Step 1: Gather Your Documentation
This could be your current investment statements, plus Social Security and pension information. Pro tip: Set up a My Social Security account to get an overview of your benefits and earnings history.Step 2: Ask and Answer: How Am I Doing?
To find out if you’re on track to reach your financial goals, review your current portfolio balance, combined with your savings rate. Tally your contributions across all accounts. A decent baseline savings rate is 15 percent, but higher-income folks will want to aim for 20 percent or more.Also factor in other goals you’d like to achieve, such as college funding or a home down payment. Are they realistic? Make sure you’re not giving short shrift to retirement.
Step 3: Check Up on Your Long-term Asset Allocation
Does your total portfolio’s mix of stocks, bonds, and cash match your targets? High-quality target-date series such as those from Vanguard and BlackRock’s LifePath Index Series can help benchmark asset allocation. My model portfolios can also help.A portfolio that tilts mostly or even entirely toward stocks makes sense for younger investors.
Step 4: Assess Liquid Reserves
Holding some cash is crucial to ensure you don’t have to tap your investments or resort to credit cards in a financial crunch.For retired people, I recommend holding six months to two years’ worth of portfolio withdrawals in cash investments.
Step 5: Assess Suballocations, Sector Positioning, and Holdings
Your broad asset-class exposure largely determines how your portfolio behaves. But your positioning within each asset class also deserves a look. Market strength has recently broadened, but growth stocks and funds that own them have outpaced value by a wide margin over the past decade.Step 6: Identify Opportunities to Streamline
Why have scores of accounts and holdings if a more compact portfolio could do the job just as well?If you’ve changed jobs, you may have multiple 401(k)s and rollover individual retirement accounts (IRAs). Consider consolidating into a single IRA. If you have several small cash accounts, you may be losing out on a (slightly) higher yield.
Step 7: Manage for Tax Efficiency
At this point, if you think changes are in order, be sure to take tax and transaction costs into account. Focus any selling in your tax-sheltered accounts, where you won’t incur tax costs and you can usually avoid transaction costs, too. Within your taxable accounts, review the tax implications and/or get tax advice before executing trades.Step 8: Troubleshoot Other Risk Factors
Uninsured long-term-care risk is a significant factor for those who are neither well off nor eligible for Medicaid. Develop a plan in case you have sizable long-term-care outlays later in life.Another common risk factor is providing help to loved ones. In this case, it’s often helpful to talk to a financial advisor and/or estate planner to figure out how you can help without jeopardizing your financial future.







