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Six Tips to Help Preserve and Grow the Value of Your Investments

Inflation has been in the news a lot lately. The high inflation rates of the last couple years have significantly eroded Americans’ purchasing power on a variety of goods and services. While inflation puts a strain on short-term spending and saving, it can be especially detrimental to long-term investment accounts if not properly planned for. Fortunately, a well-built investment portfolio can help counteract the effects of inflation. The following tips can help preserve and grow the value of your investments in the face of inflation.

1. Diversify your investments.

One of the most effective ways to position your portfolio to weather inflation is by investing in a diversified mix of asset types, such as stocks, bonds, real estate, and commodities. Different asset classes tend to perform differently during various stages of the market cycle. By maintaining a diversified portfolio, you reduce the risk of all your investments being impacted in the same manner at the same time.

2. Incorporate stocks.

Historically, equity returns have outperformed inflation over the long term. Investing in a diversified mix of large- and small-cap stocks, both domestic and international, can help provide you with the long-term growth potential you need to offset rising inflation and protect your portfolio’s purchasing power. By owning stocks, you own the companies raising the prices causing inflation.

3. Consider inflation-protected securities.

Consider incorporating an allocation to inflation-protected securities, such as Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS). TIPS are government bonds that change value based on the Consumer Price Index (CPI) that can provide a hedge against inflation. They offer fixed-interest payments that can help your investment keep pace with rising prices.

4. Include an allocation to real assets.

Tangible assets, such as real estate and commodities, have historically helped hedge portfolios against inflation. Real estate investments have the potential to appreciate in value and generate rental income, which can rise with inflation rates. Commodities tend to retain value during inflationary periods.

5. Rebalance regularly.

When planning for inflation, it’s important to regularly rebalance your investment portfolio. Rebalancing is the process of selling off outperforming assets in order to invest in lower-performing assets. While this practice may seem counterintuitive, it helps prevent your allocation from drifting too far from your target investment ranges. Adding to a lower-performing asset can be difficult, but it’s important to remember the reasons it’s in the portfolio in the first place. This practice helps offset inflation because it prevents one asset type from dominating your portfolio and throwing off your risk exposure.

6. Review your portfolio.

Periods of high inflation often coincide with challenging market conditions. Economic factors are constantly changing and evolving, so it’s important to regularly review your investment portfolio. This practice will ensure your portfolio continues to align with your goals and remains positioned to weather the prevailing economic landscape.

Gene Gard, CFA, CFP, CFT-I, is a Partner and Private Wealth Manager with Creative Planning. Creative Planning is one of the nation’s largest Registered Investment Advisory firms providing comprehensive wealth management services to ensure all elements of a client’s financial life are working together, including investments, taxes, estate planning, and risk management. For more information or to request a free, no-obligation consultation, visit CreativePlanning.com.

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Dems Thank Governor for Grocery Tax Cut They Pushed for ‘Years’

As Republican Tennessee Governor Bill Lee announced his temporary sales tax suspension on groceries Thursday, state Democrats thanked him for following their lead on the idea they say the state GOP has blocked for a decade. 

Lee’s proposal would cut the state and local collection of taxes on food for 30 days. The move is  to battle what he called “historic inflation” with the “most effective way to provide direct relief to every Tennessean.” The proposal will be delivered in a budget amendment to the Tennessee General Assembly on Tuesday. 

Tennessee’s grocery tax was cut in 2017 from 5 percent to 4 percent in 2017 thanks to the IMPROVE Act from then-Governor Bill Haslam. This rate does not apply to some prepared grocery items like fruit trays, bakery goods, hot soups, and more. Those are taxed at 7 percent. Shelby County and Memphis city sales taxes combined are 2.75 percent. So, Lee’s proposal would reduce a $100 grocery bill here by $6.75 for 30 days.

“Our state has the ability to put dollars back in the pockets of hardworking Tennesseans, and I thank members of the General Assembly for their continued partnership in maintaining our fiscally conservative approach,” Lee said in a statement Tuesday. 

