Knowing the 6 Fundamental Constraints Key to Achieving Investment Success


by Stanley Chua - Date: 2007-04-30 - Word Count: 459 Share This!

There are several constraints that may work against your desire to build up a healthy nest egg. These are all challenges of having money. Unfortunately, many of them are unavoidable… but that doesn't mean that they're not manageable. The best thing to do is know that they exist and develop strategies to help you over come them.

The constraints you'll face by having an investment portfolio (and by not having one!) include:

Risk/Return. This relationship is the most important consideration… that's why we've been talking about it so much. How much risk are you willing to accept to get a certain return?

Time horizon. When do you want to have your goals accomplished? If you are retiring next week and you're investing your first dollar today… you've got a very short time horizon. If you're just entering the workforce and want to save for retirement, you've got some time ahead of you. These factors will help determine the risk level of your investment.

Liquidity. Liquidity in a portfolio is cash or the ability to convert something to cash almost immediately. Typically, cash or short-term CDs (less than a year) are considered liquid. This is a consideration you'll have to make. When building a portfolio, you'll want to maintain some liquid assets in order to act on opportunities as they arise, or to draw from when you need it.

Taxation. While taxation is not a primary issue in portfolio management, it is an issue that you'll want to consider when you make investing decisions.

Legal requirements. Your portfolio needs to take into consideration any legal requirements. If, for example, you own a certain percentage of stock, or you are the director of a company and plan to trade your company's stock in your portfolio, you'll need to carefully weigh each decision in light of the Security Exchange Commission's regulations. Your broker, lawyer, and accountant should play a part in this decision-making process.

Emotional factors. More than just knowing your dreams and goals, though, you also need to know what lets you sleep at night. You need to determine what level of risk you're willing to accept in order to see your rewards fulfilled in your lifetime. But you always need to balance that with your ability to enjoy life without worrying about your investments. This is the quality-of-life and peace-of-mind that your investments should bring to you. We call it, "sleep insurance."

Don't forget: investing for tomorrow is also investing for today. That means that you're putting money away for tomorrow but if it has a negative impact on today, it's not worth it. Losing sleep over the high risk investments is one example. Another example might be passionately pursing your goal of investing so aggressively that you cannot afford today's bills.

May the Windfall be with You !!

Related Tags: portfolio, portfolio management, investment portfolio management, active portfolio management, portfolio management resource, portfolio management solution, portfolio risk management, portfolio management theory, portfolio management tips

Stanley Chua is an investment optimizer and has been providing value-adding advisory in international business innovations, financial planning and portfolio management for the past 10 years.Looking to find out more how you can massively profit from managing your personal portfolio ? You can instantly receive his popular free mini-ecourse on "Portfolio Management and Asset Assessment", available at => http://www.portfoliomanagementguide.com Your Article Search Directory : Find in Articles

© The article above is copyrighted by it's author. You're allowed to distribute this work according to the Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs license.
 

Recent articles in this category:



Most viewed articles in this category: