Showing posts with label Top 10 Reasons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Top 10 Reasons. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

15 Signs that it’s Time to Call CoreStates

Each question is worth 1 point (OR worth 2 points if you answer, "Heck yes!"):

  1. You’ve been waking up at night worrying about whether you’re worrying about the right things.
  2. You got scared out of the stock market earlier this year (near the bottom), and are now scared to go back in (near the top?).
  3. You’re convinced the dollar is going to tank, but have no idea what to do about it.
  4. Your children are actually turning into responsible young adults, and you hope there’s some money left for them when you die.
  5. So far, all your “precious metals” investments have been in the form of golf clubs and jewelry, but you’re thinking this probably isn’t how the pros do it.
  6. Your father keeps saying he hopes his last dollar will go to pay for his burial, but you’re thinking it might have to be your last dollar.
  7. Your daughter recently announced that she’s just not enjoying Law School, so she is dropping out and applying to Med School.
  8. After so many years of investing for the long term, you suddenly realize... it’s now here!
  9. You are noticing more and more how the things you’ve accumulated restrict your day-to-day freedom and peace of mind, and how liquid investments do just the opposite.
  10. After years of focusing on investment returns, you’re beginning to think you should have been paying more attention to investment risk.
  11. Charity may begin at home, but you’re concerned your legacy may end at home and your charitable aspirations go unfulfilled.
  12. You’re wondering if your 401(k) will be okay, or will it be KO’d by the next market decline . . . right when you plan to retire.
  13. It recently dawned on you that the medical profession has done a much better job of extending life expectancies than your investment professionals have done in extending the life of your nest egg.
  14. Your long-held vision of retirement seems to be taking on a decidedly rose-colored hue.
  15. You can’t stand another minute of Jim Cramer or Larry Kudlow (or your current advisor, for that matter), and need to find someone you can trust to help you do what is right for you.

SCORING

0 to 5 – Good for you! But, give us a call sometime so that you know us when you need us.

6 to 9 – Not bad, but you could benefit from our help. Call soon.

10 to 12 – This is serious! Make an appointment today.

13 to 15 – What have you been waiting for!? Call an ambulance and get straight over here!

CoreStates Capital Advisors, LLC
267-759-5000
http://www.corestates.us/

Thursday, July 9, 2009

The Top Ten Reasons to use CoreStates


CoreStates Capital Advisors provides financial advice to individual and institutional investors - just like hundreds of other firms. But, what distinguishes CoreStates is how we have redesigned the financial advisory service for the 21st Century investor.

1. Mutual commitment
CoreStates Capital Advisors, as a Registered Investment Advisor, bears fiduciary responsibility to act only in our clients' best interests. Your success is our primary goal. Registered Representatives represent their employers, typically purveyors of financial products, and are required only to assure that those products are "suitable" before promoting them to clients.

2. Unsurpassed understanding of you
At CoreStates, we won't even try to serve you until we truly know you, and until you know yourself. So, we provide the industry's most comprehensive investor profile, which we call our Investor DNA. You complete a questionnaire online and immediately receive a five-page analysis of your investment traits and preferences.

3. Thorough analysis of your needs and goals
With your current assets and the additional income you anticipate, will you be able to live the life you desire? The CoreStates Cash Flow Analysis will provide unique insights into your financial future, helping you make sound financial decisions and providing us with the information we need to serve you effectively.

4. We document your expectations
A personalized Investment Policy Statement is offered to each client. This document describes the mutually agreed upon processes and guidelines for the management of your account. It specifies your investment objectives, time horizons, risk parameters, investment style and communication preferences. It defines how we will serve you in the pursuit of your desired investment objectives.

5. A foundation of sound strategic perspectives
CoreStates' investment strategies are based upon a comprehensive ongoing review of the global investment environment that we call our 20/20 Global Vision. No one knows what the future holds. Yet, no one should invest without first carefully considering and evaluating the most important factors likely to drive the investment markets of the future. These proprietary perspectives are reflected in the management of all CoreStates client accounts.

6. Complete objectivity
It is extremely difficult for an investor to confront the peaks and valleys of a turbulent market and keep their emotions under control. With over 135 years of total experience, CoreStates' decision-makers have lived through and learned from virtually every market fluctuation. We have the unemotional objectivity needed to make the right decisions.

7. Full power portfolios
The New World of asset allocation goes well beyond the traditional stocks/bonds/cash/real estate portfolios by including four new asset classes and strategies. This Eight-Cylinder Portfolio model provides twice the return-generating opportunities while also incorporating truly low-correlation diversifiers to more effectively moderate portfolio variability.

8. Unbiased investment selection
We do not represent a mutual fund company, a specific money manager, an investment banking company or any other product purveyor. We have the world of investment options at our fingertips. Our freedom to choose the best available investment solution provides almost unlimited possibilities.

9. Total transparency
Paraphrasing former President Regan, trust is safely granted only with verification. We employ unaffiliated custodians to safeguard your assets, independent auditors to monitor our activities, and third party performance analysts to validate our results. Every aspect of your relationship with CoreStates is accessible, transparent, and verifiable. CoreStates offers a robust website that includes access to your account information 24/7. You will know what we are doing, and how, and why. Always.

10. Confidentiality
We restrict access to nonpublic personal information about you to our employees with a legitimate business need for the information. Our employees may access information and provide it to third parties only when completing a transaction at your request or providing our other services to you.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Top 10 Investing Mistakes

Once you've made it... Mistakes can still take it!

