Your Annual Financial Planning Checklist

Friday, March 06 2020
Source/Contribution by : NJ Publications

What Is an Annual Financial Plan?

An annual financial plan is a way to determine where you are financially at this particular moment. That means taking into consideration all your assets (how much you get paid, what's in your savings and checking accounts, how much is in your retirement fund), as well as your liabilities, including loans, credit cards, and other personal debts. Don't forget to include things like your mortgage or rent, plus any of your utility bills and other monthly expenses. This snapshot should also factor in what your goals are and what you'll need to accomplish in order to get there. This can include things like retirement planning, tax planning, and investment strategies.

Annual Financial Plan Check-Up

Now that you know what an annual financial plan is and how to make one, let’s recap the most important steps in the process. Check off each step that you've considered, even if your response was, "No, I don't want to refinance my mortgage," or "My credit cards are already paid off." The idea is to make sure you've looked at the issue. But you do need to cover every item in our first section so that you have a full financial inventory.

Create Your Personal Financial Inventory

Your personal financial inventory is important because it gives you a snapshot of the health of your bottom line. This annual self-check should include:

  • A list of assets, including items like your emergency fund, retirement accounts, other investment and savings accounts, real estate equity, education savings, etc. (any valuable jewelry, such as an engagement ring, belongs here, too).

  • A list of debts, including your mortgage, student loans, credit cards, and other loans.

  • A calculation of your credit utilization ratio, which is the amount of debt you have versus your total credit limit.

  • Your credit report and score.

  • A review of the fees you’re paying to a financial advisor if any,and the services he or she provides.

Set Financial Goals

Once you have a personal financial inventory completed, you can move on to setting goals for the remainder of the year, or even for the next 12 months. Your goals will be short-term, mid-term and long-term.

Among your short-term goals might be to:

  • Establish a budget.

  • Create an emergency fund or increase your emergency fund savings.

  • Pay off credit cards.

Your mid-term goals might include:

  • Get life insurance and disability income insurance.

  • Think about your dreams, such as buying a first home or vacation home, renovating, moving – or saving so that you'll have money to have a family or to send children or grandchildren to college.

Then, review your long-term goals, including:

  • Determine how much of a nest egg you’ll need to save for a comfortable retirement.

  • Figure out how to increase your retirement savings.

Focus on Family

If you’re married, there are certain things that you and your spouse should be thinking about on the financial front. These are some of the items that may be on your punch list:

  • If you have children, determine how much you’ll need to save for future college expenses.

  • Choose the right college saving account.

  • If you are caring for elderly parents, investigate whether long-term care insurance or life insurance can help.

  • Purchase life innnsurace for yourself and your spouse.

  • Start to plan how you and your spouse will time your retirement, including your Social Security claiming strategy.

Review Your Investments

It’s important for investors to take stock of where their investments are during the annual financial planning process. This is especially true when the economy undergoes a shift, as is happening now.

  • Check your asset allocation. If stocks are taking a dive, for example, you may consider adding real estate investments into yourportfolio mix to offset some of the volatility.

  • Then figure out which investments will do the best job of meeting your asset allocation goals – and whether your current investments still fit that profile.

Rebalance Your Portfolio

Periodically rebalance your portfolio ensures that you’re not carrying too much risk or wasting your investment dollars on securities that aren't generating a decent rate of return. It also makes sure that your current portfolio reflects your investment strategy (changes in the market often cause a shift that needs to be corrected to maintain the diversification you originally planned).

  • Look at which asset classes you have in your portfolio and where the gaps are. If necessary, refocus your investments to even things out.

  • Consider the costs of managing your portfolio .

Plan on Addressing Tax Planning for Investments

While you’re looking over your portfolio and rebalancing, don’t forget to factor in how selling off assets may affect your tax liability. If you’re selling investments at a profit, you’ll be responsible for paying short- or long-term capital gain tax, depending on how long you held the assets.This step can wait until the end of the year. When you get to that point in time, you'll want to consider these strategies:

  • Harvest tax losses by replacing losing investment with different ones to offset a potentially higher tax bill.

  • Look into whether you should offset capital gains and losses.

  • Investigate whether it makes sense to use appreciated securities to make charitable donation or support lower-income family members.

Update Your Financial Emergency Plan

A sizable emergency fund is helpful if you run into a financial rainy day; be sure you have socked away adequate resources. While you’re at it, look at your broader emergency plan as a whole.

  • If you don’t have three to six months’ worth of expenses tucked away, building your emergency savings should be a top priority.

  • Invest in insurance: Are you covered for a temporary disability, for example?

  • Make sure you have a financial and medical power of attorney in place.

Look Ahead to Future Savings

As you move into the fall, think about where else you could be saving money to fully fund your emergency savings and put aside more for the future. Consider whether you should:

  • Refinance your mortgage.

