Do you love football? Do you watch the calendar for that first game of the new season in the fall?
Have you ever wondered what the coaches do during the off season? Are they off on an island vacation, resting and relaxing from a long season? I would bet that most would love to do that, but probably more important to them, is beginning to think about the next football season.
I envision the coaches huddled in meetings discussing: Goal Setting what it will take to win the championship, Preparing new plays other teams have not yet seen, considering the Risk of special plays on certain downs, and the Construction of the best 11 players on the field at particular times.
These scenarios are very similar to my Five Steps to A Solid Investment Plan. Previously, we discussed Steps 1-3; Goal Setting, Preparation, and Risk , and Portfolio Construction . Today, I want to review the final 2 steps: Implementation and Monitoring & Evaluation.
Implementation means executing your investment plan by buying and selling securities in various accounts.
There are several areas that need to be considered before trading. These are asset location, cost basis review, concentrated stock position, and municipal bonds.
Asset Location
Where your advisor chooses to buy an investment and into what type of account is called asset location.
Most clients have at least two types of accounts that have different tax treatments: tax-deferred, such as an IRA, or pretax 401(k), and taxable, such as an individual account, joint account, or revocable living trust account.
Tax-deferred accounts allow you to defer any income and gains until you take distributions.
Taxable accounts generate tax form 1099 every year to report interest, dividends, and realized capital gains or losses that you must report on your income tax returns.
To maximize tax efficiency, proper asset location can generate an additional after-tax return when tax-inefficient assets (i.e. high yield bonds) are placed in the retirement accounts, and tax-efficient assets (i.e. growth stocks, municipal bonds) are placed in a taxable account.
Review Cost Basis, Short-Term, or Long-Term Unrealized Gains
Part of implementing your investment plan means that you or your financial advisor should identify securities that should be sold immediately, such as those that are too high cost, have a poor track record, or do not fit your current investment plans.
When reviewing your taxable accounts, any securities you decide to keep that have unrealized short-term gains that may turn into long-term gains soon should be held and monitored. If you sell a security with realized capital gains, this security needs to be held for at least a year to get the long-term capital gains tax treatment.
The goal is to generate long-term gains instead of short-term gains in order to pay lower taxes because short-term gains are taxed at an ordinary federal income tax rate that could be as high as 37 percent, while the long-term federal capital gains rate is a maximum of 20 percent.
Concentrated Stock Position
A concentrated stock position arises when you have a large portion (over 10 percent) of your stock portfolio in a single stock. This can happen often when people hold employer stock. This situation has a correlated risk because the person’s human capital (i.e., ability to earn a living) is tied to the risk of the investment capital that you have saved for future retirement or other goals.
Remember Enron? The employees not only lost their jobs, but they also lost the value of Enron stock inside their investment accounts.
Uncompensated risk is the level of additional risk for which no additional returns are generated on an investment. If you owned one stock with high concentration or too many stocks in a single market sector, you would have significant uncompensated risk.
Risk that can be eliminated by adding different stocks (or bonds) is uncompensated risk. The objective of diversification is to minimize this uncompensated risk.
Municipal Bonds
If you are a high-income professional living in a high-tax state like New York, California, and Minnesota and have a sizable taxable account (above $1 million), it’s worth considering high-quality municipal bonds. If you buy your resident state’s municipal bonds, the interest income from these bonds are income-tax-free at both the federal and state level.
To diversify, you can buy other states’ municipal bonds as well. These nonresident state bonds are tax exempt at the federal level but not at the state level.
Every portfolio needs care and maintenance over time, and the best way to make this process more effective and efficient is to use a tool. For example, the iRebal tool we use at Echo Wealth Management assigns each client’s customized portfolio to a model that matches their risk number so that we can be alerted when a particular security’s value has gone out of the specified range.
If you don’t have this type of professional tool, use an Excel worksheet or other tools to monitor this closely. The models must be reviewed periodically to overweight or underweight certain asset classes based on market conditions and your worldview.
Without these cutting-edge tools, it would not be easy to monitor the risks of many accounts effectively and execute trades efficiently.
So as we conclude these five steps, I hope I have helped you understand the importance of forming a solid investment plan and the steps that are necessary to do so. Constructing your investment plan is a large undertaking, similar to being the head coach of a college or professional football team.
You must set your goals and prepare a solid financial plan first. You must figure out your risk tolerance and timeframe, construct your portfolio, implement your investment plan, locate assets, review your unrealized gains, correct your concentrated stock position, and continue to monitor and evaluate your portfolio. Whew, does this sound overwhelming?
I am committed to educating and coaching clients to promote an understanding of the value of having a solid investment plan. Just like in football, it’s important to build a financial dream team, to achieve your goals. Coaches always remind their players, there’s no “I” in team. So don’t feel alone or overwhelmed; I am here to help.
So who is your favorite team? No, it doesn’t have to be a football team, but I just love that analogy.