Should I Be Investing? - YouTube

Channel: Your Money, Your Wealth

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So the question of the day is, “should I be investing?”
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And the answer is no.
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All right, obviously I'm only kidding.
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I'm an investment professional working for a financial firm, so yeah,
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everybody should be investing.
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But of course, not everybody should be investing for every goal they have in life.
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And it all comes down to time horizon, and whether or not you can take risk.
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If you have a long time horizon for what you're trying to accomplish,
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then yeah, go ahead and invest.
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Do you have a short time horizon?
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Is this money that you need next week or next month?
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Then absolutely no.
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Don't invest that money - stick it in the proverbial mattress.
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Don't do that.
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I actually met somebody once upon a time who put a bunch of money under the mattress for
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a new car and had a roommate that literally stole the money from under the mattress.
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So even money under the mattress may not be safe.
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But more realistically, or maybe more commonly, is that the money won't be stolen by an individual.
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Money under the mattress gets stolen by something called inflation.
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And inflation is the increase in the price of goods and services that you notice every day.
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Your money needs to earn some rate of return in order to at least keep
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and maintain its purchasing power.
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Now again, if your goal is short term - if you're saving for your children's wedding,
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your children's education, if you're saving to buy a new home, if this is your rainy day
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fund just in case the roof falls in, don't take a lot of risk.
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Save that money and put it in a certificate of deposit at the bank.
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Put it in a money market account.
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Put it in a savings account.
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Put it in a very short term bond fund.
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All of those choices are superior to seeing your money lose pace to inflation because
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they provide at least some rate of income.
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When you should invest is when your goal is longer term in nature.
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Albert Einstein once said, “the most powerful force in the universe is compound interest.”
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I'm not smart enough to argue with Albert Einstein, so I'm gonna go with that.
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Compound interest works like this:
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If I take a dollar and I invest it at 10 percent, I earn a dime.
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If I keep that dollar ten invested, the next year I earn 10 percent again on my original
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one dollar investment, plus the dime that I earned from the last year.
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So now my return is not 10 cents the next year, it's 11 cents.
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Over time compound interest can work magic.
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Now when it comes to investing, you want to maintain an asset allocation comparable
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to your investment time horizon.
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So if you've got a very long time horizon - if you're saving for retirement and you're
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in your 20s or 30s, if you're saving for your grandchildren's education and maybe your grandchildren
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haven't been born yet - you want to be more aggressive.
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The goal of financial planning is to find your target rate of return, then take the
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least amount of risk possible to get that return.
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If you don’t need to be aggressive, don’t be aggressive.
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Don't go out of your way to try and beat the market if you don't need to.
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And then match your horizon to your risk.
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For those longer term goals,
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take a more aggressive stance.
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Maybe have more stocks, and within your stocks, maybe have more aggressive stocks.
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Small cap stocks, small company stocks, emerging market stocks and the like.
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When it comes to your intermediate term goals, maybe money that you need out 10 or 15 years,
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maybe you're still taking on some risk, you still own some stocks.
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Maybe they’re somewhat more stable stocks - larger company stocks, dividend payers,
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maybe there's a larger percentage of high quality bonds in there, relative to your
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very long term horizon.
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And of course, this time horizon and this asset allocation gets mixed in with your tax
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planning as well, in the sense of asset location.
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You may choose to invest for different goals, and hold different kinds of assets in
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different kinds of accounts.
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So maybe in your tax free pool, which is your Roth accounts, maybe there you're holding
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your very aggressive investments.
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You have a very long time horizon and you're never going to pay taxes on those gains.
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Be aggressive - hold that in your tax free pool.
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Maybe if you're entering into retirement, you're going to pull money from your tax deferred
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account, from your IRA, relatively soon.
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There, you're paying tax at the highest rate - the ordinary income tax rate.
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Maybe you hold more conservative investments, your fixed income or your bonds over there.
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Of course, a lot of times the question comes back, “but I'm afraid to invest in the market.”
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After a couple of years of relative calm and more or less an upward trajectory in stocks,
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things have gotten volatile, as markets will.
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Over time, it turns out that the stock market falls from peak to trough about 14 percent
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once every 12 months.
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That decline lasts, on average, 56 days.
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Stocks fall.
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Bear markets, which is defined as a decline of 20 percent or more, happen on a regular basis.
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If you are investing in stocks, at some point, you will lose money.
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It's a certainty.
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While stocks do suffer those declines on a regular basis, we also know that over time
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they compound magnificently.
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So again, should you be investing?
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And again I go back to, no.
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No, you shouldn't be investing, unless you have the right time horizon.
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And if your time horizon is very long, then yes, absolutely you should be investing.
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For more information, contact Pure Financial.