Posts Tagged ‘investment vehicle’

Rudd’s Christmas Bonus – The Gift That Keeps on Giving?

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

Here’s how I plan to turn the $1,000 per child that the Rudd Government is giving to my family on 8 December, 2008 into a gift that lasts for life.

For those readers who are either not Australian, or who are not aware of the recently-announced financial assistance the Australian Government is offering to families; here is a brief of what is on offer.

The Australian Government, which happens to be in Surplus (given the amount of debt per capita, I am not sure what this is a Surplus “of”…), announced recently that if you have children and you fall within the “Family Benefits Tax A” bracket, then to help ‘boost’ the economy, the Australian Government is offering families a cash payment of $1,000 per child, to be paid on 8th December 2008.

There is a whole swag of other payments being made right across the country to Age Pensioners, Disability Pensioners, Carers, and others, on the same day. The media had a field day, rejoicing in the announcement, saying that families will be able to spend this on Christmas presents and will boost Christmas sales and the economy. People everywhere are plotting how they will spend the unexpected booty.

Not me! I have bigger ideas than that and will actually be applying the cash handout to remedying – at least within my own family – the underlying cause that’s behind this whole sorry mess in the first place.

That is to say, I will be putting this money to work. I will use it to create more money for my children, which will, in turn, be reinvested to create recurring incomes, from a number of sources.

What’s more, I have found a way to do this in a risk-free environment – outside of the stock market, and outside of the property market – yet which allows me to invest small amounts in carefully selected businesses by purchasing their products and receiving profit-share from sales. More on this in a minute.

First off, I will open a bank account in each child’s name to accept their windfalls and start their Investment/Savings plans for the future.

Of the $1,000 each receives, I will put into action what every Investment book out there tells me to do. Invest 10% of all money received into growing more money.

So, $100 per child will be invested and put to work using the strategies set out in the free book “How To Let Your Money Make More Money Online… While You Are Busy Doing Other Things,” by Taylor Adams.

This has taught me exactly how to use subscriptions to online companies from just $5 per month as profit-generating investments. Money Buddy Alliance (MBA) offers a free service, so I am not paying any money to them. The money I pay is to my own subscription account, in return for which, I receive the product I subscribe to, along with a profit-share in the form of commission income. How cool is that?

$100 will more than cover a 12-month subscription to my children’s first Investment. So I can just pay the annual amount and not even have to think about it for the next 12 months.

All of this I have already had set up in my own name for some time, and know from my own experiences that it works a treat. So I will simply create a subscription in each of the kids’ names, and basically set them up for life.

There is a reinvestment strategy for when income reaches successive levels that will pay for a series of additional investments from profits, one after another. It’s so easy.

MBA just lets me know when my profits are sufficient to add the next investment position. I then take a look at it, and if I like it, I commence reinvesting in that one too. So far I have 8 different investment vehicles at various stages of development, from well established to very new. It’ll be fun teaching the kids how to do this as they grow.

Sometimes I still am amazed that for as little as $5 per month I can set my kids up for life in this way. And anyone can do it.

So what am I going to do with Kevin Rudd’s Christmas bonus – the $1,000 per child ‘windfall’ that the Australian Government has given to my family…??

I will teach my children how to invest just 10% of that money. I will show them how to purchase their “Money Tree seedlings” – an annual subscription to an online gardening club; which costs just $5 per month and pays out 90% of its subscriptions to its members.

This will dovetail very nicely with the gardening that we are teaching them in our own suburban backyard, where they now have a thriving worm farm and lush crops of organic fruits and vegetables.

I will teach them how to set up their online money processor which will collect their commissions, and pay their subscriptions from profits when renewal time comes around next year.

Everything at Money Buddy Alliance is kept so easy and straight forward, it’s just like following the “bouncing ball.”

This is the first step of a program that will teach my children how to invest their Christmas bonus money and put it to work while they are busy being kids; and I can monitor and watch my children’s investments grow, while I get on with being “MUM.”

