This week, I’d like to know, do you subscribe to the print edition of your local newspaper, and if you could only read one section, which one would it be?
According
to a new report by Dreyfus, younger investors are more likely than older ones
to reevaluate their investing approach in light of a changing investment
environment.
Nearly half of individual investors (49%) reported they have yet to reevaluate
their investment approach in the midst of a shifting economic landscape,
according to a recent report by The Dreyfus Corporation, a company of BNY
Mellon.
“As
long-term risk/return expectations have shifted with an increase in inflation,
the rise of U.S. nationalism and record-low volatility, investors would be
well-served to reevaluate their portfolios in light of changed circumstances to
determine if they will continue to meet their investment objectives,”
suggests Dreyfus CEO Mark Santero.
The
Dreyfus study found that investors tend to take different approaches to
investing based on age. Sixty-one percent of investors 55 years of age or older
indicated they have not, or will not, reevaluate their investment approach in
today’s existing investing environment. Meanwhile, 65% of Millennials, defined
in the study as people between the ages of 21 and 34, had already evaluated their
investment approach at the time of the survey. These actions are reflected among
51% of those between the ages of 35 and 54, as well as for 39% of those at
least 55-years-old.
Younger investors seemed to be more inclined to
seek professional assistance. Sixty-three
percent of younger respondents said they worked with an adviser in reevaluating
their investments, while only one-third (38%) of those in the older segment did
the same.
“Our
survey revealed that younger investors have demonstrated in greater numbers a
more proactive approach to reassessing their portfolios and seeking out their
advisers for counsel, some of whom might lack the historical market experience
and accumulated wealth of older investors,” says Santero.
The
firm also pointed out that while older investors have experienced historic
highs and lows in the global markets, the Great Recession is likely the major
market shift that stands out the most in the minds of younger investors.
Surprisingly,
the survey also found that affluent investors are taking action to review their
portfolios at a slower pace than their counterparts. The research indicated that nearly half of those with investable income
between $250,000 and $2.5 million had work to do in reviewing their portfolios,
and more than one-third had decided to not take action at all.
Forty-three
percent of the total mass affluent investor audience had not reevaluated their approaches
to investing, and 39% of mass affluent investors working with an adviser had
not reevaluated their investment approach.
Still,
six in ten investors (60%) without a financial adviser are most likely to put
off their plans to address today’s market challenges. Only one-quarter (24%) report
they plan to address challenges they face at some point in 2017. At the
same time, 17% said they don’t have any plans to reevaluate their investment
approach.
Santero
adds, “We believe investors who don’t work with a professional adviser
could greatly benefit from the insights an adviser can provide in tailoring a
goals-based approach for their individual circumstances against today’s
investing environment of uneven economic growth. Options might include diversifying
their U.S. exposure with global fixed income and equities or considering
dividend or alternative investing strategies.”
As for
those working with advisers today, the survey found 65% indicated they had
reevaluated their investment approach, compared 40% who had not worked with an
adviser. Nearly three-quarters (73%) of advisers’ clients changed their
approach as a result of advice.
Information about downloading the Dreyfus Investor Survey Brief can be found here.