Monthly News and Tips May 2022
Motiv8 Investments LLC has hired Andrey Kolpakov as their Chief Investment Officer. Here is his explanation regarding some of the changes they are making with the models. This is a very positive forward-looking approach in my opinion.
“At Motiv8 Investments we implement a scientific data-driven approach to portfolio construction, by applying quantitative methods and qualitative research. We integrate dynamic risk management strategies to build quality-oriented, diversified investment model portfolios.
On 4/14/2022, Motiv8 Investments has rebalanced both the Equity and Fixed Income portfolio sleeves, to position the strategic asset allocation for the changing market environment and long-term macroeconomic outlook.
The investment landscape has drastically changed over the course of Q1 2022, as inflation pressures pushed the Federal Reserve to tighten Monetary Policy and begin the Rate Hike Cycle. The prospect of slow economic expansion, supply chains disruptions and Russia’s war in Ukraine, have been the major contributors to market volatility worldwide.
From the perspective of M8 Equity Portfolio sleeve, which is a Globally Diversified model portfolio, we favor U.S. stocks vs International, prefer Quality vs Value, favor Large Caps vs Small Caps, and optimistic on Emerging Markets. From the M8 Fixed Income Portfolio perspective, we are underweight Duration, overweight Corporate Credit, overweight Government Bonds, and underweight Securitized Debt relative to the Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond Index benchmark.”
When working with an Advisor, find someone you can work with, who’ll get to know you personally in order to create a plan that fits your needs. There are now robo-advisors. Do you really feel you are getting personal help from a robot?
Health Savings Account or HSA – there are limits on how much you can contribute if you are single for 2022 is $3650 and married for 2022 is $7300 – if you go over these amounts you must remove the excess contribution by the due date of the return. If you are both working and one is contributing the married amount, the other spouse cannot contribute.
If you are married but have separate accounts, it may be wise to put a TOD or transfer on death on the account or make it a joint account even if you use separate accounts. It will save a lot of paperwork for the spouse if one should die, leaving the account with no designated beneficiary.