For a free report called “The $5 poverty Cure,” send an email to Leanne with “$1,000 Family Tax Benefit A” in the Subject line. A detailed report will be sent to your inbox outlining how to start putting YOUR money to work, so that you will be ready to help start your kids’ investments when you receive Kevin Rudd’s Christmas bonus in December 2008.

Leanne Cane
leanne@moneybuddyalliance.com

The Texas Ratio

Sunday, November 2nd, 2008

Did you know there is a ratio by which the default of banks can be predicted? This ratio is being pointed to as the predictor to the collapse of Indy Mac Bank because of its Texas ratio.

This system was developed by Gerard Cassidy and some co-workers at RBC Capital Markets, they conceived that by dividing the value of the lender’s non-performing loans by the sum of its tangible equity capital and loan loss reserves gives a measurable ratio.

While analyzing Texas banks during the early 1980s recession, Cassidy found that banks tended to fail when this ratio reached 100% or higher. There was a similar pattern among New England banks during the recession of the early 1990s.

The Texas ratio for Indy Mac bank was reported as 140% and pointed to as the reason for the failure, yet the same people making these claims fail to mention the banks that have ratios in the 200 to 300% range yet still in business.

Was Indy Mac in trouble? Maybe yes, maybe no, did it help that a New York Senator leaked a letter to the press about his concerns that Indy Mac was in trouble. Why would a New York Senator be concerned about an California bank? In an election year it should not be hard to factor. That letter caused a run on the bank and the attempts of Indy Mac to gain a loan to make themselves more solvent was thwarted by the good senator’s actions.

So do we trust the Texas ratio or is it another Canadian bankers numbers game that really doesn’t take into account the actual banks business and tries to over simplify a way to make predictions in matters that really can’t be measured by a simple ratio.

Bank failures are on the rise and many people feel they can not trust their money with the banks. Remember banking laws are such that your bank does not have to keep but 10% of its assets in reserve. If you run down and withdrawal your savings, CDs, and other investments because of rumors and innuendo of some power hungry politician you’ll be playing right into their arm.

The fact is most banks will not be able to pay you that day if your asking for a significant amount of money, the days of thousands of dollars in bank vaults is a thing of the past. If the withdrawals are greater then 10% of the banks assets because the word leaks out and hundreds of bank customers like you go running down to the bank for their money, the bank will have to borrow the funds to pay you back (if they are able), this will cause their Texas ratio to climb and the sky is falling crowd will feel vindicated their system works. Banks can not liquidate their investments like you can by heading to where they placed their money and ask for it back right now to pay you.

Our banking system is built on trust, we trust the bank will have our money when we go and ask for it back. We trust the bank will pay us interest on the money we invest with it. But banks are a business like any other, run by people. Some smarter some not, do they make mistakes? Of course they do. All that means is you as a consumer must do your due diligence. It is your responsibility to make sure you know where you are parking your money, you are the first line of defense for your money.

Here is what I would recommend. The basic rule for individual accounts is that FDIC insurance covers up to a maximum $100,000 per depositor per bank. One way to guard larger sums is to hold accounts under $100,000 at a few separate banks, remembering that accumulating interest could push an account over the limit jeopardizing the amount above the 100,000.

There are other products, so diversify your money, take a serious look at guaranteed investment vehicles like indexed UL’s or believe it or not real estate. Remember buy low sell high. Now it’s a buyers market and finding great deals is very easy. Return on investment can be significantly higher and much more secure now that prices have fallen. Finding homes in locations where rents are steady and there is an abundance of renters since most have lost their homes, they need to rent. Finding ways that make sense in times like this is tricky but with right guidance and without panicking it should not be a problem for you.

