Financial Literacy: Six Principles of Personal Finance | TD Ameritrade

Imagine operating a boat without the basic understanding of nautical rules of the road or even how to operate a boat. Scary thought.

Here’s another scary circumstance – one that is all too real. Many Americans are making financial decisions with minimal financial knowledge of investing, budgeting, and credit. The TIAA Institute conducted a survey on U.S. financial literacy, asking 28 basic questions about retirement saving, debt management, budgeting, and other financial matters. The average respondent answered only about half of the questions correctly.

Another study, conducted by Pew Research, found that one in four Americans say that they won’t be able to pay their bills on time this month.

It has been said that knowledge is power, and if that’s true, then too many Americans lack the power to control their financial futures. Financial success rarely happens by accident; it is typically the outcome of a journey that starts with education.

Talking about money is one of the most important skills to being a fiscally responsible and a financially literate person. However, 44% of Americans surveyed would rather discuss death, religion or politics than talk about personal finance with a loved one, according to CNBC.

Why? Two major reasons are embarrassment and fear of conflict, even though the consequences can be grave: 50% of first marriages end in divorce, and financial conflict is often a key contributor. Additionally, it is considered rude to discuss money and wealth.

The missing component is financial literacy education and training.

Mastering personal finance requires you to look at your financial situation holistically and come up with a plan for how to manage your money. In this TD Ameritrade video, we’ll look at helpful principles for six personal finance topics:

  1. Budgeting – focus on the big ticket items by cutting cost on the expensive costs such as cars and homes
  2. Saving and investing – be specific about your destination and your plan on achieving your goal and reaching your destination
  3. Debt and Credit – avoid high interest debt and loans on items that will quickly lose value
  4. Reduce taxes – find ways to legally pay less taxes on the income you earn,
  5. Avoid insurance for expenses you can pay out of pocket – purpose of insurance is to protect you in unfortunate scenarios.  60% of all bankruptcy is related to medical expenses
  6. Investing for retirement. – don’t just save for retirement, invest for retirement.

Make high impact adjustments to your finances to improve your financial future.


References:

  1. https://www.cnbc.com/2019/04/30/the-us-is-in-a-financial-literacy-crisis-advisors-can-fix-the-problem.html
  2. https://www.tiaainstitute.org/publication/financial-well-being-and-literacy-midst-pandemic
  3. https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/articles/2017/04/06/can-economically-vulnerable-americans-benefit-from-financial-capability-services

Option Investing 101 | Fidelity

From Fidelity Investments

Learn the fundamentals of options trading. This introduction to trading option contracts is all about getting to know the basics of options investing and trading; learning the key terms and concepts essential for a new or novice options trader.

Put/Call Ratio

High put/call (P/C) levels are a sign of fear (bullish from a contrarian view), while low P/C levels are a sign of complacency (bearish from a contrarian view). The trend of P/Cs is more important than absolute levels. When the intermediate- to longer-term trend of P/Cs is lower, it is bullish for stocks. When the trend is higher, it is bearish for stocks from an intermediate-/longer-term basis.

Annual Black Investor Survey by Ariel Investments Charles Schwab

“Black Americans are already behind the eight ball, and it is disheartening to see that at current savings and investing rates, the wealth gap will continue to expand, endangering our futures and leaving our families exposed.” Mellody Hobson, co-CEO & President of Ariel Investments

The annual Black investor survey by Ariel Investments and Charles Schwab was recently released.

This year, the survey revealed that Black Americans continue to have less opportunity to benefit from stock market growth than white Americans at similar income levels, according to Ariel Investments. The data also showed signs of hope, including increased young investor engagement.

For more than 20 years, the Ariel-Schwab Black Investor Survey has compared attitudes and behaviors on saving and investing among Black and white Americans.

This year’s results show the deep-rooted gap in participation between the groups persists. The survey conveyed several important trends:

  • Growing engagement in the stock market by younger Black Americans, with 63% under the age of 40 now participating in the stock market, equal to their white counterparts
  • The closing of this gap among younger investors is being driven by new investors: 3 times as many Black investors as white investors (15% vs. 5%)
  • A wide investing gap exists overall – 55% of Black Americans and 71% of White Americans reporting stock-market investments

It is encouraging to view that younger African Americans are investing in greater numbers. Yet, a significant gap persist in the overall number of who invests by race and ethnicity.

