Retirement Specialist With Over 40 Years Of Retirement Planning Experience

6 Keys To A More Successful Nest Egg

nest-egg

A successful nest egg builder maximizes gain and minimizes loss. Though there can be no guarantee that any product or a financial instrument will be successful. There is always a risk, including the possible loss of principal. However, here are six basic principles that may help you build your nest egg more successfully.

1.Long-term compounding can help your nest egg grow

It’s the “rolling snowball” effect. Put simply, compounding pays you earnings on your reinvested earnings. The longer you leave your money at work for you, the more exciting the numbers get. For example, imagine a principal amount of $10,000 at an annual rate of return of 8 percent. In 20 years, assuming no withdrawals, your $10,000 would grow to $46,610. In 25 years, it would grow to $68,485, a 47 percent gain over the 20-year figure. After 30 years, your account would total $100,627. (Of course, this is a hypothetical example that does not reflect the performance of any specific product or financial instrument.)

This simple example also assumes that no taxes are paid along the way, so all money remains to be compounded. That would be the case in a tax-deferred individual retirement account or qualified retirement plan. The compounded earnings of deferred tax dollars are the main reason experts recommend fully funding all tax-advantaged retirement accounts and plans available to you.

While you should review your portfolio on a regular basis, the point is that money left alone to compound offers the potential of a significant return over time. With time on your side, you don’t have to go for “home runs” in order to be successful.

2.Endure short-term pain for long-term gain

Riding out market volatility sounds simple, doesn’t it? But what if you’ve put $10,000 into the stock market and the price of the stock drops like a stone one day? On paper, you’ve lost a bundle, offsetting the value of compounding you’re trying to achieve. It’s tough to stand pat.

There’s no denying it — the financial marketplace can be volatile. Still, it’s important to remember two things. First, the longer you stay with a diversified portfolio, the more likely you are to reduce your risk and improve your opportunities for gain. Though past performance doesn’t guarantee future results, the long-term direction of the stock market has historically been up. For assets you’ll use soon, you may not have the time to wait out the market and should consider financial instruments or products designed to protect your principal. Conversely, think long-term for goals that are many years away.

Second, during any given period of market or economic turmoil, some asset categories and are less volatile than others. Bond price swings, for example, have generally been less dramatic than stock prices. Though diversification alone cannot guarantee a profit or ensure against the possibility of loss, you can minimize your risk somewhat by diversifying your holdings among various classes of assets, as well as different types of assets within each class.

3.Spread your wealth through allocation

Asset allocation is the process by which you spread your dollars over several categories of financial instruments, usually referred to as asset classes. The three most common asset classes are stocks, bonds, and cash or cash alternatives such as money market funds. You’ll also see the term “asset classes” used to refer to subcategories, such as aggressive growth stocks, long-term growth stocks, international stocks, government bonds (U.S., state, and local), high-quality corporate bonds, low-quality corporate bonds, and tax-free municipal bonds. A basic asset allocation would likely include at least stocks, bonds (or mutual funds of stocks and bonds), and cash or cash alternatives.

There are two main reasons why asset allocation is important. First, the mix of asset classes you own is a large factor — some say the biggest factor by far — in determining your overall portfolio performance. In other words, the basic decision about how to divide your money between stocks, bonds, and cash can be more important than your subsequent choice of specific financial products.

Second, by dividing your nest egg dollars among asset classes that do not respond to the same market forces in the same way at the same time, you can help minimize the effects of market volatility while maximizing your chances of return in the long term. Ideally, if your monies in one class are performing poorly, assets in another class may be doing better. Any gains in the latter can help offset the losses in the former and help minimize their overall impact on your portfolio.

4.Consider your time horizon in your product choices

In choosing an asset allocation, you’ll need to consider how quickly you might need to convert a financial product into cash without loss of principal (your initial money). Generally speaking, the sooner you’ll need your money, the wiser it is to keep it in financial products whose prices remain relatively stable. You want to avoid a situation, for example, where you need to use money quickly that is tied up in a financial instrument whose price is currently down.

Therefore, your choices should take into account how soon you’re planning to use your money. If you’ll need the money within the next one to three years, you may want to consider keeping it in a money market fund or another cash alternative. Your rate of return may be lower than selecting a more volatile financial vehicle such as stocks, but you’ll breathe easier knowing that your principal money is relatively safe without concern over market conditions on a given day. Conversely, if you have a long time horizon — for example, if you’re planning for a retirement that is many years away — you may be able to assign a greater percentage of your money to something that might have more dramatic price changes but that might also have greater potential for long-term growth.

Note: Before buying into in a mutual fund, consider its objectives, risks, charges, and expenses, all of which are outlined in the prospectus, available from the fund. Consider the information carefully before purchase. Remember that monies in a money market fund are not insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporate or any other government agency. Although the fund seeks to preserve the value of your nest egg dollars at $1 per share, it is possible to lose money in the fund.

5.Dollar cost averaging: putting money away consistently and often

Dollar-cost averaging is a method of accumulating shares of a financial product by purchasing a fixed dollar amount at regularly scheduled intervals over an extended time. When the price is high, your fixed-dollar product buys less; when prices are low, the same-dollar product will buy more shares. A regular, fixed-dollar financial instrument should result in a lower average price per share than you would get buying a fixed number of shares at each interval. A workplace savings plan, such as a 401(k) plan that deducts the same amount from each paycheck and accumulates it through the plan, is one of the most well-known examples of dollar-cost averaging in action.

Remember that, just as with any nest egg building strategy, dollar cost averaging can’t guarantee you a profit or protect you against a loss if the market is declining. To maximize the potential effects of dollar-cost averaging, you should also assess your ability to keep putting money away even when the market is down.

An alternative to dollar cost averaging would be trying to “time the market,” in an effort to predict how the price of the shares will fluctuate in the months ahead so you can buy in at the absolute lowest point. However, market timing is generally unprofitable guesswork. The discipline of regularly putting money away in a financial instrument is a more manageable & automated strategy.

6.Buy and hold, don’t buy and forget

Unless you plan to rely on luck, your portfolio’s long-term success will depend on periodically reviewing it. Maybe economic conditions have changed the prospects for a particular financial instrument or an entire asset class. Also, your circumstances change over time, and your asset allocation will need to reflect those changes. For example, as you get closer to retirement, you might decide to increase your allocation to less volatile vehicles or those that can provide a steady stream of income.

Another reason for periodic portfolio review: your various financial products will likely appreciate at different rates, which will alter your asset allocation without any action on your part. For example, if you initially decided on an 80 percent to 20 percent mix of stock to bond portolio, you might find that after several years the total value of your portfolio has become divided 88 percent to 12 percent (conversely, if stocks haven’t done well, you might have a 70-30 ratio of stocks to bonds in this hypothetical example). You need to review your portfolio periodically to see if you need to return to your original allocation.

To rebalance your portfolio, you would buy more of the asset class that’s lower than desired, possibly using some of the proceeds of the asset class that is now larger than you intended. Or you could retain your existing allocation but shift future monies into an asset class that you want to build up over time. But if you don’t review your holdings periodically, you won’t know whether a change is needed. Many people choose a specific date each year to do an annual review.

Freeman Owen

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