Tel: +34 93 665 8596 | info@spectrum-ifa.com

Linkedin
Viewing posts from: November 2000

Decorative & Fine Arts Society event

By Charles Hutchinson
This article is published on: 18th December 2015

The Spectrum IFA Group co-sponsored an excellent DFAS (Decorative & Fine Arts Society) lecture on 9th December at the San Roque Golf & Country Club on the Costa del Sol.  The Spectrum Group was represented by two of our local advisers, Jonathan Goodman and Charles Hutchinson, who attended along with our co-sponsors Richard Brown and Lewis Cohen from Tilney Bestinvest.
DFAS is an overseas branch of The National Association of Decorative & Fine Arts Societies which is a leading arts charity which opens up the world of the arts through a network of local societies and national events.

With inspiring monthly lectures given by some of the country’s top experts, together with days of special interest, educational visits and cultural holidays, DFAS is a great way to learn, have fun and make new and lasting friendships.

At this event, over 150 attendees were entertained by a talk on Art Deco by Eric Knowles of Antiques Roadshow fame, who was simply brilliant and kept the audience gripped with his knowledge and humour.

The talk was followed by a drinks reception which included a free raffle for prizes including CH produced Champagne, a presentation wine box and a coffee table glossy book on Art Deco.  Tilney Bestinvest also supplied an art deco style money box designed and crafted by Viscount Linley, the Queen’s nephew, which caused quite a stir!

All in all, a fantastic turnout and a very successful event at a wonderful venue.  The Spectrum Group were very proud to be involved with such a fantastic organisation and we hope to have the opportunity to do so again.

[nggallery id=57]

What holds you back from investing?

By Charles Hutchinson
This article is published on: 14th July 2015

14.07.15

Investing for some can be a very difficult task and yet for others it is both easy and immensely satisfying. Those in the former group would just love to be in the latter. So what is the problem? Why are they so different?

The underlying problem is fear but there are ways to reduce these anxieties.

The most fearful are the beginners and yet it is surprising how many “mature” investors go through a similar experience. There is no doubt that that without that leap of faith, you will not achieve the return you so much seek. If your overriding desire is to obtain real growth on your capital, however big or small, you must rethink your approach. For “from small acorns, grow great trees”.

Probably the best antidote is to look back through history – look at what our forebears were faced with when they were poised to put their capital at risk. I should add at this point that without risking your capital to some degree or other you will never experience real wealth creation. “There is no gain without pain”. Here at The Spectrum IFA Group, we look to do this in a controlled and disciplined fashion to insulate the client as much as possible from the stress and concerns of investing.

But we should go back to the basic instincts which create these fears and are the barriers to wealth creation. Someone once said that “The brain is a massive sabotage machine” which interferes in a negative fashion with every important decision we make. I could go into all the reasons for not making an investment decision but I would like to zero in on just one of the many. If you look for reasons for not making the decision to invest then you need to remain in your “comfort zone”. The older we get, the more we want to be in that place because the alternative is too stressful.

Probably the greatest excuse we come up with is the current situation: the Greek debacle, the threat to the Euro, Putin’s bellicose posturing, the state of the EU and its future, whether the UK will stay in, the collapse of the Chinese stockmarket, increasing terrorism, our old favourite secure backstop the Bond Market in total disarray, bank interest rates at all time lows, global warming, global overcrowding, shortage of food and water – need I go on?   In fact these are all the excuses for not investing. The fact of the matter is that the only way to beat inflation and actually create wealth is to invest in capital markets, whatever they are, whenever. There is no good or bad time to invest. In fact, if you are a contrarian like the all time most successful fund manager, Anthony Bolton, you invest when everyone else is selling. And to put it another way, fund managers wait with anticipated glee for markets to fall, so that they can get back in at a lower level. Using people like us is the least stressful way to invest as we have already done the research on your behalf as to who are the best managers and for which investment houses they work!

Let us now look back in history and see all the reasons why we shouldn’t have invested at that time. And yet, those who ignored these doomsday factors went on to achieve amazing growth on their capital – not through some rocket science wizard scheme but by just investing in the top stocks in their respective stock markets. An internationally renowned global investment house has produced figures over decades to show that if you had ignored the gloom merchants and just invested * when you had the capability, you would be a wealthy person now. For example, if you had invested just £1,000 in 1934, it would today be worth today over £4,000,000; just £4,000 invested in 1960, would have grown to £1,000,000.   If you had invested £10,000 in 1989, it would have grown to over £90,000 today. How could this have happened with all the appalling crisis’s which have occurred in the meantime? Simple, global capital does not just disappear in times of crisis, it has to have a home, it cannot evaporate and like seasons and the rise and setting of the sun every day, capital markets just continue on, regardless of war and pestilence.

