The Corporate Executive’s Guide to General Investing
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About this ebook
Successful corporate executives face unique investing challenges, because their personal wealth is irrevocably tied to their company’s performance, normal market ups and downs, and even unexpected events. An executive’s investment portfolio may consist mostly of employer stock and stock options that are governed by rules the executive doesn’t know about and can’t control. And the executive also faces a variety of other financial landmines, ranging from taxes to corporate pension shortfalls.
So the forward-thinking corporate executive badly needs effective financial management and investing strategies to build a financially secure future, designed with the special needs of a corporate executive in mind. That is what this guide will provide: the essence of what investments and investing strategies the executive should consider employing to achieve financial independence sooner, rather than later.
The audience for this investing guide includes C-suite executives, middle managers, and those in supervisory positions with executive responsibilities or aspirations. It will also be useful for MBA students, those in executive education seminars, and others who are planning corporate careers.
This book will teach the executive reader:
- How to set the proper goals before investing
- How to maximize corporate resources for your investing goals
- How to understand and choose from the different types of investments, including bank investments, stocks, mutual funds, exchange-traded funds (ETFs), venture capital investments, real estate investments, and alternative investments.
- How design an effective portfolio strategy for an executive’s situation
Paul Mladjenovic
Paul Mladjenovic was a CFP for 36 years and has extensive experience as a financial planner, educator, speaker and author of the best-selling Stock Investing For Dummies and many other books in the fields of investing, finance, and entrepreneurship.
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The Corporate Executive’s Guide to General Investing - Paul Mladjenovic
Introduction
Hello, my name is Paul Mladjenovic. And I’m an author of many books including the best-seller Stock Investing for Dummies, along with High-Level Investing for Dummies, Investing in Gold and Silver for Dummies, and Zero-Cost Marketing. And it has been a joy to write this particular book for you. In this, we’re talking about you going from where you are an executive, corporate, or otherwise, and heading to the point where you are financially independent using general investing strategies. I’ve covered all the main aspects in this book, but let me tell you where they’re at and how it’s laid out.
First of all, the chapters are based on two basic phases, and that’s to grow your money and then generating income once retirement is near. Growing your money means that your money is working as hard as you are during your career as a corporate executive.
Chapter 1 involves assumptions about investing and about you. This chapter also covers your financial starting point and your target amount
that you need to reach with your investment assets to achieve financial independence. It is a simple dynamic that I refer to as the crash course in retirement planning.
Chapter 2 highlights executive compensation since that will be the ultimate source of your funds and the foundation for your wealth-building program.
Chapters 3 to 7 focus on growth-related investments. The subject matter includes stocks, ETFs, mutual funds, real estate investing (REITs), and alternative investments. Keep in mind that some of these vehicles also do double-duty with excellent income potential.
For a focus on income strategies, head over to Chapters 8 (bonds) and 9 (retirement income strategies). If you have done even modestly growing your investments during your working years, converting them to a focus on income gives you the potential for a financially sound retirement.
Chapter 3 focuses on growth stocks. These will be crucial during your working years and you will learn the most important considerations for choosing wisely. You can switch to income-oriented stocks (dividend stocks) as you near your retirement years and this topic is more fully covered in Chapter 9.
I think that ETFs are an excellent and convenient vehicle for your portfolio. Same premise here ... choose growth-oriented ETFs (Chapter 4) during your working years and income-oriented ETFs during your retirement years (see Chapter 9).
Chapter 5 is on mutual funds, which are typically the foundation for most long-term retirement plans (401k plans, etc.) and other types of vehicles.
Then we’ll get to real estate investing through one of my favorite vehicles in Chapter 6, which are real estate investment trusts (REITs). I think REITs are an excellent way to invest in a relatively easy, convenient, and hassle-free manner to include real estate in your portfolio.
Chapter 7 covers a few choice alternative investments. Gold, silver, and cryptocurrencies are covered as they are considered strong diversification versus traditional investment vehicles. I will also include bank investments here for short-term concerns.
Some important basic tax points and tax strategies are covered in Chapter 10. Understand wealth-building strategies versus taxes and how to minimize the taxes on your gains and income.
Each chapter will re-emphasize key points (main takeaway points
) and resources so you can dig deeper in that chapter’s subject matter. And also about those vehicles you could take advantage of that’ll help you build your wealth faster than ever before.
Lastly, since different investments tend to perform differently in various economic scenarios, it pays to monitor the big picture
so you can optimize and customize your investing approach during ongoing macro events in the world of politics and the economy and financial markets so I have included an appendix listing these resources (blogs and websites) to keep you informed.
The bottom line is that you, as a corporate executive, have the power to flourish and attain prosperity and financial independence if you keep learning and working your investing action plan.
