Topic: How To Invest

Investor Toolkit: 8 steps to financial security

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Every Wednesday, we publish our “Investor Toolkit” series on TSI Network. Whether you’re a beginning or experienced investor, these weekly updates are designed to give you specific advice and insights on good investments. Each Investor Toolkit update gives you a fundamental piece of investing strategy, and shows you how you can put it into practice right away.

Today’s tip: “When you follow these 8 important steps, you are putting your financial security on a secure footing for the future.

Investors are continually deluged with promises of lifelong financial happiness, some legitimate if overly optimistic, others frankly deceptive or fraudulent. But there is no magic formula for financial security

Instead, the right way to proceed is to follow a series of important steps that will help you secure your financial well-bein

Our approach begins with our time-tested 3-part strategy: invest mainly in well-established, dividend-paying companies, spread your money out across the five main economic sectors (Manufacturing & Industry; Resources; Consumer; Finance; and Utilities); and avoid or downplay stocks in the broker/media limeligh

If you follow that up by investing money with a disciplined plan for saving during your working years, and selling your stocks as needed in retirement, you’re on the right track toward optimal investment gains

Here are 8 key tips to help you make that plan work most effectively

  1. Only buy bonds or other fixed-return investments if interest rates are high enough to be attractive. Don’t buy bonds just to “cut your risk.” After all, our 3-part advice already takes a lot of the long-term risk out of investing. Adding bonds to the mix will simply cut the volatility of your portfolio value in any given year. But it does so at the cost of increasing your risk of loss to inflation
  2. No matter how attractive they may seem, always take a skeptical approach to buying financial products that add an extra percentage point or more to your yearly costs. Make sure the expense is worth it.

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  1. Be skeptical of advice that comes from advisors or institutions that sell insurance or other fee-heavy investment and financial products. The financial software they use naturally churns out investment plans that involve the kind of frequently-hidden costs we mentioned in point 2
  2. There is no secret investment growth hormone in insurance products, so our advice is that you should only buy what you need. For most people, this mostly this comes down to term life insurance for the main breadwinners in the family unit
  3. Before you start investing in disability or income-replacement insurance, read all the fine print closely. Just as important, assume the insurance company will decide borderline cases in its own favour, since that’s often what happens. Viewed in that light, you won’t like what you find. That’s why they put it in the fine print
  4. In contrast, we believe you should be investing as early as is practical of all registered savings plans—RRSPs, TFSAs, etc. RESPs are particularly attractive, due to the government grants that come with them
  5. Put off buying a house until you can afford one that you’re likely to want to live in for at least 10 years, if not 20 or more. Real-estate commissions and other costs of selling one home and buying another add up to a lot of money. Worse, it comes out of your after-tax income. You’ll be far better off financially if you instead keep that money invested at, say, 6% to 8%, all the more if you can do this on a tax-deferred basis
  6. Put off marriage and children until you find a potential mate you think you’ll want to stay with as long as you live. Of course, you may change your mind—nearly half of all marriages end in divorce.

    But before beginning a family, you need to recognize the economic cost of divorce. Supporting two households for a decade or two takes a huge bite out of your retirement savings. The current dollars themselves are a major drain. But you lose far more by missing out on an opportunity for decades of compound investment growth

Not all of these 8 tips may apply directly to your current situation, but if you take all of them into account, you have a far greater chance of finding financial happiness than those who have succumbed to the idea of a “magic formula” for wealth.

COMMENTS PLEASE—Share your investment experience and opinions with fellow TSINetwork.ca members

Of all the steps you have taken to put your financial future on a secure footing, what do you believe is the single most important one? Let us know what you think.

Comments

  • These are all absolutely excellent tips. Perhaps the most important of all is that of selecting the right person as a mate , i.e. one who will be a life partner therefore an assest rather than a liability.

  • Daniel 

    This was a truly insightful article. Thank you for your advice. I have not found any other source of unbiased, high quality investment advise,

    All the best,

    Daniel Robibo

  • Barbara 

    This is all great advice as it is common sense, particularily the point of living in the same house for a long time. I think most people would benefit from these points, and add that if they lived within their means or below their means, money would never be a problem to them.

  • I agree with Irene. Your choice of partner is as important as everything else. If they share a similar approach to money as earned and to be spent wisely, it makes a huge difference. If they see it as an entitlement to be spent as it comes, you won’t build much on assets no matter how hard you try individually.

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