(*invested in a portfolio of investment funds or top stocks actively managed by a competent regulated investment house with good past performance.)

Ah, but that was then, there is too much going on the world to de-stabilise the markets. Oh yes? What has changed in the last 80 years?   NOTHING!

Let me show you:

1934 Depression
1935 Spanish Civil War
1936 Economies still Struggling
1937 Recession
1938 War Clouds Gather
1939 War in Europe
1940 France Falls & Britain is blitzed
1941 Pearl Harbour & Global War
1942 British Defeat in North Africa
1943 Heavy defeats continue in the Far East
1944 Consumer Goods Shortages in the U.S.
1945 Post-War Recession Predicted
1946 Dow Tops 20 and London market too high
1947 Cold War begins
1948 Berlin Blockade
1949 Russia Explodes A-Bomb
1950 Korean War begins
1951 U.S.Excess Profits Tax
1952 U.S. Seizes Steel Mills
1953 Russia Explodes H-Bomb
1954 Dow tops 300 – Market Too High
1955 Eisenhower illness
1956 Suez Crisis
1957 Russia Launches Sputnik
1958 Recession
1959 Castro seizes power in Cuba
1960 Russia downs U-2 Spy Plane
1961 Berlin Wall Erected
1962 Cuban Missile Crisis
1963 Kennedy Assassinated
1964 Gulf of Tonkin incident
1965 Civil Rights marches
1966 Vietnam War Escalates
1967 Newark Race Riots
1968 USS Pueblo seized by North Korea – fear of renewed war.
1969 Money Tightens – Markets Fall
1970 Cambodia invaded – Vietnam War Spreads
1971 Clouded Economic Prospects
1972 Economic Recovery Slows
1973 Energy crisis & Market Slumps
1974 lnterest Rates Rise & steepest markets falls in 4 decades
1975 Oil Prices Skyrocket
1976 lnterest Rates at All-Time High
1977 Steep Recession Begins.
1978 Worst recession in 40 Years
1979 Oil prices sky rocket
1980 Record Federal Deficits & Interest rates at all time highs
1981 Economic Growth Slows
1982 Worst recession in 40 years
1983 Largest U.S. Trade Deficit Ever
1984 Energy Crisis
1985 Economic growth slows
1986 Dow Nears 2000
1987 Record-Setting Market Decline. Black Monday and UK Hurricane
1988 U.S. Election Year
1989 October “Mini Crash”
1990 Persian Gulf Crisis &1st Gulf War
1991 Communism Tumbles with the Berlin Wall
1992 Global Recession
1993 U.S.Health Care Reform
1994 Fed Raises lnterest Rates Six Times
1995 Dow Tops 5,000
1996 Dow Tops 6,400
1997 Hong Kong Reverts to China
1998 Asian Flu sweeps the Globe
1999 Y2K Millennium Bug Scare
2000 Tech Bubble Burst
2001 9/11 Terrorist Attacks
2002 Recession
2003 War in lraq
2004 Rising lnterest Rates
2005 Hurricane Katrina & destruction of New Orleans. London bombings.
2006 U.S. Real Estate Peaks
2007 Liquidity Crisis & Subprime Lending crisis spreads to Europe
2008 Credit crisis /Financial Institution failures globally
2009 U.S. Double Digit Unemployment Numbers
2010 European Sovereign Debt Crisis
2011 U.S. Credit Downgrade
2012 Fiscal Cliff Issues-/European Recession
2013 U.S. Government Shutdown/Sequester
2014 Oil Prices plunge 50% & Malaysian Airliner shot down in Ukraine

2015 Greece, Terrorist attacks, ISIS rampaging all over Middle East, etc.,etc.

So against this seemingly grim litany of disasters and cyclical market falls, the global financial wealth continued to increase at a remarkable pace over the last 80 years and before that. It will continue to do so into the future. The only thing to stop it would the total annihilation of the Human Race where wealth & money would be useless anyway!

I hope I have illustrated that fear of exposing capital to a perceived risk has no foundation! For those who are still not convinced, they should leave their money in the bank where it will continue to earn nothing, its real value will erode with inflation and possibly disappear with the collapse of the bank they have so carefully chosen to safeguard it!

The Spectrum IFA Group & the Decorative & Fine Arts Society

By Charles Hutchinson
This article is published on: 2nd April 2015

02.04.15

The Spectrum IFA Group and Charles Hutchinson in the Costa del Sol were proud to sponsor a recent event for the DFAS (Decorative & Fine Arts Society), which is the local branch of NADFAS (National Association of Decorative & Fine Arts Society).