We all know the formula for investment success is to invest early, invest often and invest broadly. These are the core principles of achieving wealth through saving and investing. Do this diligently over an entire working career and you are virtually assured of a lifetime of financial security. But, for those who have already done this, or who for any other reason find themselves responsible for a substantial sum of money, the rules are a little different. The focus must change from accumulating assets to protecting wealth and preserving purchasing power. And, the mentality of the investor must change. Investing “right” still matters, but the greater concern must be not investing “wrong.” At this stage, mistakes can be lethal to your financial security, largely because the time needed for recovery from any setbacks is limited.

So, what are the most common miscues investors make in this wealth preservation stage?

1. Maintaining insufficient liquidity

This is the big one. You must never have to sell an investment to raise needed spending money. All spending should come from stable value investments and accounts – like short-term fixed income securities and checking, savings, or money market accounts. You want to sell investments (stocks, bonds, real estate, commodities, etc.) to fund the stable accounts only when the investments are trading at favorable prices. Second best (and more practical for most of us) is to liquidate investments only on a regular, periodic basis – the opposite of dollar cost averaging in. Neither approach can be achieved if your checking account is empty and bills are due.

2. Ignoring inflation

The end of the accumulation phase of an investment program is not the end of the investment program. Tempting as it may be to seek the “safety” of stable investments with all of your investment dollars, this safety comes only at the expense of significant risk to your purchasing power. If your future spending needs extend five or more years into the future, it is simply not prudent to expect to fund those future needs with current dollars. This is especially true with today’s rampant Federal spending, which almost assures significant inflation in the years ahead.

3. Forgetting your legacy
Investors with the good fortune to have assets well in excess of their personal or immediate family needs may be able to ignore inflation. They have virtually no risk of running out of money. But, based on our many years of experience working with such people, even those who start out with a strong preservation focus often begin to see their role not as owner, but as temporary custodian of their assets. They come to realize that they have the ability to favorably influence the lives of others, now and well beyond the end of their own lives. This sometimes encourages immediate gifting and donations. Or, it may introduce a much longer investment time horizon within their own portfolio, which warrants a much different investment approach with that portion of their net worth that exceeds their personal lifetime financial needs.

4. Carelessly selecting an advisor
The Bernard Madoff scandal provides a vivid warning to all investors not to pick their advisor based on image, reputation, or social standing. Some homework is required. Visit the CoreStates website at www.corestates.us and see our “Qualifications of a Financial Advisor” and “Commitment to Fiduciary Responsibility” (both located under the “Learning” tab) for our list of the key criteria that every investor can and should look for before entrusting assets to any financial advisor.

5. Settling for hazy investment objectives
Risk tolerance, time horizon, return objectives – these are important concepts. But, they are only concepts. It is important for you and your advisor to have a clear, mutual understanding of your current and anticipated financial resources, expected additions to your investment account, expected needs to be funded from your investment account, and how much flexibility you have in how and when these needs are met. And then, keep your advisor updated. Only by discussing your particular situation in these very tangible terms can you maximize your chances of long-term financial security.

6. Pursuing investment fads and fashions

Besides their financial aspects, investments can serve a valuable recreational purpose. Investing can be fun and exciting, and can convey intellectual and emotional prestige. To capitalize on this, financial product marketers provide a constant flow of new investment ideas. Most are merely the old standards repackaged, but many are much more insidious, and some, as we just learned, are downright toxic. All investments differ in only two meaningful respects – the expected amount and timing of cash returns to be provided, and the certainty (or potential variability) of those future cash returns. If you don’t understand how these two variables compare to more straightforward investments like CDs, bonds, and stocks, don’t buy them. And, if you do understand the differences, make sure they add value. In most cases, they won’t.

7. Obsessing over the parts while ignoring the whole
An investment’s price really matters at only two times – when you buy it and when you sell it. If that investment is part of a well-constructed portfolio, your manager will have the discretion to buy it and sell it whenever the price is deemed to be favorable. And, a well diversified portfolio will at all times have some investments at favorable prices and some . . . not so much. That’s how portfolio diversification works. So, if you see some investments that currently “aren’t working,” they may signify only that the portfolio is effectively diversified, and is behaving exactly as it should.

8. Confusing a Net Worth Statement with Cash Flow Analysis
While the net worth statement is a great way of assessing your financial well being, it captures only a single frame of your financial picture at one point in time.
Unlike your net worth statement, the cash flow analysis tracks your income/expense ratios over an extended period of time. That is like comparing the features of a picture camera and video camera.
For an individual investor, no diagnostic approach is more important than the Cash Flow Analysis. Not only will you become acutely aware of how expenses, taxes and inflation affect your lifestyle, you and your advisor will also have the proper basis for making investment decisions.
And because you are recording all your transactions, coming in or going out, this makes your cash flow analysis dynamic, allowing you to review your financial decisions from time to time.
There are many approaches to control expenses and spending habits. But the critical starting point is to generate and maintain your own Cash Flow Analysis.

9. Losing faith in your investment program

Investors must play a continuous game of emotional “chicken” with the market. Don’t let it scare you to the sidelines, or hype you into a high-risk investment position. A sound investment program will respond to the market cycles in a prudent way at the manager/investment selection level. Major revamping of the overall portfolio in response to market swings is almost always detrimental to your long-term wealth. It may help to remind your self that, by definition, the market is at its low when investor fear is greatest, and at its high when enthusiasm peaks. Acting on your emotions will almost guarantee buying high and selling low.

10. Forgetting that wealth is the means, not the end

In a capitalist economy and a culture focused on continually improving living standards, money becomes a measure of success. But, that’s not all it is. It is also a means to less tangible ends. It can support favored causes, facilitate desired change, and promote higher principles. It can allow you to accept the challenge of the great religious leader, Mahatma Gandhi: “You must be the change you want to see in the world.” Let it help you to be the person you want to be, in the country where you want to live, and in the world you want to leave to succeeding generations.