5 Strategies To Help Protect Your Financial Health

Author: Cindy Alvarez

With the market entering bear territory in 2018 and a projected economic slowdown this year, 2019 might bring some unwelcome challenges to freelancers and independent contractors who rely on project-based work to pay the bills. In a bear market, falling stock prices and pessimism can create fear, causing financial ripples throughout the free market system. Bear markets often coincide with a downturn in the economic cycle.

Luckily, there are proven steps you can take to invest, protect, and plan for your financial health, regardless of economic conditions. By exploring available options, you can select those that best fit your value, vision, and goals for investing your hard-earned wealth. These tools and resources can help get your money working for you in good economic times and bad.  

Let’s face it, there are challenges that freelancers and independent contractors face that W-2 employees may not. Projects may not pay consistently, or may slow to a trickle, leading to inconsistent cash flow.

Follow these strategies to build more wealth from what you bring home.

Strategy 1: Manage liquidity

Liquidity is the speed with which you can turn assets into cash. By keeping a relatively liquid portfolio, you’ll have greater freedom to sell assets when cash is short.

There are two primary ways to structure your portfolio to generate cash when you need it:

  1. Passive. Increase revenue streams by looking into investments that can generate cash for you. During cash valleys, the dividends and interest generated by these investments can be a great additional source of income without dipping into your principle. When you are flush, the money you don’t use day-to-day is simply reinvested.

  2. Active. Invest in more liquid assets, such as publicly-traded stocks, bonds, real estate investment trusts, and other assets that can easily be sold. If you buy an individual stock such as Apple or a share in a mutual or exchange traded fund today, you can sell it tomorrow. However, if you buy into a hedge fund or non-public business, cashing out when you’re in need may be problematic.

Strategy 2: Fund retirement

As a freelancer or independent contractor, your tax profile differs from W-2 employees. You are required to pay quarterly taxes and have different retirement savings vehicles available to you.

Selecting the right retirement vehicle is largely a function of how much you want to save as well as your tax bracket. Let’s break it down by income levels.

A freelancer making a maximum of $25,000 a year might prefer to fund retirement with after-tax dollars in a ROTH IRA. A freelancer making up to $75,000 a year, may choose to fund retirement with a traditional IRA to take advantage of the tax deduction. Annual contributions are limited in both IRAs to $6,000 for the under-50 crowd and $7,000 for individuals over the age of 50.

For higher-income earners making up to $250,000 a year, consider a Simplified Employee Pension, or SEP. A SEP plan offers greater contribution options than an IRA or individual 401(k).

High-earners might consider a 401(k) profit-sharing plan. This plan lowers an individual’s tax burden immediately and only needs to be in place for three years to reap the greatest rewards.

The profit-sharing component allows you to tax efficiently take profits out each year, while the 401(k) component allows you to make pre-tax contributions for retirement (up to $19,000 for taxpayers under the age of 50 and $25,000 if 50 and over).

To summarize:

  • If you make < $75,000 annually, consider a traditional (pre-tax dollars) or ROTH (after-tax dollars) IRA, which permit annual contributions of up to $6,000, or $7,000 for people 50 years and over.

  • If you make < $250,000 annually, consider a Simplified Employee Pension, or SEP, which offers greater contribution options (up to $56,000 a year or 25% of income) than both an IRA and 401(k).

  • If you make > $1 million annually, consider a solo 401(k) with a profit-sharing component.

Strategy 3: Protect what you own

In the wealth management arena, the term “asset protection” has different meanings and uses. Generally, it shores up capital against threats from litigation, market turns, fraud and more.

While there is no way to guarantee asset safety, there are protection strategies that can help shield your assets from unauthorized access. This might include insurance binders, trusts and offshore accounts, or investment portfolio strategies, such as bulking up on bonds and non-correlated asset classes to hedge against market risk. Talk to a wealth advisor about how to best minimize risks to your assets.

At Money & Mimosas, we recommend looking after your physical and mental health. Of course, accidents and injuries can happen. But the good news is that, even if an injury does impact your earning potential, you can sometimes get compensation for it. Personal injury lawyers can help you to cover any lost earning potential, on top of the impact that an injury can have on your personal life.

Strategy 4: Integrate tax planning

Every financial decision has tax and legal considerations, and you may be able to minimize your tax bill by understanding what those consequences will be before making key decisions. This is especially important for high-income earners that have more to lose when taxes are ignored.

Work with an investment advisor that knows your tax situation and works in tandem with a tax specialist so that these considerations are comprehensively integrated into your financial plan.

Strategy 5: Point your financial compass in the right direction

Personal finances can be an intimate and emotional topic, which is why so many women find it difficult to talk about their financial affairs. Learn how to talk money with a network of like-minded family, friends, and trusted advisors. These outlets can connect you to resources and solutions that support your financial health for a lifetime.

Cinday Alvarez.jpg

Cindy Alvarez is a Senior Wealth Management Advisor at Wambolt & Associates in Colorado, where she has been helping clients achieve their financial goals since 2012. She is also the driving force behind Women, Wealth & Wisdom, a women-only educational series and group mentoring program for building and preserving wealth. Click here to join with other women taking control of their finances. Cindy can be reached at cindy.alvarez@wamboltwealth.com.


Want more money tips? Join the weekly Money & Mimosas newsletter.