Top 5 Portfolio Management Techniques - YouTube

Channel: Your Money, Your Wealth

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So today we're going to talk about five main techniques for portfolio management.
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And we're going to look at when you use these, how you might incorporate them in a portfolio,
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and how you might build these types of portfolios.
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So, how do you decide which of the five main techniques to use?
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Well, really it depends on your goals.
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As with anything in portfolio management, the journey depends upon the destination.
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And so, the first thing you want to do as always, fall back on your financial planning.
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What does your financial planning say that you're trying to accomplish?
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What is your goal?
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What is your destination?
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That's what's going to drive the technique you use in order to get there.
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Five main types, like I mentioned; we've got conservative, we've got moderate, we've got
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aggressive, we've got income-oriented, and then we've got tax efficient.
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Let's take a closer look at each of those five now in order starting with conservative.
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When would you use a conservative portfolio management tactic?
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Maybe you've got a short-term time horizon?
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Maybe this is college savings?
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Your child is in high school, and you're looking at paying for college, you want to be conservative.
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Maybe you want to focus on principal preservation because you can't afford a large loss?
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Again the college example.
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Maybe this is a home purchase?
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Maybe you're buying a home in the next couple of years?
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You don't want to put your principle at risk.
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We'll look more at the techniques you might use to get to a conservative strategy.
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But again, time horizon and risk tolerance are going to play a large role in determining
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whether or not this is the right approach.
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So if you're not conservative, what are you?
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Maybe you're an intermediate approach?
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An intermediate approach, as the name implies, it's your mix of aggressive and conservative,
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somewhere in the middle.
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Here you're focusing on some growth, yeah, but also some principal preservation.
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This is your moderate approach.
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You're moderate risk tolerance.
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And then you've got your growth approach; this is more aggressive.
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This is when you've got a long-term time horizon.
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You're willing to tolerate some fluctuations.
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You're willing to see your portfolio bounce around up and down with the hopes that in
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the long run, it will generate higher returns.
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Importantly, this isn't the portfolio management approach of swinging for the fences.
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Swinging for the fences or trying to hit the proverbial home run usually isn't really a
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portfolio management technique, it's a gamble.
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What we're talking about here is managing risk.
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Taking a little bit more risk than average in order to generate higher returns, but doing
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it in a prudent manner, taking risks that are well rewarded and still
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within a diversified portfolio.
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Then we have the income-oriented approach this is where you're not so worried about
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future growth.
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You're worried more about putting dollars in your pockets.
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Money you can spend in your bank account every day from your portfolio.
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Maybe this is in retirement.
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Maybe this is just cash flow you need to live off of.
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And then, while we're talking about income, there are two main ways of generating that,
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there's a total return approach and there's a dividends and interest approach.
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Dividends and interest: that's when you're just clipping the proverbial coupons from
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your portfolio.
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So, your portfolio is kicking off cash in the form of dividends interest payments
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and the like.
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You spend those you don't touch the principal.
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The total return approach, that's where not only are you may be collecting coupons in
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the form of dividends and interest.
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You might be selling some securities, harvesting some gains.
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Choosing how to generate that cash flow from your portfolio.
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For many people that total return approach is a more…a more reasonable
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approach to follow.
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Dividends and interest only, there are some flaws to that.
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For some people it works, but for many that total return approach to generating income
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is the way to go.
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And then the final portfolio management approach, tax efficient.
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So this is where your primary goal isn't just returns.
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It’s returns net of taxes.
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Now to be fair, taxes should be a consideration in almost any of your portfolio management
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approaches, assuming you have some assets in taxable accounts, but here this is the
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main focus.
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Maybe you're in a high tax bracket.
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Maybe you have other sources of income that are going to push your adjusted gross income
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up, and you want to make sure that what's coming out of your portfolio is tax efficient.
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Maybe here you're focusing on qualified dividends or long-term capital gains for tax efficiency.
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Maybe you're focusing on municipal bonds for tax efficiency.
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Those are the main portfolio techniques, let's talk about the building blocks.
