investing 101

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Investing 101 By: Bruce McNutt Part 1 : Creating a Diversified Portfolio Part 2 : Investing in the Stock Market, Indexing vs Active Management

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Investing 101. Part 1 : Creating a Diversified Portfolio. Part 2 : Investing in the Stock Market, Indexing vs Active Management. By: Bruce McNutt. The Goal of the Personal Investor. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Investing  101

Investing 101

By: Bruce McNutt

Part 1 : Creating a Diversified Portfolio

Part 2 : Investing in the Stock Market, Indexing vs Active Management

Page 2: Investing  101

The Goal of the Personal Investor

Your goal is to manage a well diversified portfolio through dollar cost averaging that meets your risk assessment needs through proper asset allocation in each of the asset classes.

Your goal is to manage a well diversified portfolio through dollar cost averaging that meets your risk assessment needs through proper asset allocation in each of the asset classes.

Page 3: Investing  101

Investing vs. Saving

Saving:

Holding onto the money you already have

Investing

Using your money to make more money

Page 4: Investing  101

Investing

Successful Investing requires time and a well thought out plan.

Successful investing requires a good understanding of the financial markets and investing strategy, unless you want to pay someone else to do it for you.

Page 5: Investing  101

How Investments Grow

Investments grow for two reasons, through a process called compounding, and because you add money to them.

“The most powerful force in the Universe is Compounded Interest” Albert Einstein

Compounding means that not only does your original investment grow, but the interest you earn grows as well

Page 6: Investing  101

This calculator is at www.moneychimp.com

Page 7: Investing  101
Page 8: Investing  101

A Word About Dollar Cost Averaging

When an investor puts a little bit in his investment on a regular basis (i.e. every paycheck) he is said to be Dollar Cost Averaging.

The idea is to but more shares when the market is down and fewer shares when the market is up

Page 9: Investing  101

https://flagship.vanguard.com/VGApp/hnw/planningeducation/retirement/PEdRetInvHowMuchToSaveContent.jsp

Why it’s so important to start early

Page 10: Investing  101

The 3 Most Common Investments

CashStocks Bonds

Other Common Investments

Real EstatePrecious Metals

Page 11: Investing  101

Cash

Cash refers to money you have in a bank account, money market, or C.D. type of investment.

These accounts are virtually guaranteed to pay you the interest they promise.

They are considered very low risk, and usually low reward

Page 12: Investing  101

Bonds

When you purchase a bond, you are really loaning money to either a government or company and they are promising to pay you back with interest

There are MANY types of bonds.

Page 13: Investing  101

The Stock Market

When you buy a stock, you are buying a piece of a company (a share) that someone else is selling

OR

During an IPO (Initial Public Offering) you are still buying shares, but now you are giving money to the actual company.

Page 14: Investing  101

Risk vs. Reward

Risk : Anything that can cause your investment to go down in value

Reward : Your investment goes up in value

Page 15: Investing  101

Risk vs. Reward

There is no such thing as reward without risk in investing.

As a general rule, the higher the potential reward, the greater the risk

Loan $20,000 to a friend to go drill for oil Put $20,000 in a C.D.

Page 16: Investing  101

Relative Risk

Lowest Mid Highest

Cash X

Bonds X

Stocks X

Risk

Investment

Type

Relative Potential Reward

Potential Reward

Page 17: Investing  101

Potential Reward when Investing in Cash

You will earn the percent the investment guarantees.

These percentages usually run in the 1%-5% Range

Page 18: Investing  101

Types of Risks when Investing in Cash

Inflation Risk : The rate of inflation may outpace your rate of return

The Risk of the Unexpected:

Page 19: Investing  101

Potential Reward when Investing in Bonds

The long term rate of return on Bonds is in the 6-7% range.

Page 20: Investing  101

Types of Risks when Investing in Bonds

Call Risk : The issuer of the bond decides to pay off in full their obligation on their bonds

Credit Risk : The issuer of the bond fails to pay their interest or principal (default)(The federal government has never defaulted on a bond obligation)

Interest Rate Risk : changing interest rates cause bond prices to change

Page 21: Investing  101

Potential Reward when Investing in Stocks

The historical long term rate of return on Stocks is around 10%

Page 22: Investing  101

Types of Risks when Investing in Stocks Market Risk : The Stock Market can (and will) go down

over certain time intervals

Investment Style Risk : The specific types of stocks you invest in can (and will) go down

Manager Risk : the person you have picking your stocks picks bad ones

Expense Risk : The fees you pay cut into your gains

Page 23: Investing  101
Page 24: Investing  101

The Million Dollar Question

How do you know how much of my money to put in each type of investment?

Page 25: Investing  101

Asset Allocation

Your ASSET ALLOCATION is the answer to your million dollar question.

Asset Allocation means what percent of your money is invested in each type of investment.