More Black Americans became first-time investors in 2020 than in any other year, according to the results of a new survey by Ariel Investments and Charles Schwab. The rise has primarily been driven by younger investors: 63% of Black Americans under 40 now report participating in the stock market, equal to their white counterparts.

On the whole, however, wide gaps remain, with 55% of Black Americans and 71% of white Americans reporting stock-market investments. “This disparity, compounded over time, means that middle-class Black Americans will have less money saved for retirement and less wealth to pass onto the next generation,” the report’s authors write.

The ongoing pandemic has only exacerbated the imbalance, according to the report. In 2020:

  • More than twice as many Black 401(k) participants (12% vs. 5%) borrowed money from their retirement accounts.
  • Almost twice as many Black Americans (18% vs. 10%) dipped into an emergency fund.
  • Nine percent of Black Americans (vs. 4% of white Americans) say they asked family or friends for financial support.

“Financial literacy is a great equalizer, and a life skill that everyone needs.” Carrie Schwab-Pomerantz, President of Charles Schwab Foundation

Financial literacy and education are desperately needed in the African American community. And, it needs to start at a very early age before the vestiges of debt and negative spending behaviors becomes a difficult to break habit.

Trust Remains an Issue

Trust in the financial services industry continues to affect stock market participation among Black Americans. While similar proportions of Black and white investors believe that financial services institutions are not trustworthy, only 35 percent of African American investors feel they are treated with respect by financial institutions versus 62 percent for white investors. As a result, Black Americans are less likely to work with financial advisors.

Additionally, what works against new African Americans investors is that most wealth and financial advisors will not work with you if you don’t already have large amounts of money you either earned or inherited. This leaves the vast majority of American (Black, White, etc) out of the financial advisory equation.

There will be a conversation among leading financial services experts from Ariel Investments, Charles Schwab, and CNBC discussing the challenges driving the racial wealth opportunity gap. This group will discuss the research findings, broader trends, and how the financial services industry can challenge the status quo.

The The Racial Wealth Opportunity Gap Widened in 2020 conversation will occur on Tuesday, March 2, 2021, 3:00 – 4:00 p.m. EST.


References:

  1. https://www.aboutschwab.com/ariel-schwab-black-investor-survey-2021
  2. https://blackinvestorsurvey.swoogo.com/ariel-schwab/979446?ref=swbh?SM=URO&sf243370044=1

Never invest in something you don’t understand.

Many successful investors follow one extremely important rule of thumb: Never invest in something you don’t understand.

Selecting the right companies to invest is very difficult and the decision shouldn’t be taken lightly. When you invest in the stock market, you will be tempted often to buy companies or products that you don’t truly understand.

Consequently, if you can’t understand the investment and understand how it will help you save for the future, build wealth over the long term or achieve your financial goals, do not buy the asset. You need to resist temptation, and focus on the only question that counts:

“Do I understand the business of this company well enough so that I am reasonably confident that it is going to be a good investment?”.

Warren Buffett famously said he has three boxes for investment ideas: in, out and too hard. If a company’s business or product is too difficult to understand, it’s better to just file it in the “too hard” category and move on to another opportunity.

Investors should always remember that a share of stock represents partial ownership of a company. “Just as you would never purchase a private business from someone else without at least looking at its sales, profits, debt and trends of all three of those things at a bare minimum, you need to do the same thing before purchasing stock in a company,” Cornerstone Wealth chief investment officer Chris Zaccarelli says. “If you are doing anything else, you are just hoping what you bought will go higher – and hope is never a good strategy.”

Be sure to always read an investment asset’s prospectus or disclosure statement carefully. And, if you are still confused, you should think twice about investing.

The bottom line for investors is simple: If you don’t completely understand how an investment works, or creates revenue, earnings and cash flow, then don’t buy it.


References:

  1. http://www.mymoneyworks.de/back-to-basics/dont-buy-what-you-dont-understand/
  2. https://money.usnews.com/investing/articles/2017-05-11/never-invest-in-something-you-dont-understand

Investment Plan

“An idiot with a plan can beat a genius without a plan.” Warren Buffett

Creating budgets and financial milestones are great, but you need an actual investment plan to help you stay on track. It’s one of the most critical steps to meeting your long-term financial goals. According to Warren Buffett, “An idiot with a plan can beat a genius without a plan,” and this is especially true in investing.

