3 Obstacles To Financial Success:
Part 2
November 2009
Last month, we talked about
the folks who have trouble putting their New Year’s
resolutions into action. They’re perpetual procrastinators
who never got around to completing a personal or business
financial plan. As a result, any actions they take to build
or preserve their wealth range from haphazard to non-existent.
Often, they will act impulsively (or not at all) only to find
later that their imprudent decision cost them some of their
hard-earned wealth.
Today, I want to talk to you about a second obstacle to financial
success I often see, and it’s a type of fear.
Fear of Loss
One of the most understandable emotional issues
that stands in the way of personal and professional financial
success is fear. What happens if something goes wrong? How
will I be able to recover from a bad investment?
The Entrepreneur
We had a case at my financial planning firm where a physician
client wanted help in evaluating possible strategies for growing
his business. We analyzed his options, determined the action
steps required to carry them out and evaluated the costs and
benefits of each.
Crunching the numbers revealed that his most promising option
required a $1 million investment in diagnostic equipment to
expand his practice. While he could recognize the logic that
it takes money to make money, the physician balked at risking
large sums on his business. The physician needed support from
his financial planner, acting in the roles of business coach
and CPA, to show him that the risks were not as great as he
feared, and that it was a sound business plan. Eventually,
the doctor overcame his fear of risking his hard-earned money
and agreed to the investment. Since then, his business has
grown as the financial planner predicted it would.
The Individual Investor
Fear of loss is also something I often see with people regarding
investing. Studies by research firms such as Dalbar show
that the average equity investor trailed the S&P 500
Index by 6.48% over the past 20 years! The study explains
these poor returns as “unsuccessful market timing
and other maladaptive investor behaviors.”
Good call. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve
seen investors holding on to too much cash for too long,
only to wait until the market went up before they invested
it! The emotions of these investors who fear losing their
money at the cost of earning money result in buy high and
sell low investing time and again. It is gobbling up their
wealth. These folks will have a hard time accumulating the
money they need to reach their desired wealth goals.
Next time: Fear of not making the right
decision.
Guy McPhail, CPA, CFP®
President of Zdenek Financial Planning (www.zdenek.com)
and a personal financial planner, Guy McPhail is nationally
recognized for his expertise in cash flow management and
financial planning for small business owners.
A Certified Financial Planner® professional and a Certified
Public Accountant (CPA), Guy manages the personal financial
planning area at Zdenek Financial Planning, providing clients
with strategic analysis and support in the areas of cash
flow management, business management, tax planning, estate
planning, retirement planning, stock option strategies and
investing.
©2009 FiLife.com |
All Rights Reserved
Guy McPhail, CPA, CFP®, is president of Zdenek
Financial Planning, LLC.
Click here
for a PDF copy of this article
|