You’ve worked hard to build your net worth, so protecting your wealth is always top of mind. In today’s economy, however, it may feel especially challenging. With interest rates rising amid unpredictable markets and overall economic uncertainty, it’s more important than ever to have a comprehensive financial strategy in place.
“Volatility in the markets and in the world is driving people to seek havens,” says Russell St. John, Wealth Management Advisor for U.S. Bancorp Investments. Protecting your wealth requires a combination of strategies. Working together, these six strategies – including a well-funded savings account, diversified investment portfolio and insurance – may help preserve your wealth in a challenging economic environment.
1. Create a financial plan to protect family wealth
It all starts with a plan. An experienced financial professional can work with you to identify your goals and recommend actions to help you work toward reaching them.
“My job is to get to know where my clients stand financially today and where they want to be in the future,” says St. John. “They may say, ‘I have to pay my bills today, but my wish is to buy a house on a lake or leave assets to my favorite charity.’ The intersection of those two things is the basis for a plan.”
If you already have a financial plan in place, take time to review it. It’s important to evolve your plan as your life changes and as you age. When you’re young, you've got lots of time and don't have to worry as much about volatility, says St. John. But as you get closer to retirement, your assets require greater protection.
2. Save for emergencies or large purchases to protect family wealth
Having money that’s earmarked for emergencies or future spending can help you better manage both unplanned events and your day-to-day cash flow. Financial professionals often recommend having three to six months of living expenses on hand in a savings account, so you aren’t forced to prematurely withdraw money from a retirement account or certificate of deposit (CD).
“There are risks you can control and risks you can't,” says St. John. “We can adjust your portfolio based on your risk tolerance, but we can't control your furnace dying or a large out-of-pocket medical expense.”
3. Diversify your investment portfolio to preserve wealth
Having tools in your portfolio that “zig” while others “zag” can help minimize the impact of market volatility. Diversification means not putting all your money into investments with the same risk class, and it can work on several different planes, says St. John.
“Within bonds, for example, you can diversify across types of bonds or industries,” he says. “You might buy some from the financial industry, some in technology and some industrial. If one sector of the economy weakens, not all your investments will be subject to that particular weakness.”
Diversification also protects against concentration risk. For example, having half of your investments in your company’s stock can put your retirement money in jeopardy if the stock drops.