Planning helps you focus on long-term goals, not short-term fears and market volatility. If your goal is 20 years away, a loss over one month or year probably isn’t all that important. Focus on your individual goals and time horizon. People who invest more time planning their finances invariably make better decisions, get better results, and achieve financial independence.

It’s also important to know why and for what you are investing in because it will influence how and in what you invest. This is the basis of an investment plan. The best investment plan is one that is tailored to you, and includes an individualized strategy and goals that will set you on the path to success. That means a plan that takes into account your individual goals, situation, and time horizon—and one that’s diversified.

“People who invest more time planning their finances invariably make better decisions, get better results, and achieve financial independence.” Brian Tracy

Diversification doesn’t mean you won’t ever lose money. But owning a mix of investments can help reduce the risk. That way if some investments drop, others may rise, helping you reach your goals. And, you should always manage your risk—by choosing an asset mix that is appropriate for your current circumstances, and creating diversification within that asset mix to improve your risk/return relationship.

Step 1: Evaluate Your Current Financial Standing

The first step in creating your investment plan is to evaluate your current financial standing and determine how much you have to invest.

Step 2: Define What You Want to Accomplish

Your short or long term goals that you want to achieve in your life will impact your investing strategy. Where do you want to be when you retire? Do you want to own a house? Do you want to create passive income? Do you want to create generational wealth for your family?

Defining what you want to accomplish will help you determine how much risk you can take and what type of investments to make that will help you achieve what you want to accomplish in your lifetime.

Step 3: Determine How Much Risk You Can Take

Rule #1 of Investing is to not lose money, but there is always some risk involved when investing in an unpredictable stock market. How much risk can you take based on what you want to accomplish (what we just talked about) and how much time do you have to accomplish it?

If you want to earn money for retirement and retirement is 30 years away, you have a lot of time for your money to grow and recover from economic downturns, so you can afford to be more aggressive. However, if retirement is only a few years away, you will need to make more conservative investments that ensure you will have enough money, but won’t lose it.

Step 4: Decide What Type of Investment to Make

You need to decide what type of investments will help you accomplish what you have set out to accomplish. Consider building a mix of stocks, bonds, and short-term investment. You should learn about the different types of investments that are available before you start investing your money.

Step 5: Establish Your Time Horizon

Time Horizon is the period where one expects to hold an investment for a specific goal. The longer the time horizon, the more aggressive, or riskier portfolio, an investor can build.  Simply put, your investment time horizon is the length of time you need your portfolio to work for you.

Planning and goals are really just the means to the end. The end being the tangible things (retirement security, house, generational wealth, etc.) you set out to accomplish. You should make a promise to yourself that you will accomplish that thing and make a plan to go after it.

And monitor your investments per you plan and progress toward your goals on a set, not-too-frequent schedule—perhaps quarterly or twice a year, or if your goals or circumstances change.

By developing and sticking to an investment plan that’s squarely focused on achieving your individual goals is essential in successful investing.

Regardless of your plan, it is critically important to recognize that investing involves the risk of loss. Having a plan that aligns with your objectives and risk tolerance, educating yourself on investing and doing your research to know the risks associated with investing are all vitally important.

Bottom line is that financial plans don’t fail people. Instead, people fail to plan.

The only way to find financial security is to draw yourself a map. Folks who have specific financial plans that detail what they want save more than people who don’t…Why? Because human beings are easily distracted (especially by shiny new things). So unless you have a road map that tells you where you’re going, it is very, very hard to get there. It’s not that the map will never change.  Revising your specific plans for the future is far better than not having any plans at all.


References:

  1. https://www.ruleoneinvesting.com/blog/how-to-invest/investment-planning/?utm_medium=cpc&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=investing-strategies&utm_content=interest&utm_term=cold&dclid=CID8g7PmzO4CFTEYwQod5T0EGw
  2. https://www.fidelity.com/viewpoints/personal-finance/financial-improvement?ccsource=email_weekly
  3. https://www.fidelity.com/viewpoints/active-investor/trading-guide-managing-investment-risks-and-opportunities?ccsource=email_weekly

Just Buy Low Cost Index Funds

“The less you spend on investing, the more you get to keep.”. Rick Ferri

When investors who don’t manage their costs, they pay a significant price for their inaction and inexperience. As John Bogle has famously said, “In investing, you get what you don’t pay for.” The primary issue is that investment product providers, especially annuities and actively managed funds, and financial intermediaries are selling commission-based products that take advantage of unsophisticated investors by marketing high-fee, high-commission funds that earn low returns. 

