It's about more than the money Investment wisdom for building a better life

Saly A. Glassman, 1958-

Book - 2010

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Subjects
Published
Upper Saddle River, N.J. : FT Press c2010.
Language
English
Main Author
Saly A. Glassman, 1958- (-)
Physical Description
xvii, 215 p. ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes index.
ISBN
9780137050321
  • Acknowledgments
  • About the Author
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. Rules Are Essential, but They Do Not Guarantee a Win
  • Evaluate the Investment Rules you Followed
  • Examine How Well You Followed the Rules
  • Get Back in the Game
  • Chapter 2. Focus Your Predictions on What You Can Control: Your Priorities
  • Chapter 3. Let Go of What Might Have Been
  • Step 1. Learn to Recognize the "What Might Have Been" in Your Language
  • Step 2. See It for What It Really Is
  • Step 3. Eliminate the "What Might Have Been" from Your Language
  • Notice What Factors Are and Are Not in Your Control
  • Learn from Your Mistakes and Change for the Next Time
  • Take Full Responsibility
  • Chapter 4. Take Responsibility
  • Option 1. Blame Others
  • Option 2. Take Responsibility
  • A Master Plan for Your Life
  • Get the Bigger Picture for Your Life
  • Look at the Path from Where You Are Now to Where You Want to Be
  • Map Out a Strategy
  • Take Responsibility for the Master Plan
  • Chapter 5. Do What You Know and Recognize What You Don't Know
  • Chapter 6. Have Investment Rules That Work for You
  • Rule #1. As the Investor, I must Understand what I own
  • Rule #2
  • Rule #3. My Investments Should Be Completely Transparent
  • Rule #4. My Investments Must Be Audited by Federal Regulators and/or an Independent Third Party
  • Rule #5. I Must Understand How I Am Paying for Investment Advice, Services, and Products
  • Rule #6. I Have Personally Investigated the Character of the People with Whom I Associate and Do Business. I Did Not Delegate This Critical Responsibility to a Third Party
  • Chapter 7. The Time to Have the Fire Drill Is Not in the Middle of the Fire
  • Communication with Advisors
  • Wills and Estate Planning
  • Tax Planning
  • Protection of Spouses and Gifting to Children and Charitable Interests
  • Asset Allocation and Investment Strategy
  • Chapter 8. The Best Advice Is Sometimes About What Not to Do
  • Investing with Friends
  • Overextending Your Borrowing
  • Living the Consequences of Someone Else's Choices
  • Getting Attached to Things and Not Wanting to Sell
  • Chapter 9. Appreciate the Value of Holding on to What You Have
  • You Could Misplace It
  • You Could Waste It
  • You Could Lose It in the Financial Markets
  • You Could Have It Stolen from You
  • You Could Gamble It Away
  • You Could Give It Away
  • You Could Lend It and Not Get Repaid
  • Holding on While Getting Ahead
  • Chapter 10. Know What You Want to Accomplish
  • Capital Preservation
  • Income
  • Income with Growth
  • Growth
  • Aggressive Growth
  • Chapter 11. Be Clear About What You Have and What You Don't Have
  • Chapter 12. Expect to Pay a Price-Either Now or Later-for the Choices You Make About Handling Your Money
  • 1. Estimate Your Desired Income in Today's Dollars
  • 2. Determine Your Time Frame for Financial Independence
  • 3. Adjust the Income Figure for Future Inflation
  • 4. Calculate the Ending Balance You Need to Support the Inflated Income Figure
  • 5. Estimate Your Starting Balance Using Liquid Assets and Possibly Adding Other Assets That Are Soon to Become Liquid
  • 6. Estimate the Future Value of Your Current Assets, Using a Rate of Return That Is Realistic Based on Your Investment Portfolio and Asset Allocation
  • 7. Subtract the Difference Between What You Need for Your Ending Balance and What You Have Now
  • 8. Calculate the Amount You Need to Save Each Year-for Your Designated Time Frame-to Close the Gap and Potentially Achieve Financial Independence
  • 9. Develop an Asset Allocation Plan
  • Paying Now
  • Paying Later
  • Making the Choice
  • Chapter 13. Know the Essence of Your Advisor's Brand
  • Option 1. Ask the Advisor Directly About the Brand
  • Option 2. Ask Other People About the Advisor's Brand
  • Option 3. Meet Several Advisors to Compare Their Brands
  • Option 4. Recognize and Respect Your Gut Reaction
  • Option 5. Know the Brand You Want
  • Option 6. Live It
  • Chapter 14. Does your Advisor Care Deeply About You?
  • Chapter 15. Expect to Be Taken Care Of
  • Recognize What Is Important to You
  • Ask for It
  • Know If You Are Getting It
  • Chapter 16. The Investor's Perception Is the True Reality
  • Chapter 17. Crises are Like Little Gifts
  • Crises Force You to Examine Your Behavior
  • It's Foolish to Waste a Good Crisis
  • Crises Give You a Chance to Gain Objectivity
  • Crises Give You an Opportunity to Enhance Communication with the Important Players
  • Crises Force You to Reevaluate Your Priorities
  • Chapter 18. The Most Valuable Things in Life Do Not Involve Currency
  • Paula and Maureen
  • Elliott
  • Tom
  • Chapter 19. Find the Courage You Need to Have Integrity
  • Chapter 20. There's an Entire Economy in What We Consume and Waste
  • Chapter 21. Make It Happen
  • Respect Rules, but Appreciate Them for What They Are
  • Choose Your Financial Advisor Deliberately and Carefully
  • Take Responsibility
  • Plan
  • Be Strong
  • Keep Your Eye on the Big Picture
  • Make It Happen
  • Appendix: Formulas Used for Chapter 12 Calculations
  • Review of Step 3: Adjusting Your Monthly Financial Needs for 3% Inflation over 25 Years
  • Review of Step 4: Calculating the Capital Investment Value Needed to Generate the $15,700 Monthly Draw ($188,000 Annually) Needed 25 Years from Now
  • Review of Step 6: Calculating the Future Value of $250,000 Today After 25 Years of Returns at a Rate of 7%
  • Review of Step 7: Calculating the Asset Gap Needing to Be Filled by Savings and Investment Returns over the Next 25 Years
  • Review of Step 8: Calculating the Amount You Will Need to Save Annually for 25 Years to Close the Retirement Investment Gap
