Goals-Based Portfolio Theory

This document was uploaded by one of our users. The uploader already confirmed that they had the permission to publish it. If you are author/publisher or own the copyright of this documents, please report to us by using this DMCA report form.

Simply click on the Download Book button.

Yes, Book downloads on Ebookily are 100% Free.

Sometimes the book is free on Amazon As well, so go ahead and hit "Search on Amazon"

An in-depth overview of investing in the real world

In Goals-Based Portfolio Theory, award-winning Chartered Financial Analyst® Franklin J. Parker delivers an insightful and eye-opening discussion of how real people can navigate the financial jungle and achieve their financial goals. The book accepts the reality that the typical investor has specific funding requirements within specified periods of time and a limited amount of wealth to dedicate to those objectives. It then works within those limits to show you how to build an investment portfolio that maximizes the possibility you’ll achieve your goals, as well as how to manage the tradeoffs between your goals.

In the book, you’ll find:

  • Strategies for incorporating taxation and rebalancing into a goals-based portfolio
  • A discussion of the major non-financial risks faced by people engaged in private wealth management
  • An incisive prediction of what the future of wealth management and investment management may look like

An indispensable exploration of investing as it actually works in the real world for real people, Goals-Based Portfolio Theory belongs in the library of all investors and their advisors who want to maximize the chances of meeting financial goals.

Author(s): Franklin J. Parker
Publisher: Wiley
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 254
City: Hoboken

Cover
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Forewordby Jean LP Brunel, CFA
PrefaceGoals-Based Investors and the Need for Better Theory
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1 The Story of the IdeaHow Goals-Based Portfolio Theory Came to Be
Chapter 2 A Theoretical Foundation
Comparison to Modern Portfolio Theory
Chapter 3 Allocating Wealth Across Goals and Across Investments
Case Study
Chapter 4 Allocating Wealth Through Time
Chapter 5 Real Markets, Real Risk, Real Portfolios
Chapter 6 Insurance Through a Goals-Based Lens
Chapter 7 Impact Investing
Chapter 8 Taxes and Rebalancing
Chapter 9 Goals-Based Reporting
Chapter 10 Fragility Analysis of Goals-Based Inputs
Chapter 11 Human Risks
Chapter 12 Prudent Investing with High-Variance Assets: An Experimental Chapter
Chapter 13 As a Bridge Between Normative and Behavioral Finance
Gambling, Insurance, and the Friedman-Savage Puzzle
Samuelson’s Paradox
Infinite Payoffs, Limited Costs—The St. Petersburg Paradox
Questions of Probability, Questions of Doubt
Irrational People, Irrational Markets?
Chapter 14 The Future Structure of Wealth Management Firms
Some Final Thoughts
Index
EULA