I’ve been giving talks and lectures for many, many years. Without a doubt, the question I’ve been asked the most is, “what is the best investment?”
This is a question that will have an answer depending on the person being asked. If you are to ask a real estate agent, he will say real estate; a stock broker will say blue chip stocks; a banker will offer the latest bank products like a time deposit or a special savings account; a mutual fund representative will say mutual funds; an insurance agent would probably quote a variable life insurance—get the drift?
However, my answer has always been consistent. The best investment for me? Well, I can’t really give an answer.
I must admit that many people give me a dumb-founded look whenever I answer them, “I don’t know; it depends.” For someone who claims to be a personal finance guy who has been in the financial services industry for over three decades and a trainer in financial planning, I am pretty clueless. I simply can’t tell anyone what the best investment is because there’s no such thing. My answer will always be, “It depends!”
I have a simple four-rule guide that I recommend to people whenever they are perplexed as to where they want to bring their hard-earned money.
1) Investment objective: What is the investment for in the first place? Where do you plan to use it? Is it for retirement, education, purchase of a house? Or is it just to park your money while you are scouting for other investments?
2) Time frame: When do you intend to use the money you are investing? Is it short (less than a year), medium- (up to seven years) or long-term (more than seven years)? It is unwise to put money in long-term investments when you will need your money in the short term; you might end up realizing capital reduction or you may be levied with steep penalties should you liquidate your investment. It is likewise unwise to invest in short-term instruments when the purpose of investment is for the long term like education or retirement; you will not realize a good appreciation of your investments as short-term instruments generally give lower yields. In other words, your investment would be drastically reduced by inflation and find yourself with not much funds when you need it the most.
3) Risk tolerance: Investors are usually conservative, moderate or aggressive. Determine your risk tolerance first. Are liquidity and capital preservation absolute must for you? Or are you willing to risk some potential capital loss in favor of potential capital hike? Remember the golden rule in investing: The higher the yield, the higher the risks and vice versa.
4) Acumen: There are simple products and there are complicated products. If you are investing in the stock market and you are not familiar with some form of fundamentals, you might regret ever putting money there. If you can’t distinguish a structured note from a time deposit or a stock from a cryptocurrency, you might want to reconsider your decision. I have a simple advice with regard to this—never ever invest in something you don’t understand.
Before parting with your money, I highly recommend that you go through the four-step rule first.
“But divide your investments among many places, for you do not know what risks might lie ahead.” Ecclesiastes
Source: www.business.inquirer.net
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