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Peter Locke

Saving Automation 101: Routine, habitual, saving

At the foundation of any planning conversation is saving and saving automation can help make that easier and promote good money habits. Those that start saving early and do it throughout their entire working days are setting themselves up for a life without being employed. If you want to work until you pass away you almost can but I sure don’t. In this article I will share the best savings techniques I’ve seen and how the millionaires I work with got to where they are. Surprise, it’s not because they picked the next Apple. Although you can swing for the fence and be the next Barry Bonds with a great stock pick, you could also be the next Clint Hartung and make the wrong pick and lose it all. To us, risk is worth taking at the right times and with the right amount. But those that stay wealthy develop strong habits early. There’s a reason that over 60% of NFL and NBA players are bankrupt or under financial stress within 5 years of leaving their sport. Making a lot of money doesn’t necessarily correlate with long term wealth. So what should you be doing now for it to be habitual?  Here is my trick to saving: Automation Trick one is automating your savings. There is a reason why people’s biggest investments are their home and then their 401k. Take your income and give yourself a goal. If you make less than $100,000 try to save 15%. If you make more than $100,000 save 20%-30%. Then whatever is left over is your spending for expenses. The formula is not Income-Expense=Savings. Most companies allow you to automatically take money out of your paycheck (go into your payroll system) and have it go into an investment account that is set up to automatically invest for you. If you have to invest it yourself then you’re creating a step for yourself and therefore creating an obstacle which is what makes automating your savings so valuable. Once you’ve established how much you save then it’s a matter of where to save. The younger you’re the better it is to save in a Roth IRA and a regular brokerage account. But any savings vehicle is great! If you’re fortunate enough to have an employer that gives you a 401(k) match, meaning they will give you free money to participate in the 401(k) plan then max that out. If you have a family, make sure you have a minimum of 3 months of expenses in cash saved to support everyone if you lose your job. If you’re the primary breadwinner then have 6 months saved. After you have that saved in a savings account, then look to contribute to your 401(k). In 2020 you can save up to $19,500 if you’re under the age of 50 and $26,500 if you’re older than 50. If you’re in a lower tax bracket, look to save in a Roth 401(k) as this money will grow tax free (read Investing 101). If you’re looking to have a diverse group of accounts you can put half into your Traditional 401(k) and half into your Roth 401(k) as this will prepare you for whatever the tax situation may be in the future. I like maxing out my 401(k) then anything extra goes to a joint account that is invested in stocks and ETFs. Whatever the savings vehicle, especially when you’re young will do amazing things for you. The main reason why we like the Roth 401(k) over the other accounts is because you won’t be tempted to use it, it grows tax free, and with good investments you can hopefully stop working sooner.  Don’t let the politics or the status of the global economy get in the way of savings. It doesn’t matter where the world is when you automate your savings. All that matters is that you’re dollar cost averaging over time (lowering the overall cost basis of your investment) regardless of where the markets are. If they’re high don’t try to time the market. If they’re low then try to adjust your spending down and increase your savings during that time as you’re getting great discounts that only present themselves a couple of times per year on average. To review, saving as much as possible early is made possible through automation. Accumulating good debt (student loan, mortgage, starting a business, etc) is fine but stay away from erosive debt (credit card, expensive cars, etc). Automate your savings and investments. Income-savings=expenses. 

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Articles
Kevin Taylor

Is a U.S. Housing Market Crash Inevitable?

It is almost inevitable that housing correction is coming. Most of the upswing nationally in housing prices is caused by low borrowing rates. A mortgage payment is mostly made up of three different columns 1) Principle 2) Interest 3) Other required costs of homeownership like insurance and taxes. The bulk of the payment comes from the first two.  Banks start the process by determining your “ability-to-repay” the debt. This comes to a given amount that they assume borrowers can repay, let’s say this number is $100 a month. This means you are approved if Principle, Interest, and Other Costs can come to less than $100 a month. So all of the “costs” combined need to stay below that mark, a zero-sum figure. Now as interest rates were low, the amount of the interest portion of the loan was low. Meaning more money could be freed up for the principal portion. And that principal portion is the rate at which the loan is being repaid. So if over a 360 payment loan $75 on average is getting paid in principle, the loan can retire $25,200 in debt. So the borrower can offer $25,200 for a home with faith from the bank that they will be able to repay. Thus, the buyer in the real estate auction can spend $25,200 max (and they will spend all of it).  Now if that same borrower, who can afford $100 a month in mortgage payments has to borrow in an interest rate environment that is 10% more costly than before, a rate change of borrowing from 2% to 2.2% the borrower will need to borrow from the principal repayment part of the pie. That means that the average payment they can afford to make comes down, and they will only be able to offer $21,600 when making an offer on the house. This is 14% less, after a 10% move up in borrowing costs.  This is where it will get interesting.  The “rates” that you may have heard are rising, are the percentages at which banks borrow. That money has cost banks 0.25%, since 2020. It’s made spending during the pandemic easier and lowered the cost of capital risk for banks in order to keep the money flowing. So, a bank borrowing at .25% or close to it can lend a 30-year mortgage at really low rates. Hence the sub 3% and 2% mortgage rates we saw in the last 2 years and on the heels of the 2009-2016 recovery cycle.   The by-product of this low-interest rate, high spending environment is inflation (the rising costs of goods and services). So if the cost to the bank to repay these loans increases, the cost for borrowers increases at a faster rate. So the rate of change is more than the 10% increase we discussed above. A borrower seeing their interest rate go from 2.2% to 4.4% (while still historically low) will see their capacity for repayment severely impacted. By just returning to normal lending rates the portion a borrower can repay is reduced. The borrower who could afford a $100 a month payment, now sees his buying power reduced to $9,000 over the course of the 360 mortgage payments in a 30-year mortgage. The borrower now has 41% of the buying capacity by doubling the borrowing rate, this change in the amount of borrowed capital buyers brought into the house buying equation, means that the bid sizes will invariably contract. Bringing the prices that a home clears the market down. Knock-on-effects: Inflation In the above scenario, the ignored part of the pie is the “Other.” This is mostly tax and insurance, but also includes power, water, HOA’s, and other required expenses for the ownership of a home. These costs are also climbing, and they too will erode the buying power of borrowers. This has been a largely understood space for some time, but as inflation continues to outpace wages, this will have a growing negative effect on the buyer’s ability to borrow. This is simply shifting payments from principle into insurance. What is missing from the “crash” in ‘08?: Leverage So just understanding that buyers are going to lose buying capacity in a given market doesn’t result in a crash, it just means that home prices will contract. What is still missing in this equation is selling pressures.  The housing crisis wasn’t just the rising cost of home prices, it was also the deterioration of credit quality borrowers, and excess leverage. As the housing market of the early 2000s looks eerily similar in growth, an important distinction is made between the two when we look at the leverage ratio of borrowers. This is a result of the bad actors in the housing crisis leveraging one house with another, and another, and another. This allowed the rampant contagion of home selling. One default in the leverage on leverage structure meant that a single default meant 2 or more defaults as a result. The low credit quality and poor borrowing strategies (adjustable rate mortgages, and subprime lending) meant that all borrowing became interconnected. Now while the current system has become somewhat lax on the underwriting standards again, the use of adjustable mortgages and equity requirements for vacation and second homes remains largely intact. Limiting the contagion of contraction to single borrowers. What is missing from the “crash” in ‘08?: Employment Employment is well below 4% and that is encouraging. That means that there is plenty of demand for workers and that if a borrower is qualified when they are employed, the risk of losing that employment is at its lowest point ever. Broadly speaking this means that it’s worth keeping an eye on, but will limit the amount of forced selling that could trigger a true “crash”. 

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Articles
Peter Locke

Sudden Wealth Planning

For those that are thinking about passing wealth on, they must think about how they want that wealth to be spent. For the people that are inheriting wealth, you may have other ideas in mind.  Both people have their own goals and understanding them prior to the actual event happening is important to plan for. By Peter Locke, CFP® In our podcasts and our articles, we speak at length about the three Ps.  And no, we’re not referring to the PPP loans. We’re talking about defining the People that help you, the Process to get you to your goals, and Policies you implement to hold you accountable along the way. Luckily, with everything we do at InSight, we still hold true to our three Ps. People – an heir should surround themselves with people that can help them manage this scenario. By having a professional advisor or consultant, an heir can ensure that they act responsibly with that money in order to make the best decisions possible. Process – When an heir receives money, what happens next.  What are your immediate actionable steps you will take when you receive a lump sum of money or assets. Implement the right procedures prior to the inheritance so you make good decisions. Policy – heirs need to hold themselves accountable. Defining what that looks like can mean different things to different people but overall how will you make sure you do what you said you would do when this happens.  By surrounding yourself with the right people and processes you’ve taken the first two steps now it’s time to implement and monitor. By maintaining your focus on the three Ps, you can stay in line with your values and long term goals instead of getting distracted with what you could buy or do with the inheritance. There is a reason why the majority of people that win the lottery or make a lot of money in sports early run out of money quickly and have nothing to show for it. You may think it won’t happen to you but those are famous last words. With these three Ps, your likelihood of running into problems goes down drastically. The biggest fear parents should have is how unstructured wealth transfers can have damaging effects on heirs and this is due to poor communication and trust. Parents should be preparing heirs about their relationship with money and what it means to them to educate them about best practices and things to stay away from. To teach heirs from an early age about your beliefs about money and good financial practices you can instill generational knowledge to pass down. This is a great time to bring on a third party professional to educate you and your family about how to have these conversations even when you think maturity is an issue. Waiting until you’re (the donor) older leads to quicker conversations instead of good healthy conversations that last over a long time that become part of our children’s subconscious thoughts which leads to better financial decisions. At InSight, we take teaching you how to talk to your children at an early age very seriously. These early and frequent conversations lead to our clients having the confidence to talk to their children about good money habits so that when they’re older they can rest in peace knowing their heirs have a strong foundation to lean on when they inevitably inherit your wealth. If you’re an heir and you have a lot of debt and little savings, paying off your debt may seem like a good idea but academically speaking might not be your best option for two reasons. One, it may give you a false sense of accomplishment that you paid off your debt by living within your means and staying disciplined.  Two, if your interest on your debt is very low then keeping your debt and making minimum payments may be a better long term option. Also, buying that new car or set of golf clubs because they’re really nice won’t give you true happiness. It instead may make you more unhappy because it doesn’t represent your values, it represents what you think other people care about. I have seen first hand how money affects your ability to make rational decisions, especially a sudden increase in wealth. Although the immediate dopamine hit you’ll get from a quick material purchase will be great, you’ll soon realize that you’re now in possession of an erosive debt instead of an accretive debt and your dopamine high will fade away as you pour money into trying to find the next thing. At Insight, we’re your people, we help design the processes for your plan and your heirs plan, and we create the policies to keep you moving in the right direction. For example, parents may be concerned with the negative effects an inheritance could have on their children’s drive and ambition to get ahead, desire for material things, relationship with money, relationships with friends and partners, or just spending beyond their means. With our InSight-full® plan, you and your family get the type of help that you need to make sure your money is used the way you want it to and is protected as much as possible.

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