An accomplished business owner, entrepreneur, radio talk show host, developer of super green sustainable homes and a mortgage and real estate expert. Having worked through thousands of financial transactions has given me the expertise to couch people with most types of financial matters. From securing a loan to retirement planning and asset protection. For more information please email me at dean@premiercitizensfinancial.com or visit my website http://www.premiercitizensfinancial.com/home.html

Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) – Relevance in Today’s Market

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

ETFs, otherwise known as “Exchange Traded Funds”, are a fast-growing segment of the Finance and Investment Market which are moving towards supplanting Mutual Funds as preferred means of fund investing.

You probably know most of the ways available to trade the markets… Stocks, Forex, Options, Futures & Commodities, … plenty of trading choices to consider.

But for over a decade now – since the early 90′s, there’s been a group of funds that are now growing rapidly as more investors and traders become aware of their profit potential – that is, ETFs.

In 1996 there were about $16 billion in ETFs… then just over a decade later that number has sky-rocketed to in excess of $600 billion!

An ETF is a fund comprised of a group of stocks, bonds, or other investment vehicles similar to a mutual fund. However, unlike a mutual fund, ETFs trade like stocks allowing a trader to buy and sell during normal exchange trading hours. Hence you can have immediate access to your funds upon selling an ETF position during normal market hours anytime you want.

Whilst ETFs can be generally more cost and tax efficient than mutual funds, a commission cost applies in the same way as it would have when trading stocks. There are no minimum buy requirements or holding period requirements common to many mutual funds. Likewise, you can buy as little as 1 share of an ETF as you would buy 1 share of a stock.

In simple terms, this means you can get the diversification that a fund has to offer and the ability to trade in and out of the fund. This is a big deal, because you can virtually eliminate stock specific risk by trading a basket of stocks within the fund so that if one stock in the fund suddenly drops in price, the negative impact on a position you may have in the fund would be far less than if you had owned a position in the shares of that particular stock.

There are many different types of funds available. In the United States alone there are currently now over 600 funds, with more being added on a daily basis. ETFs include stock sector, country, currency, commodity, bond or other investment objective related funds.

Further, there are funds that have only short positions and are sometimes referred to as “short” funds, or “short ETFs”, which will increase in price as the short positions they hold go down in price.

Some funds are leveraged funds, meaning that when the stocks in their funds go up by say 5%, the fund could go up by 10% and short funds whose stocks go down in price by say 5%, could go down 10%.

ETFs are also a growing investment vehicle in international stock markets as well. A prospectus on each ETF is available and information on the individual holdings of an ETF can be found on Yahoo Finance and other financial related websites.

However, not all ETFs are suitable for trading as many are thinly traded or too volatile to be considered good swing trading vehicles. ETFs in the U.S. are created and maintained by sponsor companies subject to the approval and regulation of the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Success in any chosen field can only be gained by knowledge and practice. Knowledge is best gained from recognised experts in their field.

Nadine Huegel
http://www.squidoo.com/MoneyMarketMastery

No One Knows Who Owns Mortgages in Foreclosure

Friday, October 24th, 2008

One of the most devious aspects of the mortgage industry is how loans are originated, packaged into large deals, sliced up, and sold to investors around the world. All the while, the borrowers are led into believing that the company they are making payments to is the owner of the loan. Nothing could be further from the truth, and it is in the interests of homeowners to find out who really owns their mortgage, especially if they are being sued for foreclosure.

At every step in the process of originating and securitizing mortgages, the potential exists for the banks to violate any number of federal or state laws designed to protect homeowners against predatory lending. If it can be found that the bank has broken any of these consumer protection laws, its ability to proceed with a quick foreclosure is drastically diminished; in fact, it may be better for them at that point to offer a mortgage modification or other solution to avoid a lengthy, expensive legal process.

The originator, servicer, and holder of the mortgage are three entities that are vastly different from each other. While the originator approves the loan and secures the funding (from customer deposits or lines of credit through Wall Street investment firms), the mortgage servicer is the company hired to collect payments and proceed with foreclosure in the event of default. The holder of the mortgage is the eventual owner of the loan, but who this ends up being is usually quite unclear.

