FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 1 Financial planning Financial planning (see chapter 21 Jones posted, plus Allen family and Mason family cases, all posted online)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 13: Investment Fundamentals and Portfolio Management
Advertisements

Vicentiu Covrig 1 Managing Your Financial Assets Managing Your Financial Assets (see chapter 21, plus Allen family and Mason family cases)
Investment Basics A Guide to Your Investment Options Brian Doughney, CFP® Wealth Management Senior Manager.
Chapter 1 Managing Investment Portfolios.  integrated set of steps undertaken in a consistent manner to create and maintain an appropriate portfolio.
Michipicoten Settlement Trust Trustee Investing September 21, 2012 Heather Richardson, Executive Trust Officer.
Essentials of Investments © 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Fourth Edition Irwin / McGraw-Hill Bodie Kane Marcus 1 Chapters 4.
Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management Eighth Edition by Frank K
Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management Eighth Edition by Frank K
Asset Allocation Decision
FIN Professor Dow.  Basic Investing Principles:  Be diversified.  Hold a portfolio with the appropriate level of risk.  Asset allocation determines.
FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 1 Financial planning Financial planning (see the Asset Allocation reading on the web, plus Allen family case on the web)
INVESTMENT POLICY STATEMENTS AND ASSET ALLOCATION ISSUES
The Portfolio Management Process (From Ch. 2)
Contemporary Investments: Chapter 20 Chapter 20 BUILDING AND MANAGING AN INVESTMENTPORTFOLIO What is the process of building and managing an investment.
The Asset Allocation Decision
Lecture Presentation Software to accompany Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management Seventh Edition by Frank K. Reilly & Keith C. Brown Chapter 2.
2 Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management First Canadian Edition By Reilly, Brown, Hedges, Chang.
FIN352 Vicentiu Covrig 1 The Returns and Risks From Investing (chapter 6 Jones )
Copyright ©2004 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 18 Asset Allocation.
FIN352 Vicentiu Covrig 1 Common Stocks: Analysis and Strategy (chapter 11)
Investments Vicentiu Covrig 1 Mutual Funds ( chapter 4)
The Financial Plan Chapter 2. Definitions You Need to Know Personal financial plan: specifying financial goals and describing in detail the spending,
Managing Your Own Portfolio
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 13 Managing Your Own Portfolio.
Chapter 5 THE ASSET ALLOCATION DECISION. Chapter 5 Questions What is asset allocation? What are four basic risk management strategies? How and why do.
The portfolio management process Set objective and policy goals Examine and understand the environment asset allocation & security selectionConstruct.
Personal Finance Ece Yavuzbaş Gökçe Uz Tevfik Kumru Kemal Pınarbaşı 1.
Chapter 5 INVESTMENT POLICY STATEMENTS AND ASSET ALLOCATION ISSUES.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education Canada 8-1 Chapter 8 Saving and Investing.
Chapter 1 Overview of a Financial Plan
Analysis of Investments and Management of Portfolios by Keith C
The Wonderful World of Investments A presentation by Lew Johnson to Queen’s Commerce Trading Competition November 17, 2009.
Asset Management: Education Investment Policy Statements.
1 FIN 604 Introduction and Overview 1. Investor vs. Speculator 2. Participants in the Investment Process 3. Steps in Investing 4. Types of Investors and.
Building Bucks Savings and Investment Basics. Basics Saving – provides funds for emergencies and for making specific purchases in the near future Investing.
Revise Lecture 29. Mergers and Acquisitions 1.Merger & Consolidation ? 2.Four ways of merger ? 3.Three types of merger? 4.Resisting in acquisition?
© 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part. Chapter.
Investment Policy Statement
Portfolio Management Unit – 1 Session No. 6 Topic: Investment Constraints Unit – 1 Session No. 6 Topic: Investment Constraints.
© 2012 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part. Chapter.
1 FIN 406 Outline Investor vs Speculator Participants in the Investment Process Steps in Investing Types of Investors and Investments.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. Chapter 13 Managing Your Own Portfolio.
Portfolio Management for Institutional Investors. Banks. Jakub Karnowski, CFA Portfolio Management for Financial Advisers.
LAP: QS-041 Investment Selection Factors Objectives Describe factors in selecting investments. Discuss the effect of personal factors in selecting investments.
All Rights Reserved to Kardan University 2014 Kardan University Kardan.edu.af.
Portfolio management for institutional investors. Foundations & Endowments. Jakub Karnowski, CFA Portfolio Management for Financial Advisers.
The Investment Policy Statement (IPS) Jakub Karnowski, CFA Portfolio Management for Financial Advisers.
Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management Frank K. Reilly & Keith C. Brown C HAPTER 2 BADM 744: Portfolio Management and Security Analysis Ali Nejadmalayeri.
Chapter 18 Asset Allocation. Copyright ©2014 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.18-2 Chapter Objectives Explain how diversification among assets.
The Portfolio Management Process Shahadat Hosan Faculty, MBA Program Stamford University Bangladesh.
INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Third Canadian Edition INVESTMENTS: Analysis and Management Third Canadian Edition W. Sean Cleary Charles P. Jones.
Topic: Case Study – Managing Individual Investor
Chapter 2. Questions to be answered:  What is asset allocation?  What are the four steps in the portfolio management process?  What is the role of.
Essentials of Investments © 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Fourth Edition Irwin / McGraw-Hill Bodie Kane Marcus 1 Chapter 5.
Portfolio Management Unit – V Monitoring and Rebalancing Unit – V Monitoring and Rebalancing.
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE Portfolio Management CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE Portfolio Management Cleary / Jones Investments: Analysis and Management.
Chapter 1 Overview of a Financial Plan. Copyright ©2014 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.1-2 Chapter Objectives Explain how you benefit from.
PRUDENTIAL INVESTMENTS >> MUTUAL FUNDS STRATEGIES FOR INVESTORS Speaker name Title Date WHAT IS A MUTUAL FUND?
Investors and the Investment Process Bodie, Kane and Marcus Essentials of Investments 9 th Global Edition 22.
Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management Seventh Edition by Frank K. Reilly & Keith C. Brown Chapter 2.
Chapter 2 The Asset Allocation Decision
Portfolio Management Chapter 21
Lecture Presentation Software to accompany Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management Seventh Edition by Frank K. Reilly & Keith C. Brown Chapter.
What is a…. Mutual Fund Personal Trust Pension Fund
22 Investors and the Investment Process Bodie, Kane, and Marcus
Chapter 21 Jones, Investments: Analysis and Management
22 Investors and the Investment Process Bodie, Kane, and Marcus
Chapter 2: The Asset Allocation Decision
2 Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management First Canadian Edition By Reilly, Brown, Hedges, Chang.
FIN 377: Investments Topic 3: Asset Allocation and Security Decision
Presentation transcript:

FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 1 Financial planning Financial planning (see chapter 21 Jones posted, plus Allen family and Mason family cases, all posted online)

FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 2 Individual Investor Life Cycle The individual investors life cycle can often be described using four separate phases or stages: Accumulation Phase Consolidation Phase Spending Phase Gifting Phase

FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 3 Accumulation Phase Early to middle years of careers Attempting to satisfy intermediate and long-term goals Net worth is usually small, debt may be heavy Long-term investment horizon means usually willing to take moderately high risks in order to make above-average returns

FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 4 Consolidation Phase Past career midpoint Have paid off much of their accumulated debt Earnings now exceed living expenses, so the balance can be invested Time horizon is still long-term, so moderately high risk investments are still attractive

FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 5 Spending Phase Usually begins at retirement Living expenses covered by Social Security and retirement plans Changing emphasis toward preservation of capital, but still want investment values to keep pace with inflation

FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 6 Gifting Phase Can be concurrent with spending phase If resources allow, individuals can now use excess assets to provide gifts to other individuals or organizations Estate planning becomes important, especially tax considerations

FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 7 The Portfolio Management Process 1. Policy statement - Specifies investment goals and acceptable risk levels - The “road map” that guides all investment decisions

FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 8 The Portfolio Management Process 2. Study current financial and economic conditions and forecast future trends - Determine strategies that should meet goals within the expected environment - Requires monitoring and updates since financial markets are ever-changing

FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 9 The Portfolio Management Process 3. Construct the portfolio - Given the policy statement and the expected conditions, go about investing - Allocate available funds to meet goals while managing risk

FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 10 The Portfolio Management Process 4. Monitor and update - Revise policy statement as needed - Monitor changing financial and economic conditions - Evaluate portfolio performance - Modify portfolio investments accordingly

FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 11 The Policy Statement Don’t try to navigate without a map! Important Inputs: - Investment Objectives - Investment Constraints

FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 12 Investment Objectives Need to specify return and risk objectives - Need to consider the risk tolerance of the investor - Return goals need to be consistent with risk tolerance

FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 13 Investment Objectives Possible broad goals: Capital preservation - Maintain purchasing power - Minimize the risk of loss Capital appreciation - Achieve portfolio growth through capital gains - Accept greater risk

FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 14 Investment Objectives Current income - Look to generate income rather than capital gains - May be preferred in “spending phase” - Relatively low risk Total return - Combining income returns and reinvestment with capital gains - Moderate risk

FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 15 Investment Constraints These factors may limit or at least impact the investment choices: Liquidity needs - How soon will the money be needed? Time horizon - How able is the investor to ride out several bad years? Legal and Regulatory Factors - Legal restrictions often constrain decisions - Retirement regulations

FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 16 Investment Constraints Tax Concerns - Realized capital gains vs. Ordinary income? - Taxable vs. Tax-exempt bonds? - Regular IRA vs. Roth IRA? - 401(k) and 403(b) plans Unique needs and preferences - Perhaps the investor wishes to avoid types of investments for ethical reasons

FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 17 Allen family case Investment policy: the Trust Objectives: Return requirements Risk tolerances Constraints: Liquidity Time Horizon Laws and regulations Taxes Unique preferences and circumstances

FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 18 Investment policy: George Allen Objectives: Return requirements Risk tolerances Constraints: Liquidity Time Horizon Laws and regulations Taxes Unique preferences and circumstances

FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 19 Capital market outlook Asset Allocation

FIN437 Vicentiu Covrig 20 Final Exam (take home) Final Exam consists of the Case study posted on line (80%) * For the exam study, carefully Allen Family and Mason Family cases. For the remaining 20% please answer the following questions: Chapter 7, Bodie Kane Marcus: problem 13 Chapter 15, Eun and Resnick, problem 2 Chapter 10, Strong, question 20a Chapter 10, Strong, question 20b