The Smart Asset

How to Start an Investment Portfolio

Investments hold significant potential for aiding you in reaching your financial objectives. However, the process of constructing an investment portfolio can be daunting.

Steps to building a portfolio

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Match with an advisor

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Identify your goals

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Weigh your comfort with risk

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Understand your time horizon

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Agree on an optimal portfolio mix

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Ensure proper diversification

Start building your investment portfolio today

Ensuring your investment portfolio aligns perfectly with your financial objectives is simplified when you team up with the right financial advisor. A skilled advisor will guide you in constructing an investment portfolio that harmonizes with your current and future financial goals. Collaboratively, you and your advisor can establish clear and effective investment portfolio objectives.

When it comes to crafting an investment portfolio, it all begins with your unique aspirations. Before embarking on the investment journey, it’s crucial to reflect on the ‘why’ behind your investment decisions, the motivations driving them, and the values that underpin your choices. What holds the utmost importance in your financial world? Your investment portfolio should revolve around an objective that serves as the compass guiding you toward your distinct financial goals. Ultimately, the greatest risk you face isn’t in the stock market; it’s falling short of your long-term objectives.

Chances are, you have multiple goals, each with its own purpose and timeline. Your financial advisor plays a pivotal role in helping you strike a balance and prioritize your multifaceted aspirations. Together, you can formulate a comprehensive financial strategy that seamlessly integrates your investment objectives. This involves considering essential factors such as the vision you have for your retirement, your intentions regarding contributing to a child’s or grandchild’s education, potential significant purchases like a home or car, aspirations for starting a business, and your desire to leave a lasting financial legacy for your children or heirs.

Evaluating your comfort level with risk holds paramount importance, as it can significantly impact your ability to achieve long-term financial goals, especially when facing inevitable short-term market downturns. Consistently gauging and reassessing your risk tolerance can serve as a safeguard against emotional investing errors, such as chasing performance. Growth-oriented investments like stocks or stock mutual funds often come with higher market volatility compared to income-focused investments such as bonds or bond mutual funds.

However, they also offer the potential for greater returns. Achieving the right balance through diversified, quality, long-term investments can align your portfolio’s risk with your comfort level, ensuring you stay committed to your investment strategy. Your financial advisor typically provides a questionnaire to help assess your reactions to risk in various scenarios. If you’re building an investment portfolio with a partner or spouse, it’s crucial to engage in a meaningful discussion about your risk preferences.

It’s essential to pinpoint the timeframe for when you’ll require your funds, and this directly correlates with your financial objectives. Each financial goal you have is likely to possess a distinct time horizon. For instance, if you’re saving for retirement, it’s vital to consider when you aim to retire. Alternatively, if you’re focused on saving for your children’s college education, your time horizon will be linked to when your children will enter college and the number of years you intend to support their education.

In general, the longer your investment horizon, the more room you have to potentially offset market fluctuations, which may enable you to explore investments with greater return potential. As your time horizon shortens, we recommend transitioning toward more conservative investments that tend to exhibit smaller price fluctuations.

Every investment you select comes with its own set of risk and return expectations. When constructing an investment portfolio, the composition plays a pivotal role in determining these factors. A portfolio predominantly composed of fixed-income investments tends to carry lower risk and, consequently, lower return expectations. Conversely, a portfolio with a stronger emphasis on equities is associated with higher risk and, potentially, higher return expectations.

Effective investing is all about striking the right balance. For your portfolio, we recommend tailoring the mix between equity and fixed-income investments to suit your individual circumstances. This begins by assessing your comfort level with risk, your investment time horizon, and your financial objectives. Additionally, consider other pertinent factors like your retirement income needs, existing savings, and whether you have a desire to leave a financial legacy. Evaluating these aspects can guide you in determining the most suitable allocation between stocks and bonds.

Once you’ve settled on the optimal combination of equity and fixed-income investments that suits your unique circumstances, we advise constructing a diversified portfolio spanning various asset classes. Asset classes encompass groups of investments that exhibit similar risk and return characteristics. Given that different asset classes demonstrate distinct performance trends over time, and it’s challenging to predict which one may outperform in a given year, a diversified portfolio becomes a vital tool for risk management, establishing a robust foundation.

Our long-term strategic asset allocation guidance encapsulates our perspective on balanced diversification within the fixed-income and equity segments of a well-diversified portfolio, predicated on our economic and market outlook for the next 30 years. The recommended allocation to each asset class hinges on the blend of equity and fixed-income investments you’ve chosen to align with your situation, as defined by our portfolio objectives.

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