Investing in the Trump presidency

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The election has demonstrated how difficult it can be to predict the effect of world events on the investment markets. If there was a consensus on the effect the outcome would have on the markets, it was that a Trump victory would be bad for stocks.

While the stock market did drop significantly immediately following the news that Trump had won, by the end of the following day, it was in positive territory and continuing to climb. During the following weeks, several major stock market indices went on to reach new record highs.

Ahead of the election, I did not hear a single investor suggest that, or even ask if, they should shift their TSP accounts more heavily into stocks. Many investors did tell me, however, that they were considering shifting everything into the G Fund to avoid the possibility of loss. I continue to hear similar questions as we approach the inauguration in January.

Your investment decisions should always be carefully engineered to support your short- and long-term financial goals.

Chances are that your TSP account contains money that will be needed to support your long-term goals. If not, it may be appropriate to invest most, or all, of your account in the G Fund. If so, then some or all of your account should be invested in a combination of the C, S, I, F and G Funds. This is what’s known as asset allocation — distributing your account among stocks, bonds and cash — to properly balance the risk of loss with the potential for return.

Asset allocation, when properly executed, produces a portfolio that is more than the sum of its parts. It produces the greatest expected return possible for a given level of risk. At the same time, however, it accomplishes something else. Asset allocation creates pools of funds that are invested according to time horizon, or the time remaining until you will need the funds to achieve their expected value. Longer time horizons allow for more risk and will generally require less protective cash in the asset allocation. As you age and the short-term goals for your portfolio increase, you should shift to less risky asset allocation schemes with more protective cash. This cash protects you from losses that you can’t afford, while also providing the cash you’ll need to support your goals along the way.

If your TSP account is properly invested, there should be nothing to do in anticipation of any external event. Maintaining this allocation scheme hedges the risk of each of the individual funds and balances the short- and long-term risks you face. When stocks fall, bonds tend to rise, and vice versa. Rather than betting everything on one spin of the wheel, a diversified portfolio spreads your bets around so that your losses are limited — ideally to an amount that you can afford.

While it might feel as if you are reducing risk by seeking temporary shelter in the G Fund ahead of a headline, you may simply be ignoring the risk of failing to achieve your long-term goals in favor of avoiding the risk of suffering an unpleasant, but innocuous, temporary loss.

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Mike Miles is a Certified Financial Planner licensee and principal adviser for Variplan LLC, an independent fiduciary in Vienna, Virginia. Email your financial questions to fedexperts@federaltimes.com and view his blog at money.federaltimes.com.

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