The New Zealand Herald

Keep focus on long game when investing

A roadmap is essential, but if your portfolio veers off path, look to change

- Mark Lister comment Mark Lister is Head of Private Wealth Research at Craigs Investment Partners.

New Year’s resolution­s are all the rage this time of year. While the most popular seem to be health and fitness related, investors could benefit from taking a similar opportunit­y with their portfolios or KiwiSaver arrangemen­ts.

Keep your eye on the long-term

While markets can be highly volatile over the short-term, over longer periods they are actually quite predictabl­e and consistent.

Keeping focused on the long game and ignoring the noise is difficult, but if you can do it, you’re onto a winning strategy.

When it comes to investing fresh capital, enter the market gradually. Avoid the risk of buying at a market peak by dividing your funds into smaller chunks and investing in instalment­s over time (which is the beauty of KiwiSaver).

Learn to view the inevitable declines as opportunit­ies

If you’re close to retirement, or if your investment time horizon is less than five years, it pays to be cautious.

However, longer-term investors (especially those with youth on their side) shouldn’t fear sell-offs or market meltdowns at all.

When you’re in the “accumulati­on” phase of your investment life cycle, these are better than a Boxing Day sale.

Focus on quality, in both equity and fixed income

Stick to the best when it comes to cornerston­e holdings, and only consider investment­s that meet your quality and income requiremen­ts.

There are tens of thousands of shares in the world to choose from, why bother with anything mediocre?

Buying quality is even more important when it comes to fixed income. Don’t put your hard-earned capital at risk in exchange for a slightly higher interest rate.

Invest for income growth

Income growth is the key to successful investing. Portfolios should always generate an income stream, but it’s even more important for that income to be steadily growing over time.

Own a basket of companies that pay sustainabl­e dividends, with the potential to keep growing them.

If you don’t need the additional income, reinvest the dividend payments back into the portfolio and learn why Albert Einstein called compound interest “the eighth wonder of the world”.

Review your holdings, and be willing to make changes

Investing is not a set and forget process. Monitor and review your portfolio and its holdings.

Not too often or you’ll end up tinkering unnecessar­ily, but do a thorough assessment at least once, maybe twice, a year.

You need an investment roadmap to get to your destinatio­n, and if your portfolio has veered off the path, make changes to get it back on track.

Look at your current position to see how it stacks up against your objectives, goals, and risk profile.

Don’t be afraid to sell, even though it’s often harder than buying. That might mean admitting you were wrong about a share or an idea, or it could just mean taking profits in a position that’s worked well but has got out of whack.

Above all else, stay diversifie­d

Some people think you should put all your eggs in one basket, then watch it very closely.

That’s fine if you’ve got a perfectly working crystal ball, but for the rest of us it’s not great advice.

Diversific­ation will protect you from most financial disasters. That means having a good spread across asset classes, regions, sectors and companies.

It also means ensuring you have a portion of your portfolio invested internatio­nally, as insurance against “New Zealand risk”.

 ??  ?? Ronnie and Doreen Xue of QEX Logistics help NZ manufactur­ers sell to Chinese consumers directly.
Ronnie and Doreen Xue of QEX Logistics help NZ manufactur­ers sell to Chinese consumers directly.
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