Time to take some chips off the table

Time to take some chips off the table
CEO says S&P 500's rate of growth, led by the top 10 names, is unsustainable.
OCT 07, 2024

Dealing with the unpredictable nature of interest rate changes coupled with sticky inflation concerns is no small feat. It is, however, all in a day’s work for Colin Overweg. As the founder and CEO of Advize Wealth Management, he emphasizes the importance of diversification and a safety net.

“If you ask 10 economists to predict the stock market, you’ll get 10 different opinions, and they will probably all be wrong. The truth is that nobody knows. What I’m telling my clients is that we need to make sure that we’re staying diversified and keeping the emergency fund full.

“The stock market, since late October over a nine-month period, is up 37 percent. We can probably expect that we’re not going to see the stock market up another 37 percent over the next nine months. This type of growth is unsustainable. We need to make sure that we understand our time horizons when we’re investing.”

A significant focus for Overweg is the concentration of growth in large-cap tech stocks.

“This stock market run over the last nine months has really been led by the top 10 names. In the S&P 500 right now, the top 10 companies represent about 35 percent of the market cap weighted S&P 500. It probably makes sense to start taking a couple of chips off the table.”

For Overweg, he believes that gradual rebalancing here is key.

“These type of rebalances aren’t necessarily slamming on the brakes – we're trying to find that happy medium,” he says. “Folks with longer time horizons can certainly take advantage of a higher equity position. Small companies have outperformed large companies over long periods of time.”

Addressing inflation and equity performance, Overweg understands better than most the difference between risk and volatility.

“Risk is actually the loss of principal or maybe having a bad outcome in your retirement plan. Volatility is the stock market going up and down. Nobody has ever lost money in a globally diversified stock portfolio over a 15-to-20-year period.”

Overweg uses a “stair-step system” to manage time horizons and portfolio adjustments. For short-term needs, he advocates keeping money safe in high-yield savings accounts.

“If you need money in the next two, three years, the stock market is not the right tool for the job. When you expand that time horizon to 10 years plus, stocks are a fantastic place to go.”

Discussing long-term strategies amid enduring inflation and economic stability, Overweg really stresses global diversification.

“It’s important not to be focused so much on the US. There are attractive plays in the emerging and developed international markets. I do feel that it is a new emerging asset class and is starting to become the digital gold.”

Latest News

Nationwide president and COO John Carter to step down
Nationwide president and COO John Carter to step down

The leading annuity and insurance top executive is stepping down after a distinguished 40-year career in the industry.

Bond heavyweights lead the way in active fixed income comeback
Bond heavyweights lead the way in active fixed income comeback

After a two-year drought, US bond funds saw the most new investment last year, with inflows led by big names like Pimco and Dodge & Cox

Carson Wealth kicks off 2025 deal calendar with $1B Chicago office acquisition
Carson Wealth kicks off 2025 deal calendar with $1B Chicago office acquisition

The latest buyout transaction taps into an industry-wide need for succession-planning options, says Carson Group CEO.

Retirement conundrum: crippling health care costs or start dumping assets?
Retirement conundrum: crippling health care costs or start dumping assets?

Investors fearing unaffordable healthcare may spend-down assets, study reveals.

Income growth, market performance keeps middle-class wealth on track
Income growth, market performance keeps middle-class wealth on track

Quarterly financial resilience index shows easing fears.

SPONSORED Three key trends that will drive advisors’ planning in 2025

AssetMark Group CEO explains why the great wealth transfer, succession planning, and personalization will be key for advisors in the new year.

SPONSORED Why RIAs might consider investing more in trust services

A trust delivery model not only increases the value of an advisor and a firm but is also a natural addition to any firm’s succession plan.