Thursday, April 23, 2026

Investment Basics


I recently taught a basic investing class for an audience of older adults. Below are some of the key take-aways related to investment principles, investment characteristics, and later life investing:


Common Investment Concerns- In later life, investment concerns include income generation from investments, decumulation (spending down assets), sequence of return risk (negative returns early in retirement), inheriting unfamiliar investments from others, market volatility, tax implications such as required minimum distributions, possible cognitive decline, and passing securities on to heirs.

 

Saving and Investing- Savings is money held in cash assets such as online bank accounts, money market funds, and CDs. It is generally used for short-term goals and emergencies and also useful for older adults as a “buffer account” for older adults to hedge sequence of returns risk. Investments are used to increase net worth over time and achieve long-term financial goals (generally 5+ years away).

 

Investment Risk- Risk in investing is uncertainty about future investment returns and whether you will lose investment principal or see it grow over time. There are many sources of investment risk including business failure, inflation rates, jobs reports, politics, interest rate changes, currency value changes (international investments), and a “herd mentality” in response to market trends.

 

Risk Reduction Strategies- Investment risk cannot be eliminated but it can be reduced. Three common strategies are diversification (holding a mix of different types of investments), buy and hold (not panicking and selling investments during market downturns), and dollar-cost averaging (investing regular amounts of money or making withdrawals at regular time intervals (e.g., $500 monthly).

 

Asset Allocation- This is the ratio of stocks, bonds, cash, and other asset types in your portfolio and is a primary determinant of investment success according to numerous research studies. Factors that affect asset allocation include investment goals, time horizon, investment risk tolerance, time and skill to manage investments, taxes, and, for older adults, availability of guaranteed income sources.

 

Investment Categories- There are two types of investments: ownership (where you own a piece of something) and loanership (where you lend money to a government entity or corporation). Ownership assets include stock, stock mutual funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs), real estate, and collectibles. Loanership assets include bonds and bond mutual funds and ETFs.

 

Hybrid Investment- ETFs are a cross between stock (where you are part owner of a company through your shares that trade on a stock exchange) and index mutual funds (mutual funds that track a market index like the S&P 500). ETFs are similar in composition to index-tracking mutual funds but trade like stock on a stock exchange.

 

Older Investors’ Mutual Fund Dilemma- Mutual funds are required by law to pass their earnings on to investors. This can cause a big tax problem for older adults with accounts that have grown for decades. If they sell shares, they face capital gains tax and if they stand pat, they face increasingly larger taxable distributions. There is one escape hatch: donate appreciated securities to charity.


This post provides general personal finance or consumer decision-making information and does not address all the variables that apply to an individual’s unique situation. It does not endorse specific products or services and should not be construed as legal or financial advice. If professional assistance is required, the services of a competent professional should be sought.

 


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Investment Basics

I recently taught a basic investing class for an audience of older adults. Below are some of the key take-aways related to investment prin...