The lecture in March was held at the legendary San Roque Golf & Country Club where the centre piece is the magnificent Domecq mansion. Attended by over 100 people on the 18th March the informative lecture was entitled “Romancing the Stone” and was given by Joanna Hardy on the subject of Jewellery and Gem Stones. She is a world famous authority on the subject, having been with De Beers, Sotheby’s, Phillips, regularly writes for the Daily Telegraph and features regularly on the Antiques Roadshow.

[nggallery id=37]

Spectrum on Talk Radio Europe

By Charles Hutchinson
This article is published on: 20th June 2014

Spectrum Adviser Charles Hutchinson was interviewed for Talk Radio Europe

You can listen to the whole interview by clicking on the link below

The Spectrum IFA Group & Tour de Finance Seminar Costa del Sol – October 18th 2013

By Charles Hutchinson
This article is published on: 18th October 2013

The Spectrum IFA Group & Currencies Direct held the final Tour de Finance seminar of the season on Friday the 18th October 2013 at the H10 Estepona Palace Hotel on the Costa del Sol, Spain.

The morning comprised various presentations by industry experts and professionals followed by finger food lunch and wines and soft drinks where guests mingled with the presenters and Spectrum staff to discuss questions and personal needs

The following gave presentations:

Jonathan Goodman introduced the seminar with a presentation of the company, who we are, how we do business and where and how we are regulated. Particular emphasis on client concerns and worries and how our top priority is to build a long term relationship with our clients.

Alan Lawrence of  Blackrock stressed what worries and concerns investors, how asset returns have altered in both scale and type.  Declining bond yields and income equities have shifted the risk profile of both Fixed Interest and Equity assets. The need now to rethink what is low risk and what is high. Where to obtain a reasonable income yield with lowest risk. The dangers of holding cash and how Emerging Markets are an essential part of a portfolio into the future. He ran through various currently recommended BR funds and special emphasis was also made on Gold and its outlook.

Alex Barratt of Currencies Direct showed the guests how using a specialist foreign exchange partner can save you money, both in the exchange rate margins and also in the charges free transfer service they provide, not only in Spain and Europe but all over the world. Of particular interest is that they have made an agreement with a major Spanish bank to provide charges free transfers to and from a client’s account which CD will set up on their behalf.

Andrew Wallace of Prudential International emphasised the strength and history of the company globally, their credit ratings, assets under management and number of clients worldwide. It was unique presentation in the session in that he majored on International Investment Bonds, their value to an investor and the various tax advantages of wrapping one’s investments within them.  He then went on to explain the Spanish Compliant Bond and its value to the Spanish resident.

Michael Lodhi, our venerable leader and spiritual guide, repeated what he said at earlier seminars around Europe, viz: Spectrum addresses client concerns for tax efficiency, investment returns, pensions and inheritance tax planning. He highlighted the effects of inflation on essential expenditure and how important it is to regularly review your investments to ensure their constant effectiveness.  He went on to explain QROPS (transferring your UK based pension abroad) and the importance of taking unbiased advice to see whether it is suitable for all.

Whether you want to register for our newsletter, attend one of our road shows in 2014 or speak to me directly, please call or email me on the contacts below and I will be glad to help you.   We do not charge for reviews, reports or recommendations that we provide.

Get your nest egg working harder

By Charles Hutchinson
This article is published on: 1st August 2013

Returns from bank savings accounts are at an all-time low, and savers are becoming increasingly frustrated. Expatriate financial advice expert Charles Hutchinson, of the Spectrum IFA Group, explains how expats can get their ‘nest-egg’ working harder.

 Most of us know by now that interest rates in the western world are at extremely low levels, with the Euro base rate at 0.75%. In the UK it is even lower, at 0.5%. While helps some people such as mortgage holders with tracker rates, savers are being punished as banks have continually cut the interest rates paid on savings accounts. Retirees drawing a pension, or looking to buy an annuity have also been hit hard in this low-interest rate environment.

 Low Interest Rates Here to Stay

 First, it doesn‘t look like this will change for quite some time yet. The prevailing policy of central banks has been to increase money supply (quantitative easing, also known as QE), maintain liquidity in the banking system and keep interest rates low. Even a slight increase in the base rate over the next couple of years is unlikely to result in decent interest rates on savings.

 Second, inflation is running at around 2-3% depending on which part of Europe you live. It just feels like everything is getting more expensive, especially food and energy costs. The end result is that we are effectively losing money by leaving it in the bank!

 Of course, we all need to leave some cash in the bank, as our emergency fund. Most financial planners would recommend that you leave at least 6 months income as your emergency fund.