  • Rethink your car insurance.

  • Lower your food bill.

  • Utilize Flex spending or health saving accounts.

  • Cut the cable TV cord.

  • Curb your energy bill.

  • Divert your paycheck to savings, by contributing more to retirement accounts or funneling money directly from your paycheck to an emergency savings account.

The Bottom Line

An annual financial plan is an exceptionally valuable tool for your life (and peace of mind) today and for your future. Best-case scenario: you've checked off all the items on this punch list by now. If not, don’t hesitate to pencil in time on your calendar to do so.

Direct Equity Investing vs. Investing in Mutual Funds

Friday, Feb 21 2020
Source/Contribution by : NJ Publications

History has shown us that equities have been the most rewarding investment, asset class over long-term horizons. It has potentially generated tremendous wealth for investors. As more and more investors realise the potential and need for equities in their portfolio, they are faced with the choice of either investing directly into equities or investing through equity mutual funds. Which is better? What should I do? This article answers that question.

What do you need for direct stock investment?

  1. Time to research stocks: Studying the share markets is a full-time activity and requires a lot of time and energy on part of the investor. You would also need to analyse economic numbers and macro-economic factors like government policy changes, global impact, currency, etc. You should probably leave your day time job /business to do that.
  2. Market Expertise: One needs adequate skills and expertise in managing investments. Since too much information is readily available, true skill is to know what is important and to analyse the same and assess the impact on the stock prices. This is not which you can learn easily but comes only with experience, involvement and intelligence.
  3. Research affordability: There are a cost and time factor involved in research and study. The time is something which carries huge costs but is unfortunately not often measures by small investors. Such costs are justified if your investment capital is small or if you are a small-time investor.
  4. Unbiased and emotional control: It is a fact that a very large majority of equity investors haven't created much wealth from stock investing. Faulty investor behaviour is the culprit when it comes to less than optimum returns from markets even though the markets have performed very well in long-term. Can you claim to be unbiased to your stocks, remain unaffected from daily news and stock movement and not be carried away?

What you will not get with Mutual Funds investments?

  1. Excitement and thrill (or worry) of stock movement: Let's admit it. Direct stock investment is exciting and thrilling. It is like T20 and if you wish to be always preoccupied with markets, like the excitement of uncertainty, direct stock investments may be your preference. Mutual fund investment would be like a test-match, it is boring and not exciting enough for you.
  2. Full control over investments/stock selection: In mutual funds, there is someone else who is taking the stock investment decisions within the ambit of the scheme objective. You have no control if you want HDFC bank instead of a Yes Bank in your portfolio.
  3. Ownership rights: With direct stock investing you become a part-owner of the company and get ownership rights. In a mutual fund, you do not get that sense of ownership since underlying stocks are 'indirectly' held by investors through the fund house.

But what you will get with mutual funds investments?

  1. Professional management: In mutual funds, the investor leaves this task to the fund managers who are professionals in their field and manage the investment on behalf of the investors.
  2. Portfolio diversification: With mutual funds, you have very good diversification. Even if a stock goes bust, you are not much affected. As opposed to this, if you had been invested in that stock directly, you would have likely suffered a huge loss.
  3. Diversification at affordable cost: With just a few hundred rupees, one can invest in over 20-30 companies. This is because MF units have are priced at affordable NAVs derived from the entire portfolio. You may be owning highly priced stocks which may not be possible In direct equity investing, Also, such level diversification will not be easy to achieve in direct investments with low capital.
  4. Economies of scale: Mutual funds enjoy great economies of scale for their entire research, fund management and administration costs. These are passed on the investors as the fund size or AUM grows in the form of lower expense ratios. Expense ratios are the only cost which the investors pay and it is clearly known in advance.
  5. Investment management tools: Mutual funds offer many tools like SIP, growing SIP, STP, SWP, dividend payout, dividend reinvestments, insta cash, etc which can be smartly used by investors to manage their portfolio and cash-flows. Such multiple tools are not available at the disposal of direct stock investors.
  6. Tax benefit: Of course, equity mutual funds enjoy similar tax treatment as direct stocks. However, equity-linked savings schemes or ELSS gets counted in your 80C investments. This benefit is not available in direct stocks.
  7. Budget-friendly: For most of us, we are concerned with the investible surplus we have. With mutual funds, you can however relax and start saving with as little as Rs.500. There is no upper limit though.
  8. Ready portfolios as per strategy: There is a huge choice of funds which follow different objectives and strategies in their preferred universe of stocks. There are ready portfolios like large-cap /mid-cap /blend /value /contra /sectoral or thematic fund, etc to suit one's risk appetite and strategy.
  9. Choices for asset allocation: Moving beyond equity funds, there are funds offering every possible combination of equity and debt assets. Thus, even while you may be investing in a single fund, you may have a matching asset-allocation to your risk appetite. This is something you will have to manage separately in your portfolio.