Page 26: Investing  101

Ultra Conservative : 100% Cash

0% Bonds

0% Stocks

Ultra Aggressive : 0% Cash

0% Bonds

100% Stocks

Page 27: Investing  101

What is your personal Asset Allocation

Your asset allocation is based on your risk tolerance, and there is no one size fits all formula

Your risk tolerance is a function of… Your age Your personal risk tolerance Your financial position

Page 28: Investing  101

Marge:

24 years old. No family yet Has $100 per month to invest

Page 29: Investing  101

Bill

45 years old Has 14 years until retirement Has $100 per month to invest and already

has $70,000 in his 403(b)(7)

Page 30: Investing  101

Jane

62 years old Retiring next year Already has $200,000 in her 403(b)(7) Will rely on this money for retirement

income

Page 31: Investing  101

The General Rule

You should have a number of months worth of emergency money in cash.

The younger you are, the greater percentage of your money that should be in stocks.

The closer you get to needing your money for daily living, the more that should be in bonds and cash

Page 32: Investing  101

A Balanced Portfolio

A balanced portfolio is one that is adequately spread out within asset classes according to your asset allocation plan.

Page 33: Investing  101

Asset Allocation Over Time

Most advisors recommend that as you age, you want to adjust you asset allocation to have less in stocks and more in bonds over time.

That way, as you get closer to needing the money, bad years in the market won’t substantially deplete your nest egg

Page 34: Investing  101

What you want in your Asset Allocation

You want Diversification

Diversification : your assets are spread out within your asset allocation plan

Page 35: Investing  101

Bad Plan on a 100,000 Portfolio

Stocks 40% Bonds 40% Cash 20%

Stocks: Microsoft $25,000 Wal-Mart $15,000

Bonds: Ford Motor Company Corporate Bonds $40,000

Cash: A 6 month C.D. $20,000

Page 36: Investing  101

A Better Plan for a $100,000 Portfolio

Stocks 40% Bonds 40% Cash 20%

Stocks: Large Companies $25,000

Medium Companies $10,000

Small Companies $5,000

Bonds: Government Bonds $15,000

Corporate Bonds $5,000

Cash: A 6 month C.D. $5,000 A 9 month C.D. $5,000

A 12 month C.D. $5,000 A 15 month C.D. $5,000

Page 37: Investing  101

What to Avoid

You want to avoid having too high a percentage of your money in any one place at any one time.

Enron

Page 38: Investing  101

What a Professional Financial Advisor Does

1. Assess your risk tolerance

2. Set up a diversified portfolio

3. Manage your portfolio over time

Page 39: Investing  101

Finding your own Asset Allocation

Go to almost any financial companies website and search asset allocation.

Try Vanguard, Fidelity, T.Rowe Price and then compare what each company says.

Google asset allocation, don’t do the ones you have to pay for.

Page 40: Investing  101

Summary of Part 1

Page 41: Investing  101

Part 2:Investing in the Stock Market

Page 42: Investing  101

A Short Course in the History of the Stock Market

Page 43: Investing  101

Mutual Funds

Purchasing shares of a mutual fund means you are buying shares of many companies at one time

Example of a Vanguard Fund

Why buy Mutual Funds as opposed to buying individual stocks?

Page 44: Investing  101

Diversify, Diversify, Diversify

The point of buying many companies is to reduce risk, which of course reduces potential gain, but it keeps risk at a manageable level

Page 45: Investing  101

The two main types of mutual funds

Index : An index is used to decide what stocks to hold in your fund : S&P 500, Wilshire 5000, Russell 2000, Dow Jones

Active : A fund manager, or a team of managers, decides what stocks to hold in your fund

American Fund Managers

Page 46: Investing  101

Fees and Expenses

Expense Ratio All Mutual Funds charge an expense ratio Some mutual funds charge 12b-1

(advertising) fees Some funds are load funds that have a

sales charge when you either buy or sell fund shares

Page 47: Investing  101

Lets Compare Two Funds

The Vanguard Small Cap Index Fund

The Trend-Star Small Cap Fund

Page 48: Investing  101

The Prospectus

Page 49: Investing  101

Fund Strategies

The strategy of an index fund is to mimic a particular index.

Vanguard 500 Fund

Index FundActive Fund

Page 50: Investing  101

Who Manages the Fund

Nobody

Index FundActive Fund

Page 51: Investing  101

Judging Performance

Page 52: Investing  101

Costs and Fees Index FundActive Fund

Page 53: Investing  101

Do Expenses Really Matter?

Assume you are going to invest $25,000 in both the Vanguard Small Cap Index Fund and the TrendStar Small Cap Fund for the next 25 years and the average rate of return will be 8%.

Page 54: Investing  101

David Serchuk and James M. Clash June 5th, 2006 Forbes Magazine

There's a bracing logic to letting your money ride on an S&P 500 index fund. The most celebrated of them, the Vanguard 500 Index, has beaten 60% of all actively managed domestic stock funds over the past ten years. Buying an index fund means giving up on picking a smart money manager. But this saves you money management fees and also spares you the worry that your manager will do much worse than the averages.

Page 55: Investing  101

My Recommendations for Learning About Investing Subscribe to Money Magazine (and read it).

Read Teach and Retire Rich by Dan Otter available at the www.403bwise.com website

Read the business section every day, especially the personal finance section

Find a friend to take the journey with you