Lee announced the proposal as he met with leaders in Covington Thursday. There, among other things, he toured Naifeh’s Cash Saver grocery store to tout his proposal. 

Credit: State of Tennessee

As the news spread across the state, Democrats were busy on social media thanking Lee for moving on a proposal they claimed they’ve tried to pass in the past. 

“Had a press conference today thanking [Lee] for following our lead on our long-standing idea of temporarily removing sales taxes on groceries,” Tennessee House Democrats said in a tweet Thursday. “We’ve pushed 29 bills over the last 10 years (!!) on this, all rejected until now. We welcome relief for #tnworkingfamilies.” 

Other notable Tennessee Democrats also took to Twitter about the issue:

Other non-politicos tweet-challenged the gravity of Lee’s proposal. 

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What, Me Worry? Understanding Debt and Inflation

The Senate recently passed a $1 trillion infrastructure bill that seems likely to eventually become law. How much debt does that mean, and should we worry about it?

Since the beginning of 2020, the total public debt has gone from around $23 trillion to about $28 trillion. Keep in mind that overall U.S. GDP is just over $20 trillion on average, so we could apply the entire output of the U.S. economy for a year and a half and just barely pay off the debt. Another way to look at it is that the government spent all the taxes taken in since the beginning of the lockdown and then an additional 25 percent of the entire country’s total income. These are big numbers!

Is this a problem? Is it going to inevitably lead to inflation? The answers might surprise you.

Conventional wisdom, as well as recent feedback at the grocery store and gas pump, suggests inflation has definitely arrived. However, there are a number of strongly deflationary pressures at work, too, and there’s a good chance over the next 10 years the Fed could have a hard time keeping inflation above or even near their target of 2 percent annual inflation.

For one thing, population growth is slowing down. Population growth was close to 1.4 percent a year as recently as the 1990s and now sits at 0.35 percent. Absent big changes in immigration policy (unlikely) or big changes in birth rates for Americans already here (even more unlikely), America will start seeing population decline soon. Japan has been losing population on average for more than 10 years, and this is one reason Japan has frequently experienced years of falling consumer prices in the last few decades. The number of consumers is not growing and the population is aging, leading to more retirees and fewer workers.

Another strong deflationary factor is the rise of technology. Much recent inflationary pressure is likely transient, in things like used car prices, airfare, and hotel rates. At the same time, lots of stuff is getting cheaper, like televisions and computing power. And while smartphones may not seem cheap, the idea of a device in your pocket that can make calls, send messages, and listen to or watch almost any media created in all of human history is a pretty nifty innovation and means you don’t have to buy as many products you might previously have bought. In the 1990s, one CD cost around $15 — now you can have access to almost all the music in the world for about half that per month.

Nobody is exactly sure what the future holds, and everyone loves to second-guess our elected and appointed officials. However, the employees and appointees at the Fed are not stupid. If inflation were the only thing we have to fear, the Fed wouldn’t continually try to push inflation up to a higher long-term average target. I believe they’re preemptively erring on the side of inflation to prevent disinflationary pressures from taking root too strongly. Deflation sounds nice as a consumer, but its effect on the economy is much worse than mild to moderate inflation. By the way, debt itself is deflationary too (for one reason, money that could be spent goes to pay off bonds instead), and there’s plenty of debt in the system.

In the end, it’s not too useful to speculate as to whether inflationary or deflationary pressures will win. Probably both will happen at some point; it’s just a matter of time.

The important thing for investors to remember is to stay diversified. Exposure to U.S. investments and the dollar could continue to outperform for years into the future. On the other hand, if our outsized stimulus spending starts to catch up with us, then exposure to non-U.S. developed markets and even emerging and frontier markets (and currencies) will play an extremely important role going forward.

We’re all feeling the pressure from inflation in the short term, but there’s no guarantee it will persist. We might even miss it if it goes away.
Have a question or topic you’d like to see covered in this column? Contact the author at ggard@telarrayadvisors.com. Gene Gard is Co-Chief-Investment Officer at Telarray, a Memphis-based wealth management firm that helps families navigate investment, tax, estate, and retirement decisions.