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Glassman, senior vice president of investments at Merrill Lynch, demystifies investing and offers instantly useful advice on getting your feet into the water. She urges readers to complete a full financial audit and evaluate spending habits honestly and objectively before they move on to her sensible investment plan and setting their own rules. She includes stories of success and failure to clarify key points, and provides valuable advice on will, estate, and tax planning, gifting to children, and asset allocation. She also dedicates an entire chapter on what not to do, including investing with friends, overextending your borrowing, and getting attached to investments. Concise, realistic, and very readable, this book opens up the complex world of financial investing and provides a useful guide that first-time investors can-and should-utilize. (June) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Introduction Hello In this introduction I'd like to talk with you briefly about your investments, your financial future, and your quality of life. That will prepare you to get the most out of this book. In 29 years as a financial advisor with Merrill Lynch, I've seen enormous changes in the markets, the financial services industry, and even my own firm. A key objective of my professional career during those years has been to guide and educate clients. The downturn that began in mid-2007 has made me even more determined to use my experience to help simplify the investment process and offer practical advice that anyone would find valuable. In the past you may have come to rely on what you considered conventional wisdom in your pursuit of successful investing. Perhaps as a result of this most recent crisis you have reconsidered what you thought it would take to achieve your goals. That would certainly be understandable. This particular market downturn has dealt such a devastating blow that everyone has been struck by it or knows someone who has. No one could blame you if you now wonder where this experience has left you and whose advice is safe to follow. In my role as a financial advisor, I have talked at length with clients about their investment experiences. Like most people, you probably have lost money in one or more economic downturns. You may also have lost faith in the investment process. In this book, my primary goal is to help you get your investments back on track and restore the confidence you need to be a successful investor. Along the way, the insights I share will not only help you emerge victorious from the current financial crisis, but also prepare you to be a more successful investor in whatever markets lie ahead. You may not think of yourself as an investor; however, if you have money that you want to protect and grow, you are an investor. You may have money in the bank, in bonds, in the stock market, in real estate, or in complex derivatives. That makes you more than just someone who has put aside a little money. You are not just a bank customer or a client of an investment brokerage firm. As long as you have saved money, you are making investments. You are an investor, and you need to take that role seriously. How can you regain control of your financial life? First, you have to focus honestly and objectively on your past investment decisions and the consequences of your actions. Let's face it: For most investors, this is too great a responsibility to go it alone. For that reason, an important message throughout this book is that there may be distinct advantages in working with a financial advisor who is reliable and well suited to your circumstances. Most likely you have at least one person functioning as an advisor already. Maybe your advisor is the account manager at your local bank or the person assigned to you when you walked into an investment firm. Maybe you obtained outside advice as to where to put your money. From whom did you accept advice? Was it your spouse? Your parents? Your friends? Any of these may be your advisor. Or you may have a financial advisor in the most traditional sense--a formal relationship with a qualified investment advisor at a bank, trust company, or investment brokerage firm. You might be asking yourself, "Do I need to establish a formal relationship with a professional financial advisor to be considered the kind of "investor" for whom this book is written? The answer is "no." When I refer to investors in this book, I want you to know I'm talking to you. As an investor you deserve to be treated with care and respect, regardless of whether you use professional investment services. I want to acknowledge, however, the advantages of working with a professional financial advisor and selecting an advisor wisely. Whatever insight you gain here about how to think of investing and how to talk constructively to others about investing can help you make better investment decisions. In the meantime, I will also guide you behind the scenes by offering insight into how to improve both your investment strategy and your overall financial picture. You'll be hearing true stories and quotes from actual investors. I have changed most names and supporting details to protect their privacy. You may find yourself having thoughts and opinions similar to theirs, or you may discover entirely new perspectives based on what they have to offer. The sharing of their dialogue may be just the ingredient you need to effectively evaluate your own actions. One of my objectives in writing this book is to demystify the investment process so you, perhaps in league with your advisor, can develop and follow guidelines that will work for you. That is entirely possible even if you have little experience with investments. I intend to help you become empowered through knowledge and action--oriented practical advice. Through this book I will be available to you every step of the way as you pursue success in your investments and in all your goals. Being successful relative to life's most important goals, after all, is about so much more than the money. Let's read on and learn more. (c) Copyright Pearson Education. All rights reserved. Excerpted from It's about More Than the Money: Investment Wisdom for Building a Better Life by Saly A. Glassman All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.