Taking Your Annual Financial Pulse
Is it time for your annual financial checkup? Our expert shows you why you need one and what you should be looking for.
By Debra Neiman
| June 19, 2006
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/money/personalfinance/personalfinancecolumnistdebraneiman/article159532.html
An annual financial checkup is the most important part of the
financial planning process. Yet many people downplay its
significance.
This annual review is an opportunity for you and your financial
planner to examine your financial planning action steps, or
"to do" list, and measure the progress you're making
toward your goals. It's also a time to incorporate any new life
changes that have occurred during the past year--the birth of a
child, the death of a loved one, a new marriage, a business startup
or expansion, or even a major purchase--into your financial plan to
help you chart a new course, if needed, or to further affirm that
you're on the right track. Remember, your life is dynamic, not
static, and your financial plan should be as well.
During your annual review, you and your planner will want to
revisit the building blocks of your financial plan and review your
resources, goals and priorities to see what's changed. This act
of monitoring and benchmarking is beneficial because you'll get
an opportunity to step back from your busy life, review your goals,
and confirm that your priorities remain the same. And you and your
planners get the chance to reconnect to affirm that you--and your
planner--are taking the right steps toward goal achievement or to
refocus so that you don't get too far off track.
In most cases, your first step will be to examine your
short-term goals. Here, your planner can recommend strategies that
should be considered for time-sensitive objectives. For instance,
if you plan to purchase a home sooner rather than later, your
planner might suggest putting more aside for the down payment and
decreasing what you're putting into your children's college
fund just until you buy the house. Or the birth of a child may be
the catalyst for your planner to recommend purchasing additional
life insurance.
Your planner may also use this time to educate you about new
research that either confirms the rationale behind your current
financial plan or provides a basis to alter your short-term or
long-term strategies. For instance, new research that shows the
costs of nursing homes or health care during your retirement years
will escalate wouldn't change your goal of "secure, long
term retirement," but it could change the strategy necessary
to achieve that goal.
Your planners should also discuss regulatory and other changes
that could either adversely or positively affect your financial
plan. The new Medicare Part D plan, for instance, could prove
useful to some clients. If recent changes will negatively affect
you, such as recent changes in the federal estate tax laws, then
you and your planner can devise possible plans of actions to get
you on a better path.
You and your financial planners may also want to measure the
performance of your investment portfolio as part of the annual
review. Typically, performance should be measured against several
benchmarks, the most important of which is your own personal goals.
For instance, if you and your planner had established that your
portfolio should grow by 5 percent annually before taxes, then your
portfolio performance should be measured against that yardstick.
It's also important that your portfolio be measured against
standard benchmarks as a point of reference. Meeting personal
investment goals is far more important than over- or
under-performing the Standard & Poor's 500 Index.
Much like your annual medical exam, an annual financial review
isn't something to put off. You need to take the time to
examine your financial and life goals in order to determine that
you're on course to attain these goals. It's also a chance
to review changes that have occurred and begin to anticipate
changes that may occur in the future. And it provides the
opportunity to implement any new plan of action that's been
developed in light of changing situations or goals. Don't put
off your review any longer--your financial health could suffer
because of your neglect.
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