Cost Matters Hypothesis.

It costs money to try to beat the market, according to Bogle, and you pay whether or not the manager succeeds. When a group of financial people try to out perform the market, some will win and be successful, some will lose, but collectively they will get the market’s return—before fees. After fees, they will get much less. Bogle once calculated that “active stock investors lose close to 3% a year in fees, trading costs and taxes.”

“Costs matter. They matter more than past performance.” John Bogle

Occasionally, you might get lucky for a year or five or ten. Eventually, though, your luck will run out. With each passing year it becomes more likely that you will be overtaken by the law of averages.

Buffet advice to investors

Billionaire investor Warren Buffett recommends that most investors should buy low-cost index funds. In his sage opinion, buying index funds would go a long way toward solving this serious problem of overpaying for investments. Buffett’s recommends inexperienced investors and investors without time or inclination to conduct research buy index funds. His view is that index funds, such as those that mimic the S&P 500 benchmark, are a smart investment that almost anyone can follow.

“Costs really matter in investments,” Buffett says in a CNBC interview. “If returns are going to be 7 or 8 percent and you’re paying 1 percent for fees, that makes an enormous difference in how much money you’re going to have in retirement.”

The appeal of index investments is their low cost compared to most actively managed mutual funds and ETFs. With active funds and ETFs, according to Fidelity Investment, a manager attempts to deliver performance that outpaces a chosen index, often referred to as a benchmark. Passive ETFs and mutual funds, on the other hand, try to match the performance of a benchmark.

Benchmarks may include familiar indexes such as the S&P 500, as well as custom benchmarks created by a fund’s managers. Passive investments may not offer the potential to outperform an index, but they typically offer lower costs than active funds managed against a similar index or benchmark.

When evaluating cost, most investors focus on the expense ratio—the annual percentage of assets that mutual funds and ETFs charge investors to cover services such as investment management, recordkeeping, compliance, and shareholder services. In general, these costs are much lower for passive strategies than for active ones. And, even this expense that can vary dramatically even among seemingly similar passive index funds and ETFs.

Labor Secretary Thomas Perez said during a Senate panel meeting: “The problem with our [financial] system in the U.S. is it incentivizes complexity when simplicity is all too frequently what’s called for. … It incentivizes complexity because complexity generates more fees.”

The solution and best defense against those who prey on investor ignorance, according to Rick Ferri, is investor education and requiring financial literacy in our schools and colleges. Perhaps we need to scream continuously, “Just buy low-cost index funds!” every time an investor is pitched a hyped-up mutual fund advertisement or a high-cost fund.

Investing in index mutual funds and ETFs can be an outstanding low-cost strategy. And, like any other investment strategy, investing in index funds requires that you understand what you are investing in. You need to ensure that you are investing in a low-cost product that tracks a benchmark that fits with your investing strategy.


References:

  1. https://rickferri.com/forewarned-is-forearmed-on-investment-expenses/
  2. https://www.cnbc.com/2018/01/03/why-warren-buffett-says-index-funds-are-the-best-investment.html
  3. https://www.fidelity.com/viewpoints/investing-ideas/how-to-shop-smart
  4. http://johncbogle.com/wordpress/

Financial Literacy: Saving for Retirement

“We teach our kids everything in high school: sex education, geography, math, reading, etc. We do not teach them anything about credit cards, or debt, or investing. Then we ask ourselves why we end up in a situation as we are today, which has been highlighted by the pandemic a bit: There’s 100 million people in America that have set nothing aside for their retirement.” Kevin O’Leary

The retirement crisis in America is an ongoing worry for most Americans. As companies have shifted away from offering traditional (defined) pension plans to employees, much of the responsibility in planning for financial life after work now relies heavily on individuals. Unfortunately, the crisis is mostly due to a lack of financial literacy and consumer spending on new shiny things, and as a result, most are struggling to keep up.

A March 2019 Bankrate survey found that more than 1 in 5 working Americans aren’t saving any money for retirement, emergencies or other financial goals. Major barriers as to why respondents said they weren’t saving included not making enough money, financially helping adult children, and large credit card and other personal debt payments.