Especially with the large-scale securitization of the mortgage industry over the past decade, finding out who actually owns the loan paperwork can be downright impossible. In a typically confusing deal, a large pool of mortgages are originated and immediately sold to a Structured Investment Vehicle (SIV), which is created solely to hold the mortgages and act as a middleman between the servicer and end investors.

Then, the rights to income from these loans are cut up into “tranches” and the tranches are then sold to investors such as pension funds or hedge funds in the form of bonds. The right to collect the payments from the homeowners is given to the servicer, who then forwards the payments to the SIV, at which point the income is divided into the appropriate tranches and sent to investors.

But who actually owns the mortgages that the SIVs hold? Because unless the owner of the loan forecloses on the house once the payments are in default, the company suing the homeowners may have no legal ground to stand on. People can not be sued for defaulting on a debt by just anyone — they only entity that can sue is the one who owns the loan (on its own or through attorneys). When mortgages are sliced up and held in specialized vehicles that do nothing except act as a conduit between the servicing company and the investors, ownership of the loan becomes a little fuzzy.

Back at the mortgage servicer, though, when properties fall behind in payments, it is the servicing company that is expected to proceed with the foreclosure. Even worse, the servicing company may only have received the rights to collect the payment and have no idea who has possession of the original loan paperwork. When they try to sue, if challenged, they may be unable to show the note. Without proving to the courts that they have the note, it is simply impossible for them to sue for foreclosure of the loan they have no ownership interest in.

Homeowners may find that they have no idea who has the right to their payments, who they can negotiate with to stop foreclosure, or who is in possession of their mortgage. Once they begin asking questions to find out this information, they may quickly realize that no one else has the answers, either. But this rarely stops the banks from pursuing foreclosure through the courts, since the banks have so many more resources than the typical borrower. Knowing that this “who owns the note” challenge can not be adequately explained, though, homeowners should begin using it more often against predatory lenders.

Nick writes articles that help homeowners in danger of losing their properties find solutions before they run out of time and options. His site specializes in assisting borrowers in working out modification agreements with their current lenders or finding a new foreclosure lender to get a fresh start with. Visit his site on the web to read more about how foreclosure works and what the best options are for escaping with your home and credit intact: http://www.myforeclosurelender.com/

Foundation For Retirement

Wednesday, October 15th, 2008

What a difference a year makes. People entering retirement early last summer had a strong market to boost their nest eggs and cushion any anxiety over their life transition. On July 19, 2007, the Dow Jones Industrial Average hit a record high, closing above 14,000 for the first time. To the extent that the subprime crisis had even registered, most observers expected the damage to be contained within the housing sector.

The investment outlook has darkened since then, however, especially for those who may not have decades ahead to smooth the effects of volatility. Regardless of how the markets perform, most retirees count on withdrawing income regularly from their nest eggs, while preserving as much of their principal as possible.

On an institutional level, foundations face a similar task. Congress requires them to give away at least 5% of their assets each year; their challenge is to grow principal to keep pace with inflation, so they can meet commitments to grantees and cover operating expenses. It’s like retirement… in perpetuity. “The problems of the retired investor and of the endowed institution are very closely related,” says Laurence Siegel, director of research in the investment division of the Ford Foundation. “Both seek to produce an income stream that grows with inflation.”

You don’t need to invest your clients’ nest eggs exactly like the Rockefeller or Ford Foundations-to say nothing of Harvard or Yale. In fact, most investors can’t act like Harvard or Yale, despite the books and articles that espouse to teach how-they just don’t have enough money. But foundations and endowments can teach advisors strategies for constructing and maintaining retirement income portfolios. Here’s a look at how.

All-Important Allocation

Retirement income planning didn’t even exist a couple of generations ago. Through the mid-20th century, most people didn’t have a decades-long retirement, for the simple reason that life expectancies were shorter. People stopped working, lived a few years on Social Security and then died. Later on, in the 1980s, retirees could pack their portfolios with double-digit-yielding Treasury bonds and bank certificates of deposit and live comfortably off that income. During the same decade, as inflation cooled, a bull market began that persisted for the rest of the century.

