Advisor Training, Consumer Material Alex Strandell Advisor Training, Consumer Material Alex Strandell

Rethinking 60/40 Part 4: How Fixed Index Annuities Can Help

WealthVest believes that there is a natural fit for FIAs within optimized portfolios A fixed index annuity is a type of fixed annuity that offers a rate of return based on market performance. An FIA is appropriate for someone who is closer to retirement, prefers tax deferral, principal protection, and market participation. While FIAs may not be appropriate for younger individuals with higher risk tolerance or if they need access to their funds immediately. By allocating 20% of a 60/40 portfolio to an FIA, the portfolio’s risk premium decreases due to the guaranteed protection from the annuity.

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Advisor Training, Consumer Material Alex Strandell Advisor Training, Consumer Material Alex Strandell

Rethinking 60/40 Part 3: How Multi-Year Guaranteed Annuities Can Help

WealthVest believes that there is a natural fit for MYGAs within optimized portfolios. A multi-year guaranteed annuity, or MYGA, is a type of fixed annuity that offers a guaranteed fixed interest rate for a certain period, usually from three to ten years. A MYGA is appropriate for someone who is closer to retirement and prefers tax deferral and a guarantee of investment return. By allocating 20% of a 60/40 portfolio to a MYGA, the portfolio’s risk premium decreases thanks to the guaranteed protection from the annuity.

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Advisor Training, Consumer Material Alex Strandell Advisor Training, Consumer Material Alex Strandell

Rethinking 60/40 Part 2: What can we learn about the years when stocks and bonds are both negative?

Rethinking 60/40: What can we learn about the years when stocks and bonds are both negative?

In our last blog post, I discussed the underlying reasons for today’s underperformance of 60/40 portfolios, but let’s look at how much of an anomaly today’s times are and where 2022 falls in history. Since 1928, we can glean the underlying reasons a 60/40 portfolio allocation became popular method for investors seeking reliable returns. The chart below shows historical corporate bond yield and the S&P 500® returns by year, demonstrating how often bonds and stocks remained positive. However, looking at the years in which equities and bonds are negative provides important context for the contemporary market environment.

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Advisor Training, Consumer Material Alex Strandell Advisor Training, Consumer Material Alex Strandell

Rethinking 60/40: Part 1-Why investors use 60/40 allocations?

Rethinking 60/40: Why have individuals used 60/40 Allocations for their Retirement Savings?

A portfolio invested in 60% stocks and 40% bonds, commonly known as a 60/40 portfolio, is where many portfolios start before adjusting to a diversified mix based on time horizon, risk tolerance and savings goals. The 60/40 portfolio mix is a tried and true portfolio allocation because it provides market gains during market rallies and fixed income reliability during economic slowdowns. This portfolio is most suitable when interest rates go down, as equities perform well. When interest rates rise, equity returns typically fall.

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TODAY’S LONGVEITY PARADOX

The dynamic of life expectancy increasing over one’s lifespan is referred to as the longevity paradox. WealthVest’s newest series, The Longevity Paradox, dives into the risks retirees face. With life expectancy growing over the past century, retirees must plan for an indefinite retirement timeline. Planning for longevity, while balancing investor behavior and market conditions, proves that retirees face an uphill battle when creating a lifetime income plan. Our first paper in the Longevity Paradox series tackles options retires can use to help combat these issues. This is a consumer approved resource that can help guide today’s retirees to options that help mitigate longevity and behavioral risk in retirement.

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Advisor Training, Consumer Material Alex Strandell Advisor Training, Consumer Material Alex Strandell

3 Questions to consider before purchasing a CD

With volatility in the markets at an all-time high, individuals are looking for safe options to allocate their portfolio into whether it be bonds, CDs, or money market funds. Money markets have seen a large uptick of inflows. This year we have seen money market funds grow to $4.5 trillion in assets. In March alone, the U.S. Money Market Funds experienced nearly $1 trillion of new money entering into money markets.** The downside of being in cash right now is low yields make it difficult for accounts to keep pace with inflation.

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Advisor Training Alex Strandell Advisor Training Alex Strandell

IS A 9% ANNUAL AVERAGE RETURN ENOUGH FOR YOUR CLIENTS IN RETIREMENT?

How do you demonstrate timing and sequence of returns risk with your clients? The consumer-facing sales tool “The Hatfields and Mccoys” tells a simple yet effective story on sequence of return risk. In the piece, we examine two hypothetical families entering retirement at age 65, but under different circumstances. Both families retire with $500,000 of their nest egg fully invested in the S&P 500® index. They both withdraw 4% annually, with a 2.5% increase each year to keep pace with inflation. The McCoys experience the annual returns from years 1978 to 2008, while the Hatfields experience the same returns, but in reverse chronological order, with a key point being that the annual return for 2008’occurs during their first year of retirement and the return for 1978 is their last.

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Advisor Training, Retirement Research Alex Strandell Advisor Training, Retirement Research Alex Strandell

HOW YOU CAN HELP YOUR CLIENTS IN THIS BEAR MARKET

You are undoubtedly getting phone calls each and every day from your weary and worried clients about what they should be doing with their investments and how today’s events will affect their financial plan. You’ve helped navigate them through the ups and downs of the market in the past, but this is the first time guiding them through a worldwide pandemic. What do you tell them?

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