It is the ‘nest egg’ money (the savings that we don’t really need in the short-term) that we can do something about.

 How Can You Get Your Nest Egg Working Harder?

 With the objective of ‘beating the bank‘ over the longer-term, a diversified portfolio of investments can be built. In plain English this means spreading your money across different types of ‘assets’ and not having ‘all of your eggs in one basket’. Assets primarily fall into one of the following categories; equities (shares in companies), fixed-interest bonds, property, cash or commodities.

 Lifestyle Investing

 You need to be clear about your ‘Risk Profile’. At Spectrum, we carry out a ‘Risk Profiler’ exercise which aims to establish the level of risk you are comfortable with and helps you understand the relationship between risk and reward. We then employ a forward-looking ‘Life-styling Process’ which means building a portfolio to match your own personal situation and objectives.

 The eventual portfolio should therefore match your risk profile, usually measured from ‘cautious’ at the lower end of the scale, ‘balanced’ and then ‘adventurous’ at the higher end. The investment strategy should therefore be appropriate for your stage of life.

What assets to invest in

 There are literally thousands of investments funds and vehicles to choose from. At Spectrum, we filter these by using strict criteria when choosing clients‘ investments. For example we only use;

  • UCITS compliant, EU regulated funds, ensuring maximum client protection and highest levels of reporting.
  • Daily priced funds, providing clients with daily liquidity, so that clients do not get ‚locked-in‘.
  • Financially strong and secure investment houses.
  • Funds which are highly rated by at least two independent research companies. 

Multi-asset funds

Multi-asset funds are popular with clients as they are managed by experienced asset managers who, through active daily management, can offer access to all asset classes within a single fund. Their job is to capture capital growth while also protecting investors when markets suffer a downturn. Some fund managers have a great track record of doing this, for example Jupiter Asset Management’s Merlin International Balanced Portfolio, which has returned +35% (Euro share class) since launch in Sept 2008, with relatively low volatility.

Multi-asset funds can be used as a ‘core‘ holding within a portfolio, with more specialised and sector-focussed funds making up the rest of the portfolio.

Equities (shares)

Many blue-chip companies have very strong balance sheets and pay dividends of around 4%, which is higher than current interest rates. This dividend income can be re-invested into your capital (unless you need the income).  The capital value of course will fluctuate but if you are investing for the longer-term you have time to ‘ride out‘  any volatility.

Equity funds can be global in nature, regionally specific (for example focussing on emerging market countries) or even country specific. Other types of equity funds focus on smaller ‘growth-orientated’  companies rather than those blue-chip, dividend paying stocks.

Ethical Investing

Ethical funds are also an interesting option. These are funds which only invest in ‘ethical’ companies. They are screened and assessed on criteria such as environment, military involvement or animal welfare.

Fixed-interest bonds

This includes government bonds and corporate bonds. Western government bonds were traditionally seen as ‘safe havens‘ however yields are now currently as low as cash. It may be wiser to look at corporate bonds, and these are categorised in terms of risk (higher-yielding bonds means higher capital risk). Emerging market bond funds (with exposure to local currencies) could also be considered.

May investors like to get exposure to bonds via a fund, which is a diversified mixture of bonds. One good option may be  Kames Capital’s Strategic Bond Fund, with a return of +57% (Euro share class) since launch in Nov 2007. 

Commodities

Commodity-focussed funds can be volatile and would normally make up only a small part of a portfolio. However there is potential for long-term growth by investing in companies with exposure to precious metals and resources (gold, silver, iron ore, copper)  as well as other ‘soft’ commodities such as agricultural resources and the food sector.

Property

Collective property funds or property-related shares could also form a small part of your portfolio. Physical property by its nature is illiquid but by using a property fund you can obtain exposure to shares in property companies, keeping your money liquid.

Review Your Portfolio Regularly

It is vitally important that your portfolio is regularly reviewed. One reason why people do not get the most from their finances is the lack of regular attention paid to their arrangements. Consider using a regulated, independent adviser who should offer regular reviews as part of their ongoing service.

 At Spectrum we have an in-house Portfolio Management team, who help advisers and clients monitor their portfolios regularly for performance and suitability. One aspect of our regular reviews is ‘profit-take alerts’; when one area of your portfolio has out-performed then why not take some profits? Investors can really benefit from such regular service.

 Charles Hutchinson has been with The Spectrum IFA Group since inception and is one of the founding partners. He helps expats in Southern Spain with their financial planning. The Spectrum IFA Group is a pan-European group of independent financial advisers. Feel free to contact Charles at charles.hutchinson@spectrum-ifa.com or call him on 952797923