Today, the picture is decidedly more complex. People are living longer than ever. The life insurance industry has adopted new actuarial tables reflecting this: As of January 1, 2009, all policies must be issued with rates that extend through age 121, replacing tables that end at age 100. And the markets are less friendly. Market watchers predict that stocks may languish for years in a range-bound market that provides none of the oomph of the bull market that ended in 2000.

Meanwhile, people’s spending needs haven’t changed-if anything, they’ve risen, as healthcare costs have exceeded inflation-and inflationary pressures have mounted. Yet 30-year Treasury bond yields hover under 4.50%.

Recent research reinforces the importance of asset allocation in retirement as one of the safest, most efficient ways to meet long-term portfolio needs today. Because of compounding, more than half of every dollar that’s withdrawn from a defined contribution plan comprises investment returns generated after retirement, according to a study conducted by Russell Investments and released last month. The study looked at a prototypical 25-year-long retirement of a 65-year-old who dies at age 90. Out of each dollar the retiree withdrew from a defined contribution plan, 10 cents came from contributions made to the plan while working, 30 cents came from investment returns generated prior to retirement, and a full 60 cents came from investment returns generated after retirement. “The pool of assets is so much bigger after retirement,” says Bob Collie, director of investment strategy for Russell. Post-retirement investment returns account for an outsize portion of each dollar withdrawn from a defined contribution plan simply because the asset pool is larger in retirement, and because people’s longer lives are putting their money to work over longer horizons than before.

Today’s long life expectancies mean that an overly conservative asset allocation won’t go the distance for most retirees. Indeed, advisors recognize that only their wealthiest clients can derive a secure retirement from, say, bond ladders. “You can’t do it with bonds alone, because that would erode the assets,” says Thyra Zerhusen, manager of the $1 billion Aston/Optimum Mid Cap Fund and of a New York-based foundation’s portfolio, which she declined to name and which she runs the same way as her mutual fund. When Zerhusen began managing the foundation’s portfolio, it had roughly 70% of its assets in bonds and the rest in stocks. This breakdown mirrors the traditional retirement portfolio. But longer life expectancies, lower bond yields and a potentially stagnating stock market have zapped the effectiveness of this allocation. Zerhusen persuaded the foundation’s finance committee to adopt the inverse allocation, and today the portfolio is roughly 70% stocks and 30% high-quality bonds.

Alpha Alternatives

The foundation portfolio Zerhusen manages is unusual in that it doesn’t have an allocation to alternative investments. “We only buy what we understand,” Zerhusen says. Her expertise in identifying undervalued and misunderstood mid-cap stocks has helped the foundation meet its annual operating goals, which involve withdrawals of 8% to 10% per year, without sacrificing principal.

Most large foundations and endowments (foundations are mandated to give away a minimum of 5% of their assets per year, while endowments are not) have at least a quarter of their assets in investments outside of traditional, long-only publicly traded equities and bonds, Siegel says. “Alternative investments are, in principle, a more efficient way of generating alpha (if the manager has skill) than traditional, long-only investments,” he writes in an email message. “This is because short selling, the ability to leverage and use derivatives, the ability to lock up funds for long periods of time, and other features of alternatives each contribute in various ways to portfolio efficiency (the expected return per unit of risk taken).”

The Harvard and Yale endowments have about 50% of their portfolios in alternatives such as private equity, hedge funds, real estate and commodities, according to Frontier Capital Management, a Boston-based investment management firm. At $34.6 billion and $22.5 billion, respectively (as of the end of fiscal year 2007), Harvard and Yale’s endowments could weather any liquidity challenges that this high alternative allocation presents. But less-capitalized funds and private foundations without access to new money from alumni or other contributors (and whose circumstances are more analagous to those of retirees) could face trouble in a bear market if they allocate such a high percentage to alternatives, Siegel says. Margin calls or forward commitments on private equity can force the selling of assets, and there are fewer liquid assets to choose from if a large chunk of the portfolio is in real assets. Similarly, your clients will have less flexibility in their income withdrawals if they have too much allocated to real assets.

