Philosophy and Values - Investment Management
Solid academic research, along with the collective wisdom and insight of many successful investors, forms the foundation of the investment management perspective at Table Rock Financial Planning. This philosophy of investing influences the advice given to hourly financial planning customers and the portfolios we manage for clients on an on-going basis.
At Table Rock Financial Planning we believe in:
Managing risk and return expectations
- Investing involves risk: Understanding the financial risks you are assuming is critical to creating an investment strategy you can live with. Most people realize that in order to expect higher returns on their investments, they generally need to assume higher risks. Conversely, if a client desires to minimize investment risk, lower investment returns need to be factored into their plan and other decisions (e.g. saving more or lowering expectations of future income) may need to be aligned.
- Realistic return expectations: It is not prudent to blindly assume that markets will always produce investment returns equal to some historical average. Reasonable and conservative future expectations are essential to creating plans with a high potential of achieving goals.
- The risk and return trade-off: A key objective is to balance each client’s:
- Need to take risk—How high of returns do you need to meet your goals?
- Ability to take risk—How much risk is prudent, given your time horizon and resource levels?
- Tolerance for risk—How much downside volatility can you emotionally handle before you are losing sleep and ready to abandon your investment strategy?
Maintaining discipline and perspective
- Investor emotions: Markets go up and down, and investor emotions go with them. Things are generally never as good, or as bad, as they seem at the moment. Although we don’t advocate burying your head in the sand, we encourage tuning out popular media hysteria and maintaining a balanced perspective.
- Adherence to plan: We will encourage you to create and stick to a long term strategy, increasing the odds of you reaching your goals. Changes in strategies should only be initiated when personal circumstances and goals change, or if there is significant new information—not when emotions run high. Bear markets can be an expensive time to change strategies.
- Avoiding the performance gap: It is well documented that the average individual investor achieves much less than the average returns of the markets they invest in. This is primarily due to high costs of investing, trying to time the market, and chasing returns. We want to help investors eliminate this performance gap.
The importance of diversification and asset allocation
- Diversification: Smart investors realize the market is not going to reward you for the extra risk you take when putting “all your eggs in one basket”. To avoid over-concentration in individual stocks, bonds, industry sectors, countries, etc, we believe most people should invest through mutual funds and exchange traded funds (ETFs). If you want to play the market by making individual stock selections, we suggest it with a small, dedicated portion of your assets.
- Focus on asset allocation: At Table Rock, in accordance with Modern Portfolio Theory1, we advocate spreading investments across many different asset classes2, seeking to maximize a client’s expected return for a given, acceptable level of risk. This often means more exposure to small company stocks, foreign companies in the developed and developing world, real estate investment trusts, and different types of bonds than are found in many portfolios. Although this strategy doesn’t eliminate the risk of investing, over time it will smooth out returns and allow you to benefit from the growth in more sectors of the world economy. Asset allocation is arguably your most important investment decision.
- Stocks vs. bonds: How much of your portfolio allocation should be in defensive assets (e.g. bonds and money market) versus how much you allocate to growth assets (e.g. stocks and real estate) is the most critical asset allocation decision. Getting this right is key to designing portfolios with acceptable levels of risk and expected return.
Passive, low cost and value investing
- Index funds: At Table Rock we believe that low cost, passively managed index funds and ETFs are the most effective way to build a portfolio. It is simple, tax efficient, and the best way to ensure that you make your fair share of market returns. When actively managed funds are used, we look for low cost, no load funds that fit your asset allocation strategy.
- Value investing: Although we will allocate investments across all investment styles, we will overweight portfolios to the value side. We believe that value investing will provide superior risk adjusted returns over time.
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