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How do you get to those portfolios?
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And here you're talking about, really, two main types of assets.
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People talk about all different asset classes, asset types.
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I focus on two, I focus on growth, and I focus on safety.
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And when I talk about growth, these are your assets that, as the name implies,
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are intended to grow.
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They're intended to generate higher returns over time.
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With those higher returns does come some higher levels of volatility, of course, it’s a
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tradeoff like everything.
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You don't get something for nothing when it comes to investing.
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What kinds of assets fall within the growth pool?
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Well, I might look at things like stocks, I might look at things like natural resources,
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I might look at things like real estate, I might look at things like alternative investments
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as asset classes designed to generate more growth from your portfolio.
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And then in addition to growth, you have your safe assets.
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These are the assets that are designed to preserve your principal,
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not fluctuate as much.
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Perhaps provide a solid foundation on which your growth assets can rest.
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These are things like cash perhaps, and these are things like high-quality bonds.
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Notice that word I use, “high-quality” bonds: aggressive bonds, your high yield bonds,
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your emerging market bonds, your preferred stocks.
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Those should be part of the aggressive or the growth pool.
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When you're focusing on safety in the bond market, you want those shorter and intermediate-term
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high-quality bonds because that's really where that safety and that stability is coming from.
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How you choose to combine these growth assets and these safe assets will, to a large degree,
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depend on which of the portfolio management techniques you're focusing on.
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If you're focusing on a growth portfolio, you're going to want obviously more of the
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growth assets, less of the safe assets.
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If you're focusing on the conservative approach to portfolio management, you're gonna want
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more of the safe assets, less of the growth assets of course.
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And then in the tax efficient or the income-oriented, it's going to be a combination of both and
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determining whether or not those assets will help you accomplish the additional goals of
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tax efficiency and income generation, depending on which the portfolio management techniques
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you're going for.
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Once you've determine what mix of growth and safety you want, of course, it's how do you
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then implemented from a vehicle perspective?
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And that's the topic of another article, another video.
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But importantly of course there are multiple approaches some will use actively managed
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mutual funds, some will use index mutual funds, some will use our preferred approach, which
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is an institutional approach of mutual funds and exchange-traded funds designed to capture
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market returns while overweighting factors that have proven to generate higher returns
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in the long run.
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Some people buy individual securities, that can work for some.
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But that vehicle selection comes after determining your mix of growth and preservation.
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And then of course as you put this all together, you need to determine which of the portfolio
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management techniques is right for you?
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And that circles us all back to the financial planning which is, what are your goals?
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What is your response?
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Importantly, what is your required rate of return?
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When you ran your cash flows when you did your financial planning, what rate of return
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do you need to meet your financial goals?
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Because to a large degree that's the number that's going to determine whether you want
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an aggressive portfolio, a conservative portfolio, an income portfolio, etc.
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And then, where do your assets lie?
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What kind of tax bracket are you in today?
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And what kind of tax bracket are you going to be in the future, based on your tax projections
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and your tax planning?
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Because that's going to determine whether or not that tax-efficient portfolio is the
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one to focus on.
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As you can see, and as always, investing is a very important discipline, but it's one
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piece of the larger pie.
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Investing takes place within the context of your financial planning, because without the
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financial planning, you're not going to know which portfolio management technique
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is appropriate for you.
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So, in order, first you do your financial planning that leads you to which portfolio
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management technique is appropriate for you.
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Then having determined which is the appropriate portfolio management technique, whether it's
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conservative, intermediate, aggressive, whether it's tax efficient, or income generation,
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you then figure out based upon that what mix of safe and growth assets
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is appropriate for you?
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What proportions?
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For most people, it’s going to be some mix of both.
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And then finally, what vehicles will help you implement the strategies you've chosen?
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So there you have it, five main types of portfolio management technique ranging from conservative
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to growth, incorporating perhaps tax efficiency or income generation as a goal, and then determining
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what mix of growth and safe assets is appropriate to get you there.
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For more on this topic or on any others visit us at PureFinancial.com.