Most consumers have the idea that a financial planner can give you answers regarding; e.g., whether you will have enough money for retirement or college funding. While financial planners do have suggestions, they cannot truly give you complete answers.
Working with a financial planner can help you to make sure your financial affairs are organized and integrated. It is important to have someone watching your back regarding insurance coverage, logical investments and estate planning. This being said, there are many variables in your financial life that no one has the answer to. You do not know how long you will live, you do not know what the tax laws will be in the future, you do not know what rate to use for inflation, and you do not know what rate of return you will ultimately attain. A financial planner can help you guess on these variables using historic norms. This will give you an idea of whether or not your plans will come to fruition, but by no means is it a guarantee. Additionally, many financial planning projection tools look at the probability of attaining the rate of return that you need to meet your goals; however, these projections do not take into account the potential for massive downturns in just about every asset class, or incredibly long periods of economic stagnation. There are many things that can go wrong, and 2008 was a good example.
With the aforesaid in mind, while your financial planner may have good intentions, you need to understand his limitations and plan accordingly. The following steps, which you can initiate on your own, can assure that you will not run out of money:
Save way more than you “need” to save. The best way to make sure you meet your goals is to plan for a considerably greater goal;
Always keep some gold in your portfolio. If the dollar becomes worthless you will still have some wealth;
No matter what a financial plan says, never put too much of your wealth into one asset class, such as equities, even if they are diversified within that asset class;
Understand that tax laws will change. When you put money into things like qualified plans or other very illiquid vehicles know that you are taking a big risk. Therefore, while traditional financial planning really pushes you to defer, defer, defer, this may not be in your best interest in all cases.
We believe there are many flaws in the accepted wisdom on building wealth, and we will continue to point them out in future articles. For now consider the foregoing points as they apply to your own situation.