Ask an Advisor: How Can I Make Up for Investment Losses When Time Isn’t on My Side?

Date:

Ask an Advisor: I’m 81, Have a Mortgage of $118K and an IRA Worth $110K. Should I Withdraw From My Investment to Pay off My Mortgage?

My retirement savings were wiped out in market changes over the last couple of years. I am planning on working for about five more years. What investment suggestions do you have this late in the game?

– Daniel

Sorry to hear that you’ve taken a hit as you enter the home stretch to retirement. I know that can be disappointing and potentially stressful. This type of scenario is why I suggest broad diversification and holding an asset allocation that fits your timeline, matches your goals and allows you to stay the course during rough markets. (If you have additional questions about investing or retirement, this tool can help match you with potential advisors.)

Potential Reasons for ‘Getting Wiped Out’

Although I don’t know how much you’ve lost, describing it as “getting wiped out” tells me it was a lot. Let’s build some context around that. If the last several years wiped you out, I imagine one of two things happened, or potentially both. 

  1. You were holding a concentrated portfolio.

  2. You tried to time the market.

These are two common pitfalls of investing that expose you to a significant amount of unnecessary risk. (If you need help aligning your investments with your risk tolerance, consider working with a financial advisor.)

Holding a Concentrated vs. Diversified Portfolio

Ask an Advisor: How Can I Recoup My Recent Investment Losses 'Late in the Game?'
Ask an Advisor: How Can I Recoup My Recent Investment Losses ‘Late in the Game?’

I’m suggesting that you may have been holding a concentrated portfolio because a broadly diversified portfolio wouldn’t have wiped you out. 

Let’s use the classic 60/40 portfolio as an example. This portfolio typically holds 60% of assets in equities and 40% in bonds. A diversified 60/40 portfolio had an average annual return of 6.5% for the 10-year period that ended in 2022, according to Bloomberg. This return can vary depending on what exactly you have in a 60/40 portfolio. It will also be different for other allocations such as a 50/50 or 70/30. But the basic premise remains true – the past several years didn’t wipe out broadly diversified portfolios. (A financial advisor can help you make important investment decisions such as how to spread your money across stocks, bonds and cash.)

A diversified portfolio is a good risk mitigator. Concentrated investments tend to be more volatile and expose you to specific risks that diversification can protect against. When I come across heavily concentrated holdings in new clients’ portfolios, I always point out that one squirrely CEO, one failed product launch or one blip of bad publicity could “wipe you out.”

Does holding a diversified portfolio mean you’ll always have a positive return? No. Some years are good, and some are not. The 60/40 portfolio, for example, lost about 16% in 2022. As long as you incorporate those fluctuations into your plan, though, you will have created an important risk mitigator. 

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