To be fair, both mutual funds and direct equity have their pros and cons. What is more important is to know what you are looking for, what you are capable of and how much time and efforts you can put to it? Obviously, most of us are preoccupied in our lives, job, business, etc to devote quality time regularly only to investments, even assuming you have the necessary skills & knowledge. Investment in stocks is thus recommended only to those investors who not only are great researchers having expertise in markets but also willing to go put in the efforts. For the majority of us, mutual funds offer a much better trade-off where you can hire such proven experts in the industry for a small fee. When we look at the benefits offered, obviously we can safely say that equity mutual funds are the ideal vehicles for investing in stocks.

Real Rate of Return - Real Wealth Creation

Saturday, Feb 01 2020, Contributed By: Team NJ Publications

We as investors are mostly interested to know what returns I am going to get from my investments. It is seldom asked what is the real rate of return I am going to get.

It is very important to understand the real rate of return that is expected to come from one's investment rather than the absolute return which generally an investor ask for. To understand what you actually mean by the real rate of return and how it really helps in Wealth Creation you need to spare a few minutes to read through the article.

What is Real Rate of Return?

In simple terms, it is the return you earn above the inflation rate – which is the rate at which the prices, in general, are rising. To exemplify, if you invest in a fixed deposit which is today giving you a return of say 8% and the inflation is 6% then the real rate of return that you are generating would be 2%, ie., actual return (less) inflation for the period. The logic is simple – Rs.100 one or say 10 years ago does not carry the same value today because things have become costly due to inflation. Generally, consumer price Index growth (CPI) or wholesale price index growth (WPI) is taken as inflation indicators.

Having understood whats the real rate of return is, the question is how it is related to wealth creation. Let's understand what actually wealth creation means. Putting jargons aside wealth creation in simple terms is the increase in one's ability to purchase more things. If one feels his ability to purchase things have increased substantially over a period of time, one can simply say he has created wealth.

How can one increase its ability to purchase more through prudently investing?

That's a very right question to be answered. Let's go back to our example of one investing into fixed deposit with 8% absolute return and 2% real rate of Return. Say the investor had Rs 1,000 to invest in a fixed deposit. At 8% of interest rate, the value after one year of the amount invested would be Rs.1,080. Now assume that with Rs.1,000 he could have bought 50 packets of milk priced at Rs.20. Now with 6% inflation (assumed price increase of milk), the price of milk packet would be Rs 21.3 after one year.

At Rs 1080 available with the investor from his investment he now would be able to buy 51 packets of milk. The purchasing power of the investor has increased by one packet of milk thanks to the positive real rate of return. Had his return on investment been equal to the inflation he would still be able to buy only 50 packets of milk. And had his investment return lesser than the inflation, negative real rate, his capacity to buy milk packets would get reduced. That is the explanation why for creating wealth it is important to look at the real rate of returns and not the absolute returns on your investment.

Now interestingly let us look at the table below highlighting the approximate real rate of return across different asset class in India from 1981 – 2019. The question to ask is how it has increased the purchasing power similar to our example above over the period?

Asset

Actual Returns

Real Rate of Return

Increase in Purchasing Power

Equities ( Sensex)

15.00%

9.00%

22

Company Deposit

9.60%

3.60%

4

Bank Deposit

8.60%

2.60%

3

Gold

8.10%

2.10%

2

(Source: NJ Wealth – Internal. Assuming average inflation during period @ 6%.)

The results mesmerize us as to how the real rate of returns in equities over the period has increased the purchasing power and hence created wealth.

Never in the period considered had equities ever had a linear growth. There were many periods or phases when everyone considered to be the worst time for equity investors. For example, the equity markets in India post Harshad Mehta Scam (1994- 98) or post the Y2K technology bubble (1999-2001) or the after the Lehman brothers (2008-2012) and many such periods of dullness. But over the longer period, equities still delivered a real rate of return which increased the purchasing power the most as illustrated in the table.

Does the real rate of return increase the purchasing power over the shorter period say 5 Years?

The answer is NO. For a change in purchasing power, we require both time and returns.

What if we assume the same returns for the investor as return generated over 38 years to be generated in 5 years and measure the impact on the purchasing power?

There will be very marginal difference in the results and one cannot distinguish one from the other. Also, since equities are volatile in short-term, we cannot expect the same results of long term in the short term. That is not the nature of equities and something that everyone should understand.

Conclusion:

Equities change the purchasing power to a great extent and it been the biggest wealth creator across all asset class over a longer period, 10 years at least but longer the better, with the short term volatility. I would never understand why investor invests in equities and start seeing returns on a day to day basis and gets disturbed with short term negative returns. It is important to have a firm long term belief and give time to your equity investments for Real Wealth Creation through Real Rate of Returns from Equity Investments.

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