Some advisors have embraced the use of alternatives. “In portfolio design, the ultimate goal is to have investments that are not correlated,” says Greg Plechner, principal and senior wealth manager at Greenbaum and Orecchio, a fee-only advisory firm in Old Tappan, N.J. “With alternative investments, you’re able to attain that.” Greenbaum and Orecchio allocates an average of between 15% and 20% of their clients’ portfolios to alternatives. Retired clients have a slightly smaller allocation to alternative investments, he notes, since their fixed-income portion is higher.

The firm’s clients with more than $1.5 million to invest have access to private investment partnerships, while those with less than $1.5 million can access similar strategies through exchange-traded funds and notes, and institutional share mutual funds. For example, the firm uses PIMCO CommodityRealReturn Institutional, Vanguard Energy ETF, and Rydex Managed Futures Fund for market-neutral exposure.

Choosing private equity and hedge fund opportunities requires considerably more due diligence than does selecting investments sold on an exchange, as the former have far fewer reporting requirements. Greenbaum and Orecchio employs three full-time professionals whose sole job is to evaluate private investments and do the related legal work.

Endowment Products for the Rest of Us

Over the past year, the financial services industry has introduced new products to help consumers generate retirement income and to capitalize on the wave of retiring baby boomers. Endowments inspired the design of at least one of the new retirement income mutual funds on the market: The Vanguard Managed Payout Funds, launched in early May. The three funds of funds target payout rates of 3%, 5% and 7%, respectively, while maintaining capital, and in this approach function something like a university endowment, Vanguard executives say. The underlying funds are Vanguard stock and bond funds, and other investments, including REIT and TIPs (inflation-protected Treasury bonds) funds and commodity-linked investments.

Vanguard’s approach contrasts with that of Fidelity Investments, whose new payout mutual funds are designed to liquidate an investor’s principal by a target date. Vanguard chose its approach because “there was a sense generally that there’s a strong desire among retired clients to preserve their capital in liquid form for the duration,” says John Ameriks, a Vanguard principal and economist. Vanguard’s research among the company’s mutual fund shareholders reveals that many older people continue to save in retirement. “It’s very hard for people to turn on a dime in retirement,” Ameriks says. “They’ve been saving their whole lives.” In other words, even if your clients aren’t saving enough for retirement, their saving habits are nonetheless ingrained.

According to the Vanguard funds’ prospectus, the 3% payout fund is expected to appeal to investors who want to see their capital and payouts increase over time and seek only a modest current payout from their assets; the 7% payout fund, on the other hand, is expected to appeal to those who need a greater payout to satisfy immediate spending needs. While the payments and capital on the 7% fund are not expected to keep pace with inflation, Vanguard will seek to preserve the fund’s original value. The 5% fund is designed to provide long-term inflation protection and capital preservation. The funds could function as the investment vehicle of a small endowment, and in fact, Vanguard has fielded a few inquiries from such institutions, Ameriks says.

The funds’ payout rates are targets, not guarantees. “These products are not annuities,” which offer a guaranteed income stream for life, Ameriks notes. “There are positives and negatives to that.” The company believes that positives, such as liquidity and flexibility, outweigh the lack of a guarantee. Indeed, annuities have failed to gain widespread acceptance in the marketplace largely because consumers are loath to relinquish access to their principal.

But Then Again…

As much as retirees and foundations share similar challenges, there are some noteworthy differences between the two. For starters, individuals die. No one needs to produce income in perpetuity, as foundations endeavor to do. Retirees need to plan for at least 30 years in retirement, and annuities can insure they won’t outlive their assets. Amid the general unpopularity of these insurance products, advisors and their clients often overlook the benefits provided by risk pooling. “Annuities produce a much higher income than bonds or TIPs because the people who die help pay for those who survive,” Siegel explains in his email. In fact, you need 25% to 40% less capital to provide for yourself in retirement using risk pooling than you would structuring an investment portfolio on your own, according to a study by David F. Babbel and Craig B. Merrill of the Wharton Financial Institutions Center, co-sponsored by New York Life.

