Your investment profile will help you work out the type of investment you should consider.
There are four factors in your investment profile:
12% return, can you really afford it?
There's little point investing in something offering returns of 12% or more if you end up losing some or all of your money.
It might be that you have a couple of different investment goals.
You might be saving for an overseas holiday, and saving for your
retirement at the same time. You'd have separate investment profiles to
match each goal, and the best investments for you will be different in
each case.
Duration
Duration means how long you want to invest for.
Short term - 1 to 3 years
Medium term - 3 to 7 years
Long term - over 7 years
Money you are saving to go overseas in two years time is a short
term investment. So you need to make sure you'll be able to get it when
you need it. Money you are putting away for your retirement can be a
long term investment. Over a longer period of time you'll be more
interested in 'capital growth'. This is when the value of your
investment (your capital) grows. If you invested $100,000 in shares
last year that are worth $110,000 this year, your capital growth is
$10,000, or 10%.
It's common to have different investments of different durations.
Returns - Income or growth?
To work out the type of returns that will suit you, ask yourself if you're more interested in income or growth.
Do you want to use the money your investment earns as income to live off during the duration of the investment?
Do you want to reinvest it with the original lump sum, and grow your lump sum as much as possible?
If you need short term income from your investment, it's probably
best to put your money where you can guarantee how much money it will
earn - such as a bank deposit paying a fixed amount of interest for a
set period. If, on the other hand, you don't need the income in the
short term and you want to grow your lump sum as much as possible, you
could consider investments that don't guarantee the return from year to
year, such as shares.
Liquidity
Liquidity means the speed you can convert your investment into money
before the end of your investment period, without taking a loss.
High liquidity investments mean you can get at your investment
anytime, without losing any of your investment. A bank savings account
is the classic example of a high liquidity investment.
In a low liquidity investment, it may take time to find a buyer at a
price which is acceptable to you. Property is usually a low liquidity
investment. Shares in public companies generally have a resonable
liquidity. An interest in a forestry syndicate will probably have low
liquidity.
Some investments maybe illiquid - you can't get your money until a
certain date or event (e.g. retirement). It is important you understand
and are comfortable with the risk
Risk
Risk and reward is the classic investor's balancing act.
The higher the risk you take, the higher returns you could receive, but the more chance you have of taking a loss.
With a low risk investment, you generally know the return you will
receive right up front. A low risk investment would be a bank savings
account - you know the return (the interest rate), but compared to
riskier investments, like shares, it isn't great.
Higher returns are only available with higher risk. The risks come
in two types, volatility, which is the possibility that the value of
your investment will go up and down, and performance, which is the
possibility that the investment could be a flop and you lose all or
part of your money. Or, the investment gives you a lower return than
you expected or needed.
If you are considering high risk investments, you can balance your
risks with other investments in lower risk areas, like short term
deposits or cash and bonds.
You can generally recognise high risk investments because the
potential returns are also sky high (the promise of too-good-to-be-true
returns is probably just that, not true).
For a guide to how much risk you can tolerate in your investments, try the Sorted.org.nz Risk Recommender
To find the type of investments that could suit your investment profile check out the Sorted.org.nz Investment Recommender.
Content provided by Sorted.org.nz, Your Independent Money Guide.
Mary Holm: Get Rich Slow: How to Grow Your Wealth the Safe and Savvy Way
Martin Hawes: 8 Secrets of Investment Success
Martin Hawes: Shares: Make Money and Beat the Market
Anita Bell: Your Investment Property: How to Choose it, Pay for it and Triple Your Return in Three Years
Lisa Dudson and Andrew King: Residential Property Investment in New Zealand
Compare Credit Cards - Independent interest rate and fees comparisons for New Zealand banks.
Find the latest money news and 'how to' guides on Guide2Money.
Ask our researchers your personal finance questions.
Your Questions. Independent Answers.
---
Australian 'how to' guides and recommendations