Glossary – Asset Management
and Retirement Planning Terms
Monitoring
At Wharton Wealth Planning, we carefully design portfolios to strike a balance between risk and return, aligned with our clients’ specific financial objectives. Once a portfolio is constructed, we will provide continuous supervision of the portfolio and may periodically rebalance or adjust client accounts under our management as changes in market conditions and client circumstances…
Detailed Reporting
We prioritize efficiency and convenience for our clients. Our goal is to streamline and simplify your financial life and investment accounts. We have software and tools to consolidate reporting to provide an easily accessible overview of your financial performance and status. Clients receive direct custodian reporting containing a description of all transactions and all account…
Beneficiary Designations
One of the easiest ways to make sure your assets go to the people you intend is to list them as beneficiaries. We recommend reviewing all account beneficiaries and contingent beneficiaries. These are important as your will or trust does not necessarily govern how your investment accounts will be distributed. If you die without naming…
Cost-Effectiveness
This involves costs associated with being a shareholder of a mutual fund, exchange-traded fund (“ETF”), closed end fund, or other investment that is managed by a third-party. For example, mutual fund costs can include: management fees, sales loads, and redemption fees. As an independent fee-only fiduciary financial advisor, we have a tremendous advantage in helping…
Risk-Reward
This involves understanding the valuation and return potential of an investment. There are many good businesses to invest in but if their stocks are priced too high they may not make good investments.
Tax Efficiency
Our financial advisor team may use tax reduction strategies that include: tax loss harvesting, asset location (by account type), mutual fund turnover ratio analysis, distribution strategies, long term capital gains tax bracket analysis, roth conversions, and managing required minimum distributions. Our objective is to ensure that our clients’ investments are optimized while reducing their overall…
Rebalancing
Portfolio rebalancing is a reallocation of the weight of portfolio assets and is intended to systematically help sell high-priced asset classes for low-priced asset classes. It includes buying and selling existing assets either fully or partially from time to time to maintain the desired level of return and diversification. Rebalancing can be industry or sector-specific…
Alternative Investments
Alternative investments are all assets outside the traditional portfolio mix of stocks, bonds, mutual funds, exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and cash. These investments have advantages and disadvantages that are important to analyze and understand. These kinds of investments differ from traditional investment types because they aren’t easily sold or converted into cash. It’s also common for…
Concentrated Positions
A single holding that makes up more than 5% to 10% of your portfolio can create risk because if that stock (or the respective sector that stock is in) experiences a significant decline, your portfolio may suffer much greater volatility than if you held a diversified asset mix. A disproportionately large single stock holding can…
Diversification
The goal of diversification is to improve the probability of success for your investments, regardless of economic and market conditions. Choosing the right mix of investments and then periodically rebalancing and monitoring your choices can make a big difference in your outcome. We believe that you should have a diversified mix of stocks, bonds, and…