Financial assistance to adult children

Parents are helping their adult children financially and the majority of those parents say that financially supporting their adult children is hurting their savings for retirement and their financial futures, according to Bankrate. In total, 50 percent of respondents to a Bankrate survey say they have sacrificed or are sacrificing their own retirement savings in order to help their adult children financially.

Living and remaining in the workforce longer

American baby boomers are healthier and are living longer; as a result, they’ll need a bigger nest egg to fund their retirements, especially since the number of employers providing pensions has been steadily shrinking. As some reach retirement age and realize they don’t have enough saved, it’s keeping them in the workforce longer. Workers older than 55 years young filled almost half of all new jobs in 2018 even though they make up less than a quarter of the nation’s labor force, according to an analysis of Labor Department data by The Liscio Report.

“Many seniors are having a hard time making ends meet and find they have to work when they had not planned to.” Dean Baker, cofounder of the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

“Most Americans haven’t made saving [for retirement] a priority”, says Nick Holeman, CFP at Betterment. “Most people don’t like to admit that, but we live in a consumer culture and it can be difficult to turn down the new shiny gadgets.” Saving for retirement is your largest and most important financial goal. Even if it feels very far away, it’s important to start saving early.

Holeman recommends that Americans wanting to retire to take three steps:

  1. Create financial goals and a financial plan. At a minimum, you should have these two financial goals: Create an emergency fund and save for retirement. SoFi calls these “bookend goals”—your primary short-term and primary long-term goal. Your financial plan should consist of small, achievable goals; they’ll help you see your finish line and empower you to stay on track. Start by determining how much you need to retire comfortably.
  2. Come up with a strategy to execute. Selecting an investment strategy depends on your financial goal amount (how much you want to save each month or year) and the time horizon (when you’d like to use that money). Decide how you plan to save that amount.
  3. Get creative. For those struggling to save, consider retiring later or working part-time during retirement. Holeman says there are tons of other options out there, which he refers to as “levers,” like moving to a low-cost state or downsizing your home. Engaging them can help get your retirement savings back on track.

Investing

It has been regularly reported that billionaire investor Warren Buffett made 99% of his current wealth after his 50th birthday.  At an age when most Americans give up hope achieving financial independence, Buffett was just getting started on the capital assets he controls today.  Building wealth could mean financial peace, taking a spur-of-the-moment international travel.

Many older Americans are advised to sell or significantly reduce their stock holdings and frankly, this advice is antiquated, shortsighted and wrong.  Buffett built his incredible level of wealth by continuing to buy stocks despite his advanced age.


References:

  1. https://www.bankrate.com/personal-finance/financial-independence-survey-april-2019/
  2. https://www.bankrate.com/retirement/baby-boomers-unable-to-retire-gig-economy/
  3. https://www.usatoday.com/story/life/allthemoms/2019/04/24/adult-children-robbing-parents-retirement-savings-study-finds/3559812002/
  4. https://d32ijn7u0aqfv4.cloudfront.net/wp/wp-content/uploads/20170718165706/Guide-to-Investing-Intelligently_V5-1.pdf

Habits for a more Abundant Life

Two most important:

  • Read at least thirty minutes everyday
  • Know and pursue a goal your passionate about

Intelligence, talent and charm are great, but more often than not these aren’t what separate the wealthiest among us from the poorest.

Instead, the differences are in our daily habits.

Do you realize that these subconscious, second-nature activities make up 40 percent of our waking hours? That means that two out of every five minutes, all day and every day, we operate on autopilot.

It’s true: Habits are neural pathways stored in the basal ganglia, a golf ball-size mass of tissue right in the center of our brains, in the limbic system.

This neural fast lane is meant to save the brain energy: When a habit is formed and stored in this region, the parts of the brain involved in deeper decision-making cease to fully participate in the activity. However, we all know there are good habits and bad habits.

5 habits

We know that habits can either help or hurt your success in life. Bad habits can fester and grow into a lifestyle that takes you away from the things you want to do—and good habits can help you create a life that’s full of action and accomplishment.

If you were to look at someone you respect, someone who’s successful, you would see that they spend each day doing the things that help them accomplish their biggest goals. This isn’t to say they’re perfect—because no one is—but despite the things that are not perfect in their lives, they continue to make moves that have a positive impact. And it starts with their daily habits.

Now, while we can all study successful habits, it’s meaningless if we don’t implement that knowledge. So, according to Kimanzi Constable, here are five daily habits you can adopt to create the life you truly want to live:

1. Plan out your day the night before.

It’s easy to get off track when you don’t have a plan. Without planning what your day will look like, you wake up not knowing what you want to do or accomplish. Spend a little time the night before giving yourself clear goals for the next day. Life rarely works out as planned, but with a plan, you can adjust without losing momentum.

2. Read books and novels to get inspired.

Reading is an essential element in success—books contain so much knowledge. Forming a daily reading habit will expand your knowledge, allow you to learn more about your profession and help you on your journey to success.

3. Make your health and fitness a priority.

What you eat and how much you exercise affects every area of your life. Successful people use their exercise as a time to reset and reinvigorate. And they make smart food choices that will give them the energy they need to accomplish everything on their daily to-do list.

4. Don’t get distracted by what other people are doing.

Other people’s journeys to success can be inspiring; you can learn so much—about their mistakes, their victories, what to do, what not to do. But if you start comparing your progress to theirs, instead of using their stories as inspiration, you can lose focus and fail to keep your eyes on your own mountain top. Realize your journey is unique and can’t be compared. So don’t get stuck in the comparison trap—stay focused on your why.

5. Live each day as if it were the last.

Life is busy, it’s chaotic, and so you tend to want to focus on the future—we all do it, worry about what’s next. But while planning is important, so is living—being fully present.

Life is short, and there’s no guarantee as to when it will end. Successful people live each day as if it were their last and make the most out of each moment—and so should you.

When you look at a big goal, it’s common to get frustrated at the enormity of what you’re trying to accomplish. If you wake up each day determined to spend it forming good habits, you give yourself a better chance at success. So use these five habits as a starting place to build whatever a successful life means to you.


Read more:

  1. https://www.success.com/16-rich-habits/
  2. https://www.moneycrashers.com/productive-habits-wealthy-successful-people/

Dividends are Important in Retirement

“Get paid to wait” Kevin O’Leary

Noted Shark Tank investor, Kevin O’Leary aka “Mr. Wonderful”, has one simple rule when it comes to investing in a stock. If it doesn’t pay a dividend, he does not consider the stock. His investment mantra is “get paid to wait”.

“My whole investment strategy is built around cash flow”, O’Leary said. “I have a little Charlie Munger on my shoulder every day when I look at a deal, and he’s just saying two words: ‘cash flow, cash flow.'”

Know your cash flow.

How much do you make after taxes? How much do you spend. Investors in retirement must figure out how to generate cash flow without a job from multiple income streams to meet essential living expenses and spending while also making sure they don’t outlive their income stream.

Receiving regular dividends, or “getting paid to wait” reduces an investor’s dependence on the market’s volatility and the roller coaster like price swings by stocks to make ends meet.

Essentially, dividends could become investors “cash flow” in retirement. Naturally, then, the best retirement stocks to buy in 2021 (or any other year) to accomplish those objectives are ones that pay dividends.

Regular dividends lessen an investor’s dependence on the market’s fickle price swings because it reduces or eliminates the need to sell shares to generate income. Regardless of whether the market rises or falls in 2021, a portfolio of high-quality companies can provide you with predictable, growing dividend income.

And in today’s low-interest-rate environment, dividend stocks can generate much higher income than many fixed-income instruments. Better still, many dividend-paying stocks grow their payouts, which preserves those dividends’ purchasing power. And dividend stocks, like other equities, also provide meaningful long-term price appreciation potential.

Whether or not the market rises or falls, a portfolio of quality businesses delivering predictable, growing dividend income is always preferred.

Dividend stocks, like other equities, can provide long-term price appreciation. Dividends are the periodic payouts investors can earn by investing. And because many companies pay a dividend — more than 80% of the S&P 500 stocks currently pay dividends, according to data from FactSet — investors can actually earn money even when the market is down.

Research firm Simply Safe Dividends published an in-depth guide about living on dividends in retirement here. However, a key component to this strategy is finding the best retirement stocks that can deliver safe dividends and grow in value over time.

