Trusting the numbers
Christine Carrillo
As the stock market continues to take drastic dives and steep
inclines, brokerages in Newport-Mesa are working hard to reassure
clients that the stock market remains an excellent avenue for them to
reach their financial goals.
As a result, their jobs are often as much about earning trust as
crunching numbers.
With clients here generally focusing on similar long-term goals,
like college funding and retirement, investment specialists have
tailored their advice and often face familiar questions.
“It’s important that people don’t follow the herd, as we call it,”
said Jeffrey Paulson, Charles Schwab vice president and Newport Beach
branch manager. “Two years ago when the market was at its high it was
‘buy, buy, buy,’ and now two years later when the market is at or
near it’s low period it’s ‘sell, sell, sell.’ People just tend to buy
high and sell low, which is kind of the opposite of what we help
people to do.”
To the untrained or uneducated investor’s eye, the constant
reports of both high and, more frequently these days, low indexes can
appear to be detrimental. However, most financial consultants are
trying to relay to their clients that the everyday volatility of the
market will not directly impact a well diversified and long-term
planning investor.
“We believe that if you properly diversify your portfolio, than no
matter where the world is turning, one way or another, you’re always
winning in some category,” said Sanford Coggins, Merrill Lynch vice
president and senior financial consultant. “The objective is to stay
in the market, ride it through and just have a professional there to
coach you through it.”
Coggins added that the balance diversification provides enables
investors to wade through the rough waters by not having to worry
about being knocked down by drastic change.
That comes, however, with an investor placing trust in a financial
advisor, Coggins said.
Trust has become a major concern of investors. In addition to
their concerns about the volatility of the market, many local
investors have also expressed trepidation about the increasing news
regarding corporate ethics and national governing surfaces.
“Economically we’re looking very strong, but the investors
perception is that they can’t trust the numbers; they can’t trust
corporate America; they can’t trust the current political party,”
Coggins said. “It’s really put a fracture in their confidence and as
a result the people that were sitting on the sidelines are pulling
out, a combination of fear and being unfamiliar with a long enough
history to know that these types of things happen.”
In looking back throughout history when the market and the
national economy struggled during times of duress, like that of Pearl
Harbor or the fall of the Berlin Wall, Coggins believes that those
moments of uncertainty, many of which led to an incline within the
market, should provide some assurance to nervous investors currently
in the market.
“My reality for clients is that the goal is not about whether A,
B, C or X, Y, Z, makes money today,” Coggins said. “The goal is to
get you from point A to point B.”
Generally, the process of establishing a portfolio for a
prospective investors is based on establishing a plan, preferably
long-term. Focusing on the value the client has placed on his or her
money, their particular needs, goals and objectives, in addition to
the current market figures, financial consultants provide
recommendations best suited for them.
Therefore, when the market shifts, consultants re-evaluate each of
their clients’ portfolios to make sure that their current investments
are working toward their personal financial goal.
“What were doing is trying to contact our clients to reassure them
about the stock market and their own personal holdings,” said
Paulson. “It’s just a matter of individuals needing to be
well-diversified and just have a good plan to kind of make it through
this down turn and be prepared for a turn-around.”
However, despite how well-diversified investors may be, they all
seem to flock to their financial advisors for a similar reason: They
want reassurance.
A bear market has continued to stir the nerves and concerns of
investors throughout the years and yet, the market, as many
consultants try to show their clients, has always bounced back.
“The fundamentals of the economy are very strong ....I think the
only question in the minds of sort of the cross-section of market
investors is when the market will actually rebound,” Coggins said.
“It’s not a matter of if.”
Although investors may disagree about the exact time frame the
market began it’s downward cycle -- some say it over the last few
years, others the last year or so -- they all agree that it’s due for
a turn.
“We feel pretty good about the future and the turn-around of the
market at some point and the advice that we’re giving is the best
long-term advice that people can get,” Paulson said. “We feel
confident that stocks and equities are still the best way to go for
people to reach their financial goals and be able to retire some
day.”
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