Riding the Right Bus: How Personal Goals Should Drive Your Investments

We’ve commented before on the mechanics of accumulating and preserving your wealth by building a low-cost, globally diversified investment portfolio aimed at your personal goals and risk tolerances. Today, let’s consider your money management from a different angle: What are your personal goals, and why do they matter?

For starters, your goals are the lead for your financial plans. Or at least they should be. You can have the sturdiest plans around, but if they’re hitched to the wrong horse, they’re unlikely to take you where you want to go.

Turning the Bus Around

To illustrate, consider this 2023 anecdote about how a different system—a school bus scheduling system—ran aground due to misguided goals.

At a glance, the city’s plans seemed solid enough. It sought to streamline the number of routes needed to transport its thousands of students across some 150 schools. By this measure, their AI-driven project was a “success,” reducing 730 routes to a planned 600.

Unfortunately, these plans proved disastrous when it was discovered that having fewer routes was the wrong goal for delivering overall improvement. On opening day, there were reports that “a ton of kids” didn’t make it to school at all; among those who did, “some students did not get home until almost 10 p.m.” The school system was forced to  cancel classes for the remainder of the week, to work on getting back on track.

Defining Durable Goals

At least when bus schedules run amok, the problem is immediately obvious. Unfortunately, that’s not always the case with your financial goals. Sometimes, errant choices made years ago or as a series over time are only obvious in hindsight. Which is why we recommend you …

·       Establish your greatest financial goals sooner rather than later, to give yourself the greatest chance to help achieve them.

·        Prioritize your goals, in case you can’t achieve them all.

·       Revisit them now and then, as life’s curves may alter your aim.

It’s also essential to define your financial goals as more than just desired dollars.

What do you want to spend your money on? How much will it cost?

When will the money need to be available?

These questions factor into how much you’ll want to set aside for each goal; how much you can spend in other ways; and importantly, how to manage your investments over time.

By targeting well-crafted financial goals, we can better aim your overall investment strategies and selections. For example, money you won’t need to spend for some time can be invested in assets that are expected to deliver higher long-term returns, but that also exhibit a wilder ride along the way. Money you’re depending on to fund near-term goals should be preserved against the market’s short-term changeability. Investments that will probably deliver lower returns, but more dependable outcomes are the tickets here.

Let Your Goals Be Your Guide

Admittedly, it can be tough to plan your financial future in a world filled with obstacles and opportunities. But the terrain only worsens in the absence of well-crafted goals. If you don’t know how much money you’ll need, when, and why, you end up chasing after the latest fads (buying high) or fleeing market risks (selling low). Beyond the financial damage done, the emotional toll can be terribly taxing as well.

Without personal financial goals to lead the way, investing becomes a pointless practice. Not sure where to start? Reach out to us to learn more.

The opinions expressed in this material are for general information only and are not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual. To determine which strategies or investments may be suitable for you, consult the appropriate qualified professional prior to making a decision.

No strategy assures success or protects against loss. There is no guarantee that a diversified portfolio will enhance overall returns or outperform a non-diversified portfolio.  Diversification does not protect against market risk.

All investing involves risk including loss of principal. 

Dan Olsen