dwindling value of investments.
The easiest way to understand dwindling value is to look at something as basic as an individual retirement account (IRA). Financial advisors and independent securities brokers recommend these all the time to people ǁithout peŶsioŶs or 4Ϭϭ;kͿ plaŶs. That’s great. But ǁhat happeŶs ǁheŶ a Đlient starts withdrawing from his or her IRA?
That account loses value with every withdrawal. As the account loses value, there is also less cash in it to create future returns. So along with less money in real terms, there is also less future value as the balance of the account gets smaller. This is a two-edged sword. It is a sword that cuts into all sorts of investments.
Reduce the amount of cash in your stockbroker account and you will have less money to put into stocks. Cash out some of your gold and silver and you will have less value whether prices rise or fall.
Making up the Shortfall
The second problem created by the growth-only mindset is felt mainly by retirees: having to make up the shortfall. In other words, spending more than an investor earns puts that investor in negative territory. There ǁill Đoŵe a poiŶt ǁheŶ returŶs Ŷo loŶger ŵeet the ĐlieŶt’s Ŷeeds, forĐiŶg the iŶdiǀidual to ŵake up the shortfall elsewhere.
There is a reasoŶ ǁhLJ so ŵaŶLJ of todaLJ’s retirees are ǁorkiŶg part-time jobs even though they have retirement investments to fall back on. They have consistently spent more than they earned, substantially negating the benefits of investing in their younger years. They now have insufficient income to pay the bills at a time of life when they should not have to worry about working.
Both the independent securities broker and the employed financial adviser owe it to their clients to help them create strong portfolios capable of maximum growth and returns. But they also owe them the courtesy of at least talking about spending and how it might outpace earnings. Clients need to understand that how they spend will ultimately influence the true value of their various investments.
  • Univers Univers
  • Ebooks Ebooks
  • Livres audio Livres audio
  • Presse Presse
  • Podcasts Podcasts
  • BD BD
  • Documents Documents