What are Dividend Stocks

When investors buy stocks, they can make money two different ways. The first is by selling their shares for a price that’s higher than their original cost. The second is by collecting dividends. Dividend stocks are companies that pay shareholders a portion of earnings, as dividend, on a regular basis. Not all stocks pay dividends, but those that do offer shareholders a steady stream of income.

These payments are funded by profits and cash flow that a company generates but doesn’t need to retain to reinvest in the business. Shareholders can receive dividends as cash or additional shares of stock. As an investment category, dividend stocks also have an impressive track record of helping people build wealth over the long term.

To live on dividends in retirement, a key component to this strategy is finding the best retirement stocks that can deliver safe dividends and grow in value over time. Look for companies with a history of paying and increasing dividends, as well as sufficient earnings and cash flow from current operations.

Dividend Aristocrats

Dividend Aristocrats are a select group of S&P 500 Index stocks with a history of 25+ years of consecutive dividend increases. These businesses have both the desire and ability to pay shareholders rising dividends year-after-year. They are considered the ‘best of the best’ dividend growth stocks.

The Dividend Aristocrats have a long history of outperforming the market. The requirements to be a Dividend Aristocrat are that they’re in the S&P 500, have 25+ consecutive years of dividend increase, and must meet certain minimum market cap and liquidity requirements.

Dividend Yield

Dividend yield refers to a stock’s annual dividend payments to shareholders expressed as a percentage of the stock’s current market price. A stock’s dividend yield can and frequently does change over time, either in response to market fluctuations or as a result of dividend increases or decreases by the issuing company. And, it’s important to keep in mind that a high dividend yield alone doesn’t make a stock a great investment.

Dividend amounts and yield might seem small in mid-2019. The average dividend payment for U.S. stocks was 1.87% of your investment, according to Siblis Research. Regardless the size of the ratio, they can drastically impact an investor’s long-term investment performance and retirement income.

GE’s Dividend Story

General Electric (GE) has been one of America’s most widely held stocks, and countless retirees relied on the dividend payments. But, the company was under enormous balance sheet and cash flow pressure, and it became necessary to cut the dividend in half. By cutting, GE saved significant cash flow making it one of the largest dividend cuts in the history of the S&P 500 and the biggest for GE since 2009, according to S&P Dow Jones Indices.

But dividend cuts had been rare at the time since many companies were increasing them because the U.S. economy was healthy and the stock market was booming. GE’s dividend had been reliably paid for multiple decades.

Prior to GE Board’s decision to cut its dividend, GE was having problems and could not earn enough money to cover its dividend payments. Free cash flow, which measures how much cash is being generated after investing in the business, had deteriorated for six straight years.

Dividends: Cash Flow is King during Retirement

The distinction between income and cash flow is important during retirement. Generating income in retirement is focused on finding investments that pay a high yield, which necessarily means taking on more risk. Focusing instead on cash flow allows investors to take a broader perspective, assessing various aspects of their finances to determine how to creatively produce the money required for expenses. Cash flow strategies may allow retirees to reach their financial goals while not necessarily taking on a higher level of risk.

A primary financial goal in retirement is to guarantee a minimum daily standard of living so you don’t outlive your nest egg and can sleep well at night.  Some folks are able to meet that minimum income amount they need through some combination of pension income, Social Security payments, and guaranteed interest from certificates of deposit. 

 “I have found that retirement is all about cash flow, not net worth, especially after the real estate crash. I have met people who have a net worth of $2 million, which looks great on paper, but when it comes to retirement income, they are just barely squeaking by on their Social Security and a small pension. It’s great that you are worth $2 million, but ultimately, it’s your cash flow that will determine your quality of life in retirement, not your net worth.” Jason R. Parker, Sound Retirement Planning: A Retirement Plan Designed to Achieve Clarity, Confidence & Freedom

When picking dividend stocks, chasing yield can cause issues where the price has declined, which may be an opportunity for capital appreciation, but may create greater risk for income seekers since the stock may be cheap for a legitimate idiosyncratic reason.

It’s important for investors to find a company they feel comfortable with, and whose product line they understand. Next, they can look at the company’s ability to generate sufficient earnings and cash flow to pay their annual dividends, operate their business, and have enough left over to grow, remembering that not all quarters must indicate growth.

