Over their lifecycles, individuals must rely increasingly upon assets to replace earned income. Without the good fortune of receiving substantial inheritance and gifts or winning the lottery, a person can only invest if he or she saves. When saving to fund an investment program, people must live within both their current and future economic means.
A positive difference between current income and expenditures usually represents intentional expenditure control and allows for deferred consumption. Personal savings will tend to increase with conscious planning and better expenditure decision-making. Better expenditure control results from a conscious decision at the point of each purchase about whether it fulfills a true need or affordable desire versus being just a passing fancy.
Economists call the potential of each person to earn money, pay current expenses, and still set aside savings as their “human capital.” For most people, their personal human capital is all they have financially, until they convert some of it into more durable investment assets.
Income volatility has increased significantly at all income levels in recent decades and people must exercise increased discipline to restrain spending in a fluctuating income environment. The passage of time steadily diminishes total personal earning potential and human capital. Furthermore, illness and injury can randomly slash the value of one’s potential human capital, disrupting lives, and permanently altering the best-laid financial plans.
Therefore, the first thing an individual must get right is his financial savings program. To ensure that an individual’s personal savings rate is high enough to build up an adequate asset base, he must understand, track, and project his cash flows. He cannot know the adequacy of his savings and progress toward his investment goals without measuring his current progress and comparing it to projections of his future needs.
Concerning plans, any comprehensive cash flow projection must also include planned future cash requirements for living expenses and special requirements, such as a down payment on a house, college expenses, retirement, charitable giving, and estate bequests. Projected personal financial requirements provide the baseline expenditure plan over which an investor can overlay several likely income and investment return/volatility scenarios to test the adequacy of his current savings and investment plans for his lifetime.
Selecting a Financial Advisor:
Payment of Financial Advisors:
Regulation of Financial Advisors: