admin No Comments

5 rules to follow when kickstarting your investments

POST BY AMIT KUMAR

“Do not go where the path may lead, go instead where there is no path and leave a trail.”
– Ralph Waldo Emerson

Any investment decision should be akin to taking a decision when running a business. And much like an entrepreneur, one should start one’s investment journey on a sound foundation. The list below gives the necessary framework to kick-start your investment journey

Rule #1: For a successful investment, beat inflation

‘Money saved is money earned’ is just a myth. In today’s world, money only has value if it earns over and above inflation. For a majority of investors, the ideal way is to assess future expenses by projecting inflation over a longer period and according to the nature of the spend; for instance –  education inflation at 8-10%, household expenses at 5-6% and so on. This way the risk of being under-invested is mitigated to an extent.

Rule #2: Invest in products with higher returns than a fixed deposit

A majority of investors that I meet restrict their investments in capital markets to equities and invest in fixed deposit when it comes to debt. What is interesting to note is that the inflation and tax adjusted return from a fixed deposit barely matches the inflation rate. You can read more about this in my article that highlights the returns from a Fixed Deposit over a 35 year period.

As an investor, you have to remember that debt as a category has multiple options which give better tax-adjusted return. For instance, for the last 35 years, Gold has delivered a return of 8.52% in absolute terms, while Fixed Deposit has delivered a return of 8.91% and Equities (BSE Sensex) has delivered 15.56%.  While the average inflation during this period was 7.79%. So net of tax, a Fixed Deposit gives return in the range of 5-7% depending upon the tax bracket.  

Rule #3: Never mix your investments with insurance, keep them separate

An investment product along with insurance is a deadly cocktail which most of the investors fail to notice till it’s too late. Traditionally insurance products are packaged the way most Bollywood movies are packaged, that is as a combination of a bit of everything, ‘a bit’ being the operative phrase. The return on such plans is not more than 5-7% and at times they don’t even provide sufficient cover. And for these reasons, it is best to consider pure term insurance to safeguard yourself and your family against risks and keep your investments separate.

Rule #4: Follow goal-based investing

More often than not, I meet investors who arbitrarily invest a certain amount in a Systematic Investment Plan and consider it sufficient to take a term cover based on the current financial condition. What they completely disregard are their future liabilities and expenses, while there is no risk bigger than being under-insured. After all the onus of protecting one’s family goes beyond one’s lifetime.

The ideal approach is to follow our five steps to financial success wherein we help you assess your goals, calculate your net worth, then check the gap between the two and implement a suitable plan and regularly review it. You can also read about the approach here.

Rule #5: Be a disciplined investor

One of the simplest yet not often appreciated aspect of investing is the discipline required towards achieving one’s’ goals.  Quite often the biggest enemy of an investor is the investor himself.  Saving, investing and growing your wealth requires you to have a disciplined approach and stay the course as there are often too many distractions and much short-term noise along the way.  It is when you stick it out for the term of the investment that you enjoy the benefits of the power of compounding.

One word of advice as a parting note – superior internet speeds and user-friendly transaction technologies have ushered in a new era of investments via ‘click and transact’. However, this could be a bane as the tendency to keep logging in to check your portfolio and make changes is very high. Ideally, you should use such technology platforms for their ease and convenience but ensure you don’t act out of impulse against your investment goals.

 

admin 3 Comments

5 steps to financial success & planning a birthday party

The phrase ‘financial success’ or for that matter any phrase with ‘financial’ as prefix gives an impression of being highly complex. Most people consider it will involve a lot of calculating and analysis and get put off by the very thought.

But look closely and all that poor word means is ‘to do with finances’; in other words, to do with money, in this case, your money. Something you use every day from the time you pull into a petrol pump before your morning ride to work to the time you use your credit card to pay for dinner.

Add ‘success’ in this mix and all the phrase really means is how to win with your money. Now how can that be such a bad thing?

Moving on to the 5 steps, I could do a similar deconstruction of Goal Assessment, Networth Assessment, Need Gap Analysis, Planning & Implementation, and Review. But instead, let’s do something more fun. Let’s plan my niece’s 5th birthday party which falls in a year.

So let’s start by penning down some specifics – how many people are to be invited, what kind of food will be served, what kind of venue do I want and how much will all of this cost me in a year. How these details will help is that they will ensure I can put together the best surprise party for my niece. You do the same thing for your life plans with a financial planner, and it’s called Goal Assessment.

Next, comes figuring out what all I have around the house to plan my party. So I go around and look through last year’s supplies and find that I have some 50 party hats and 25 party favours. I also have a holiday home not far from the city which can be my venue. In the financial world when you make a comprehensive list of everything you own it’s called Assessing your Networth.

Next, comes a fun step, I take my two lists of everything I want to get done for this party and everything I have in terms of resources for it, and I check where I’m falling short. I have 80 guests and 50 party hats for instance; so I need to provision for 30 more. I also need 55 party favours, a catering service, princess theme decor and cake. All this put together will cost Rs. 35,000 in about a year but my brother only has Rs. 30,000 to spend, so I am looking at a shortfall of Rs. 5000. My financial planner calls this step the Need Gap Analysis.

Now to plan for my shortfall, I call up my friend and financial planner and tell him to invest this money for me in such a way that I will have Rs. 35,000 in one year. This he calls Financial Planning and Investment.

In one year, I get Rs. 35,000 and am able to plan a beautiful surprise party for my niece. My financial planner is also invited and over cake and coffee, we discuss the next big surprise party for her 10th birthday, and he suggests a plan for it. In other words, he does a Review, and we start over right from Step 1. Now that wasn’t so complicated, was it? In fact only logical.

And while I took a fairly short term goal as an example and one that doesn’t cost too much; The principle pretty much remains the same – not matter how large your goals or how varied. If the idea of putting your life out on the table still worries you, start simple – not with a birthday party but maybe an expensive vacation or the house of your dreams. Sit with your financial planner and do the same exercise for yourself and if at any point you start getting bogged down by obscure financial terms think of your life as one big party and then get party planning.

Read more about starting your financial planning journey here.