Edmonton Journal

PUTTING THE OFFICE HOCKEY POOL AHEAD OF RETIREMENT PLANNING?

Biggest disconnect in investing is apathy of ordinary investors, Tom Bradley writes.

- Financial Post Tom Bradley is president of Steadyhand Investment Funds, a company that offers individual investors low-fee investment funds and clearcut advice. He can be reached at tbradley@steadyhand.com

As an investment manager, I spend my life looking for disconnect­s in the market. Securities that are mis-priced. Trends that aren’t being recognized. And of course, extremely bullish or bearish investor behaviour. All of these create opportunit­ies.

For all this searching, however, it struck me that the biggest disconnect in investing is in plain sight. It’s the behaviour of ordinary investors, or to be more specific, their lack of effort.

Let me explain.

1.

Costa Rica or free roaming Your investment portfolio is one of the most important determinan­ts of how you will live the last third of your life. Yes, putting aside money and investing it is all about the years when you have lots of time and no regular paycheque.

The disconnect? People don’t treat it as being important. They spend more time analyzing the cost of their cellphone plans than how much they’re paying their investment adviser. They monitor daily (or hourly) how they’re doing in the NHL pool, but have no idea how their portfolio is performing. And most will switch a hairdresse­r or golf pro in a heartbeat but stick for years with an adviser they’ve lost faith in.

It doesn’t make logical sense when you think about what could be lying ahead. Some effort now may mean birding in Costa Rica, owning a condo in Palm Springs, taking the grandchild­ren to Disneyland and eventually, living in a nice retirement facility.

February in Costa Rica in 20 years or free roaming now?

Condo in the Palm Springs or $200 win in the hockey pool?

Taking your grandchild­ren somewhere every year or avoiding the awkwardnes­s of firing your adviser?

2.

Why the lack of effort Described this way, these trade-offs sound ridiculous, so why the lack of interest?

First, the reward for paying attention to your investment­s is years away. It’s difficult to grasp the impact of larger monthly contributi­ons, an appropriat­e asset mix and lower fees. The here and now is more urgent, even if it’s less important.

Second, making a regular TFSA or RRSP contributi­on doesn’t feel like it moves the dial.

Third, the fees you pay are often obscured by big moves in the market. The difference between paying a fee of one per cent and two per cent over 30 years doesn’t sound like much when the TSX is up or down 15 per cent, and yet it can profoundly impact your retirement.

Fourth, investing is perverse. Just when you think you’ve figured it out, something comes out of left field. It’s not like any other product or service you purchase. When three people tell you to buy a Honda Accord, you can be assured it’s a good car. If three people tell you to buy a stock, you should run for the hills.

And finally, the profession­als you deal with make it sound complicate­d. Yield curve. EBITDA. P/E multiples. Correlatio­ns. The jargon can leave you feeling like you’ll never understand what investing is about.

3.

One step at a time

These barriers to being engaged are by no means insurmount­able. If you want to commit some time to your retirement, here are a few steps to get you started.

Once a year, spread the statements from all your saving and investment accounts out on the table and see what you have.

What is the total?If you break it into three categories — cash and GICs; bonds; and stocks — what does the asset mix look like? How have you done over the last one, five and 10 years?And of course, how much are you paying ?

If you can’t do this, then find someone you trust who will help. A friend. An uncle. An adviser. Or better yet, an independen­t, feefor-service planner.

You should go see your adviser once a year, whether you feel like you need it or not. You’ll learn something every time. Also, take every opportunit­y to attend investment presentati­ons, whether it’s by your provider or the local library. And at every step of the way, ask lots of questions. Get your adviser or manager to clarify what you don’t understand. Tell her what you want to know about. And definitely ask how the stuff she’s talking about will impact the last third of your life.

 ?? ISAAC BREKKEN/GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Your investment portfolio is one of the most important determinan­ts of how you will live the last third of your life, yet people spend more time monitoring daily (or hourly) the NHL pool than their investment­s, writes Tom Bradley.
ISAAC BREKKEN/GETTY IMAGES FILES Your investment portfolio is one of the most important determinan­ts of how you will live the last third of your life, yet people spend more time monitoring daily (or hourly) the NHL pool than their investment­s, writes Tom Bradley.

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