An investor’s particular situation must be considered such as their required income needs during retirement, weighed against their desire for capital growth— typically, lower-growth segments, such as utilities, pay more yield. Investors who allocate upwards of 80-100% of their portfolio to dividend-paying stocks to generate more income and achieve stronger long-term capital appreciation potential and income growth, are incurring greater risks.

Additionally, their specific risk/reward trade-off (and there is risk in all stocks), keeping in mind their ability to ride out a downturn without having to sell the stock on the way down.


References:

  1. https://markets.businessinsider.com/news/stocks/shark-tank-star-kevin-oleary-investing-yahoo-short-retail-pandemic-2021-1-1029932948
  2. https://www.kiplinger.com/investing/stocks/dividend-stocks/602016/21-best-retirement-stocks-income-rich-2021
  3. https://www.simplysafedividends.com/intelligent-income/posts/1-living-off-dividends-in-retirement
  4. https://www.forbes.com/sites/jonathanshenkman/2020/10/21/7-strategies-to-generate-sufficient-cash-flow-in-retirement/?sh=2fe4062b2ac4#click=https://t.co/qv3DensgA1
  5. https://www.spindices.com/documents/education/indexology-december-2017-can-dividends-yield-a-better-retirement.pdf?force_download=true
  6. https://www.fool.com/knowledge-center/dividend.aspx
  7. https://www.fool.com/investing/your-definitive-dividend-investing-guide.aspx

Purpose Driven Saving, Investing and Accumulating Wealth

Investing with a Purpose – “Start with the Why” regarding saving, investing and accumulating wealth.  It’s about your values and life goals.  It’s about keeping your eyes on the prize and on the why you’re saving, investing and accumulating wealth.

There is an underlying reason why you invest your hard-earned money and it’s not just to earn more money.  While that may be the ultimate outcome, the “Why” or “Purpose” of investing is something completely different.  Simply put, you invest to achieve your financial goals in life. These goals are different for every person.  Maybe it’s retirement, a child’s college education, buying a beach house, or planning for the next generation. We all have our own goals, whatever they may be.  It’s your mission to plan out a clear path to achieve those goals. This is what is considered Investing with Purpose.

Purpose-driven investing thrives by instilling a sense of purpose into any investment.  People seek to achieve real-life objectives such as saving for your kid’s college or your retirement.

A firm purpose behind your saving for the future, investing for the long term and accumulating wealth will ensure that you are making the right money management decisions today to achieve long term financial success. Your risk will be optimized when your purpose for saving, investing and accumulating wealth matches your goals and timeline.

People Invest to Achieve Personal Financial Goals

“An investor without investment goals, objectives and a plan is like a traveler without a destination.” Anonymous

Understanding your values and what you want to accomplish in life is essential to “Purpose Driven” saving, Investing and accumulating wealth.  Saving, investing and accumulating wealth are deeply personal undertakings, which is why you must always start with a discussion about what’s really important to you. This helps us shape your saving, investing and accumulating wealth strategy around three key dimensions of your financial life: liquidity, longevity and legacy.

When people are asked why they invest, their answers typically are focused on family and future goals in life—buying a house, saving for emergencies, retirement, taking care of loved ones. Those are the big picture answers. But as in life, it’s often as much about the journey as the destination. Investors have specific expectations about the investment experience, as well as the outcomes.

For example, some investors want long-term growth to build their retirement nest egg, but they don’t want to feel the volatility that can occur in the broader stock market. Others want regular income distributions after they reach retirement. Still others want investments that can help them manage through changes in the economic environment, or more personal economic challenges.

Create the future you want for yourself and your loved ones. New to investing or an experienced trader. To be great and successful at any endeavor, you’ve got to sacrifice and put in the work, because anything easy is just average. To become great you have to make big sacrifices and work really hard — much above average.

Wise spending is a subset of wise investing. And, it’s never too late to start investing.

When you invest in assets over the long term, you are buying a day in the present that you don’t have to work several days in the future.

I like this quote since it succinctly defines one of the primary reason for investing … “putting away money today so sometime in the future, you do not have to work to live”. And the seeds you sow today, will reap the financial harvest to live a life in retirement with dignity and financial security.

Your actions dictate the consequences. Reaps what they sow, they suffer or benefit as a result of their own actions.

Investments are the tools we use to make your financial plan successful.  With your plan as the guide, your stock portfolio should be designed around your personal situation, needs, and goals.