Annuity companies have introduced cash refund options that have increased their products’ popularity. This popular feature insures that investors’ heirs will receive money back after they die, yet it eats into the benefits of risk pooling. A 65-year-old male would receive 8% less income and a 75-year-old man 13% less from an immediate annuity with a cash refund than he would from one without, says Mike Gallo, senior vice president for retirement income at New York Life.

Another approach is to deconstruct the traditional annuity by layering a low-cost insurance guarantee on top of a separately managed account. In March, Pershing LLC launched such a hybrid retirement income product, which pairs a managed account solution with a lifetime income guarantee offered by The Phoenix Companies. The product, known as Lockwood Investment Strategies Longevity Income Solutions, or LIS2 for short, will ensure that investors won’t outlive their assets, says Len Reinhart, the former president of Lockwood who worked on the product design and now consults for Pershing Managed Account Solutions.

LIS2 features a 5% annual payout, after fees, which begins when an investor is 65 years old. The 5% rate is applied to the initial investment for a fixed dollar amount that stays the same each year. For example, an investor who puts $1 million into the product would get $50,000 each year for the rest of his or her life. The Phoenix Companies buys 10-year puts as hedges for the guarantee, which assures consumers of their fixed payout regardless of the underlying funds’ performance.

This structure will ensure that investors don’t become too conservatively invested in retirement, Reinhart says. “The whole point is for the client to be in an aggressive growth strategy,” he says. In other words, ensured of a guaranteed income stream through LIS2, retirees can invest the rest of their portfolios more aggressively. This argument is frequently applied to annuities as well.

Another major difference between retirees and foundations lies in their tax treatment. Private foundations pay an excise tax of 1% to 2% on investment income and realized capitalized gains, and endowments pay nothing. Needless to say, individuals don’t enjoy such favorable treatment at the hands of the Internal Revenue Service.

Furthermore, many retirement income strategies are not designed for their tax efficiency. For example, investors in Vanguard’s Managed Payout Funds receive a 1099 tax form each year stating how their monthly payments were generated for the previous year, whether by a combination of income, capital gains or a return of capital. This complex tax treatment means investors would benefit from holding these funds in a tax-advantaged account. If Lockwood’s LIS2 product is able to generate income payments through income or capital gains, then investors will be taxed at the 15% capital gains rate, Reinhart says. But if the account balance plunges and the insurance company must make the payments, the investor will be taxed at regular income rates. Investors who open an IRA account managed by Lockwood Capital Management and hold the LIS2 offering inside it would enjoy tax-deferred treatment on the income.

Advisors at Greenbaum and Orecchio actively work to minimize their clients’ tax burdens. If a client needs income, the firm uses iRebal rebalancing software to quickly determine how to use principal, income and rebalancing proceeds to generate the income in the most tax-efficient way, Plechner says. Clients with more than $1.5 million to invest may choose the firm’s ETF and mutual fund-based alternative investment strategy for tax purposes, he notes. Clients with alternative investments including hedge funds, private equity, venture capital and real estate receive a K-1 tax form that state the investor’s share of the partnership’s taxable income. The forms often come late, requiring clients to file an extension on their taxes, Plechner says, a hassle some wish to avoid.

Despite the most careful planning, many institutions and individuals will fail to meet their income goals at some point. Following a year of poor returns, a foundation can simply cut the size of its grants. Your clients’ bills, however, won’t disappear in a bear market. When clients fail to meet their income goals, they can cut their spending or increase their equity allocation, says Deena Katz, chairman of Evensky & Katz in Coral Gables, Fla. The choice, as her partner Harold Evensky puts it, is clear: “Do you want to eat less well, or sleep less well at night?”

For more information, visit our website at http://www.financial-planning.com — the leading resource for the informed independent advisor.