A good professional provides important guidance and insight through the years.
What kind of role can a financial professional play for an investor?
The answer: a very important one. While the value of such a relationship is hard to quantify, the intangible benefits may be significant and long-lasting.
There are certain investors who turn to a financial professional with one goal in mind: the “alpha” objective of beating the market, quarter after quarter. Even Wall Street money managers fail at that task – and they fail routinely.
At some point, these investors realize that their financial professional has no control over what happens in the market. They come to understand the real value of the relationship, which is about strategy, coaching, and understanding.
A good financial professional can help an investor interpret today’s financial climate, determine objectives, and assess progress toward those goals. Alone, an investor may be challenged to do any of this effectively. Moreover, an uncoached investor may make self-defeating decisions. Today’s steady stream of instant information can prompt emotional behavior and blunders.
No investor is infallible.
Investors can feel that way during a great market year, when every decision seems to work out well. Overconfidence can set in, and the reality that the market has occasional bad years can be forgotten.
This is when irrational exuberance creeps in. A sudden Wall Street shock may lead an investor to sell low today, buy high tomorrow, and attempt to time the market.
Market timing may be a factor in the following divergence: according to investment research firm DALBAR, U.S. stocks gained 10% a year on average from 1988-2018, yet the average equity investor’s portfolio returned just 4.1% annually in that period.1
A good financial professional helps an investor commit to staying on track.
Through subtle or overt coaching, the investor learns to take short-term ups and downs in stride and focus on the long term. A strategy is put in place, based on a defined investment policy and target asset allocations with an eye on major financial goals. The client’s best interest is paramount.
As the investor-professional relationship unfolds, the investor begins to notice the intangible ways the professional provides value. Insight and knowledge inform investment selection and portfolio construction. The professional explains the subtleties of investment classes and how potential risk often relates to potential reward.
Perhaps most importantly, the professional helps the client get past the “noise” and “buzz” of the financial markets to see what is really important to his or her financial life.
The investor gains a new level of understanding, a context for all the investing and saving. The effort to build wealth and retire well is not merely focused on “success,” but also on significance.
This is the value a financial professional brings to the table. You cannot quantify it in dollar terms, but you can certainly appreciate it over time.
Rich Ramsay may be reached at 651-429-3151 or rich@ramsaywealth.com. https://www.ramsaywealth.com/
This material was prepared by MarketingPro, Inc., and does not necessarily represent the views of the presenting party, nor their affiliates. This information has been derived from sources believed to be accurate. Please note - investing involves risk, and past performance is no guarantee of future results. The publisher is not engaged in rendering legal, accounting or other professional services. If assistance is needed, the reader is advised to engage the services of a competent professional. This information should not be construed as investment, tax or legal advice and may not be relied on for the purpose of avoiding any Federal tax penalty. This is neither a solicitation nor recommendation to purchase or sell any investment or insurance product or service, and should not be relied upon as such. All indices are unmanaged and are not illustrative of any particular investment.
Citations.
1 - cnbc.com/2019/07/31/youre-making-big-financial-mistakes-and-its-your-brains-fault.html [7/31/2019]
News
- News
- Tax Deductions Gone in 2018
- Avoiding the Cybercrooks
- What Do You Have in Reserve for 2018?
- The Medical Expense Deduction in 2018
- The Backdoor Roth IRA
- How New Tax Laws Affect Small Businesses
- Watch for These Insurance Blind Spots
- Tax Changes Around the Home
- Why the U.S. Might Be Less Affected by a Trade War
- Debunking a Few Popular Retirement Myths
- Searching for Health Coverage in the Years Before Medicare
- Is Generation X Preparing Adequately for Retirement?
- A Retirement Fact Sheet
- When a Family Member Dies
- Section 199A Business Tax Deductions
- Certain Uncertainties in Retirement
- Retirement Now vs. Retirement Then
- The Chapters of Retirement
- Three Key Questions to Answer Before Taking Social Security
- Retiring Single
- Eight Mistakes That Can Upend Your Retirement
- Why Having a Financial Professional Matters
- Retirement Wellness
- Systematic Withdrawal Strategies
- Measuring the Value of a Financial Advisor
- Debunking Common Retirement Assumptions
- Tax Considerations for Retirees
- Key Provisions of the CARES Act
- A Stock Market Lesson to Remember
- Eldercare Choices in the COVID-19 Era
- Before You Claim Social Security
- A Checklist for When a Spouse or Parent Passes
- Why Medicare Should Be Part of Your Retirement Strategy
- Year-End Estate Strategies
- The Social Security Administration Announces 2021 COLA
- 2021 Limits for IRAs, 401(k)s and More
- Building a Healthy Financial Foundation
- Earnings Season Gets Underway
- Tax Efficiency in Retirement
- Paying for the Infrastructure Bill
- 2021 Retirement Confidence Survey
- A COLA with Your Social Security?
- Conducting Your Mid-Year Financial Checkup
- A 6.1% Bump in Social Security?
- 401(k) Millionaires
- The Social Security Administration Announces 2022 COLA
- Wise Decisions with Retirement in Mind
- Fed Chair Changes His Tune
- Outlook for 2022
- Retirement Preparation Mistakes
- Getting (Mentally) Ready to Retire
- Are You Retiring Within the Next 5 Years?
- The Retirement Reality Check
- Rehearsing for Retirement
- Creating a Retirement Strategy
- Required Minimum Distributions 101
- 5 Retirement Concerns Too Often Overlooked
- Should We Reconsider What “Retirement” Means?
- End-of-the-Year Money Moves
- New Retirement Contribution Limits for 2023
- Managing Probate When Setting Up Your Estate
- What Happens When There Are No Beneficiaries
- Couples Retiring on the Same Page
- 9 Facts About Social Security
- Eight Mistakes That Can Upend Your Retirement
- Healthcare Costs in Retirement
- Navigating Retirement Pitfalls
- Does Your Portfolio Fit Your Retirement Lifestyle?
- Helpful Retirement Strategies for Women
- Orchestrating Your Retirement Accounts
- Important Birthdays Over 50
- Social Security: Five Facts You Need to Know
- How Will Working Affect Social Security Benefits?
- Women and Wealth: A Pivot Towards Retirement
- Immediate vs. Deferred Annuities
- How Retirement Spending Changes with Time
- The A, B, C, & D of Medicare
- Understanding Money Market Funds
- Understanding Qualified Charitable Distributions
- Glossary
- White Papers
- Blog