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Home Financial Planning

Advisors navigate a political divide in client outlooks

by FeeOnlyNews.com
5 months ago
in Financial Planning
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Advisors navigate a political divide in client outlooks
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Financial advisors often advise keeping politics out of a portfolio, but do clients heed their warnings?

A flood of new tariff policies from the Trump administration has sent shockwaves through the stock market. Advisors say that individual reactions, often dependent on their political views, can vary wildly from one client to another.

Paula Nangle, president and senior wealth advisor at Marshall Financial in Doylestown, Pennsylvania, said market outlooks between her conservative and progressive clients can be quite different.

READ MORE: Proactive comms can keep jittery clients from blowing up inboxes during market turns

Following Donald Trump’s inauguration earlier this year, one of Nangle’s clients asked her if she could put all of her money into a “virtual mattress,” she said. Nangle’s conservative clients, meanwhile, have been “quite bullish” since the start of the second Trump administration, she said.

That pattern is hardly new. Researchers have found that investors tend to be more optimistic when their favored political party is in power, viewing markets as less risky and more undervalued. As a result, investors whose political party is in power allocate more to risky assets.

The inverse is also true. Midway through President Trump’s first term, just 16% of Democrats said that the stock market would be higher a year from then, according to a poll conducted in December 2018 by Axios and SurveyMonkey. In that same survey, more than three times as many Republicans — 51% — said the stock market would be higher by the end of 2019.

READ MORE: Uncertainty drives sharp decline in advisor confidence

Partisan views on the stock market can have substantive impacts on individual investments. Da Ke, an assistant professor of finance at the Darla Moore School of Business at the University of South Carolina, found that even after accounting for factors like education, income and wealth, Democrats are less likely than Republicans to invest in the stock market.

Advising around partisan politics

Financial advisors are seeing those partisan market views firsthand.

Ethan Miller, founder of Planning for Progress in Washington, D.C., said that his more politically progressive clients have been pessimistic about the future of the economy as a result of the new Trump administration.

“I had a client come to me recently and say, ‘Oh, should we consider pulling out our money or investing more conservatively?'” he said. “And I pointed out that we were already invested what I would consider to be rather conservatively, based on our previous conversations … and they were like, ‘Oh, okay, great!'”

READ MORE: Crafting the perfect retirement portfolio: A financial advisor’s dilemma

Miller, whose firm serves left-leaning clients as a niche, said that his clients’ pessimistic political outlooks shouldn’t impact their long-term investment strategies.

Other advisors take a similar approach.

Ross Dugas, founder of registered investment advisor Scientific Financial in Houston, said market impacts from President Trump’s recent tariffs have concerned some of his clients, but he reminds them that they’re planning for longer time frames than any single administration.

“We’re looking at 10-, 20-, 30-year time frames many times, and what’s happening today is usually not terribly relevant amongst really long time frames like that,” Dugas said. “The market has always gone up and down, but it’s also sort of maintained this upward trajectory when you look at it over long time periods. So I encourage people to kind of zoom back and just look at the big picture, as opposed to just focusing on what’s happening today.”

Moving money in a down market

Still, for clients worried about the state of the market, Dugas said there are a couple of actions advisors can take to help their clients without altering broader investment plans — namely, Roth conversions and withdrawal strategy shifts.

“Roth conversions can become a little more attractive in down markets because we’re essentially going from stocks and bonds to stocks and bonds, and we’re just changing from a traditional IRA into a Roth IRA,” he said. “So if we move $50,000 from account A to account B, we haven’t lost any value. But if the market is down when we do that transaction, we’re able to move more shares … into that Roth IRA, that more tax-advantaged account, potentially faster without as big of a tax impact.”

A down market is also a good time to reevaluate withdrawal strategies for retired clients, Dugas said. For retirees with buckets of both stocks and cash, now could be a good time to lean more heavily on their cash reserves so they’re not liquidating positions in a correction.

Making the best of a bad market

When played right, advisors say that market downturns can be full of opportunity for clients, especially those in the accumulation phase.

READ MORE: Tariffs, taxes and market tumult: Navigating uncertain, volatile times

“Like any market downturn, regardless of the cause, there are opportunities to … make a little bit of a silver lining out of what is, hopefully, a temporary downturn,” Miller said. “What I always say to my progressive clients is, ‘If the market never recovers, we have bigger problems than the balance in your 401(k), right?'”

Miller said that strategies like Roth conversions don’t make sense for his clients at this point, but the current correction does present a useful opportunity for other options, like tax-loss harvesting.

Still, for all the unique opportunities the current market presents to investors, advisors say that client concerns aren’t going away anytime soon.

“We’re certainly not at the end of this, right? We’re not going back to the normal market cycle tomorrow,” Miller said. “I anticipate having many more conversations as we get deeper and deeper into not just correction territory, but actually maybe bear market territory. I certainly am anticipating more of those conversations.”



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