CHAPTER 1
Your Starting Point … Plus Assumptions
Whether you are starting in your corporate executive position today as a junior, middle-level executive in a mid-sized firm or you are a C-level executive in a large, public firm, you can reach your financial objectives by maximizing the wealth you can accumulate through both your salary and your investment-related fringe benefits (such as stock options and 401k plan).
Your Action Plan Blueprint
The essence of building wealth during your career is a simple premise that has been tweaked and modified a thousand times by all sorts of advisers and financial consultants … and here it is:
1. Inflow: Earn your money … find ways to increase it.
2. Outflow: Spend less than you make … find ways to decrease it.
3. Invest the difference. Repeat regularly until you reach your target amount for financial independence.
4. Maximize all your financial resources (greater income, 401k, etc.) to accelerate your journey to your target amount.
Yes … the approach is simple … but it’s not easy. However, over a span of 20 to 40 years, very doable! Do this approach year in and year out and by the end of your working career it could be a seven-figure nest egg for a middle-class earner … or an eight-figure sum for the industrious upper-income corporate executive.
You have heard it all before: If you fail to plan … then you plan to fail.
The corporate job you have may give you some great perks now and some great income but to what extent will it be maximizing your career resources? Because the corporate executive is in a position to make an income that is significantly higher than the average worker, I think it’s an important task for you to do the most simplest goal of all: coming up with the one number that if your assets grow to that point you will be financially self-sufficient or independent or at the point where you don’t need to work that hard anymore.
From Focusing on Growth to Focusing on Income
Consider this an addendum to the overall action blueprint. It was about the how
in terms of your overall approach, but this section accentuates the what
involved in the approach. During your working years, the investments inside your various accounts should generally be focused on growth. Growth-oriented investments include
•Stocks (covered in Chapter 3 )
•Exchange-traded funds ( Chapter 4 )
•Mutual funds ( Chapter 5 )
•Real estate ( Chapter 6 )
•Alternative assets ( Chapter 7 )
Later on and especially in your retirement years, the focus switches to income. Income-oriented investments include
•Bonds (covered in Chapter 8 )
•Dividend stocks and other income strategies ( Chapter 9 )
•Real-estate income strategies ( Chapter 6 )
The Executive’s Starting Point (Homework!)
Before you begin your journey to your financial independence target amount, like any journey, you need to know your starting point and the optimal path to your destination. Here is where your corporate skills will benefit you personally. It’s time to create two important documents:
1. Personal balance sheet . What are your total assets, your total liabilities, and your net worth? The investable net worth is your starting point. This is what should be on the growth path to hit your retirement target.
2. Personal cash flow statement . From your total inflow (e.g., wages or net business income) less your outflow (expenses, debt payments, etc.) to figure out what you can comfortably invest as part of your accumulation and growth toward your personal target amount. Update this document regularly to know how much you can comfortably set aside for investing.
In terms of the amount(s) to invest, this includes what you can sock away not only in pretax, tax-advantaged accounts (401k, traditional IRAs, etc.) but also in after-tax vehicles (regular accounts, etc.). How much should you seek to invest? As much as possible. The real question is: How quickly do you want to reach a target amount that symbolizes your financial freedom?
The whole point of long-term investing is to build your wealth to the point where your wealth’s potential cash flow (dividends, interest, etc.) makes work an option and not a necessity. Work is great … but it should be something you enjoy and something that eventually becomes optional. The ultimate question when discussing your financial independence (such as a secure retirement) is that you woke up that morning and said to yourself: What do I feel like doing today?
That is the essence of financial freedom in a single question. This is the essence of what I communicate in my retirement planning seminars and webinars. (For the reader’s benefit, I include a link to a free retirement planning webinar in the resources listed at the end of this chapter.)
The Maximized 401k and Roth IRA Approach
Say you don’t have a specific target amount for retirement, but you were specific in how much you plan to commit to your goal of financial freedom, how would that work out? Keep in mind that for higher-income folks, there may be limits to how much you can sock away so check with your tax adviser with your personal contribution limits. Regardless, I will assume relatively modest contributions for typical corporate compensation scenarios. Contributing a total of $20,000 in pretax accounts such as through some combination of a 401k plan and a Roth IRA, for example, is easily doable. If you did $20,000 per year for at least 30 years (averaging 10 percent total reinvested annual growth), how would you fare? If you were to plug in those numbers at financial websites that offer investment calculators (such as Bankrate.com and smartassets.com), that approach would accumulate over $3.6 million before factoring other variables such as tax rates and inflation, which can be hard to forecast decades in advance. The bottom line for you is that, in this example, $3.6 million, if invested in a portfolio of income securities yielding at least 3 percent, would earn you over $100,000 per year without touching the principal. But let’s say that you will need $140,000 per year, how long would that $3.6 million last … again, presuming it is only yielding 3 percent?
In this case you would use an annuity calculator. Figure 1.1 is Bankrate’s annuity calculator (found at www.bankrate.com/calculators/investing/annuity-calculator.aspx).
Plugging in your available numbers for our example and clicking