Walk Toward Wealth: The Two Investing Strategies Everyone Should Know
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About this ebook
Are you ready to make steady gains instead of foolishly chasing the market?
In Walk Toward Wealth, veteran money manager Kevin Simpson shares portfolio hedging strategies typically accessible only to professional money managers and wealthy financiers - including one of the best-kept secrets to cre
Kevin Simpson
Kevin Simpson is Founder and Chief Investment Officer of Capi- tal Wealth Planning (CWP). Based in Naples, Florida, CWP is an SEC-registered fee-only investment advisory firm. The company has approximately $5 billion of assets under management, and has been building and managing equity income-oriented portfolios since 2005.Originally from Philadelphia, Kevin has been investing in options since beginning his career at W.H. Newbold’s Sons & Co. in 1992. He worked for seven years at Wheat First Butcher Singer (later Wells Fargo) where he helped institutions and high-net-worth individuals plan and achieve their financial goals through option-centered strategies. He also worked at Sterling Financial for several years before opening CWP.Kevin practices the strategies outlined in this book, applying institutional investment management to diversified equity and option portfolios. His methodologies are designed to enhance risk-adjusted returns and offer portfolio protection while delivering monthly cash flow. CWP leads the implementation of covered call strategies with their Enhanced Dividend Income Portfolio, ESG Enhanced Dividend Income Portfolio, ETF Covered Call Portfolio, and Covered Call Overlay Service, and was recognized by Financial Advisor Magazine in 2018, 2019 and 2021 as one of the top 50 fastest-growing SEC-registered investment advisors in the country. To learn more, visit www.capitalwealthplanning.com.A frequent contributor on Yahoo Finance, Fox Business, and CNBC, Kevin also hosts a podcast where he interviews the financial industry’s top investment professionals to provide expert insight and analysis for a deeper understanding of today’s markets. He graduated from George Washington University, where he majored in finance. Kevin lives in Naples, Florida, with his wife JoAnna. They have one son, Jack, and Dallas the dog.
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Walk Toward Wealth - Kevin Simpson
FOREWORD
Kevin and I both come from hard-working families who, just a few generations ago, humbly made their way from Europe to the United States to passionately pursue the American Dream.
While they proudly ended up as auto mechanics, schoolteachers, crane operators, and stay-at-home moms — not rich by any means — our families have heart, worked hard, and budgeted, which helped us establish a value system and sense of self-worth that can’t be measured in dollar signs.
Our blue-collar and middle-class upbringings may not have paved our way with silver spoons, but they showed us that drive and determination can take you places.
You don’t get to pick your family of origin, or where or when you’re born. A lot of things in life are serendipitous. When it comes to creating wealth and building financial independence, you don’t have to rely on either. In this book, Kevin lays out in clear language and simple steps how you can build wealth based on the knowledge of seasoned portfolio managers honed over decades.
Until now, the benefits of portfolio hedging haven’t been accessible to the public at large. Instead, this knowledge has been held close by professional wealth managers and wealthy financiers. The democratization of wealth, full transparency, long-term thinking, and a consistent strategy are all aspects of money management that we also believe in at SkyBridge.
It doesn’t matter if you’re familiar with options strategies or don’t yet understand the foundation of buying and selling stocks. All you need is curiosity, a desire to learn, and discipline to apply the strategies taught here.
The two important strategies Kevin details — writing covered calls and purchasing proven, dividend-paying equities — can help improve your investment returns through steady gains by focusing on investing for the long term and walking toward wealth instead of trying to get rich quick. His focus on dividend-paying, blue-chip equities is especially timely and prudent in our current low interest rate environment.
Kevin has the X factor
for being successful: He’s not afraid to make decisions. Why? Because he stays true to his investing philosophy that you’ll learn about in the pages to come. I don’t believe in money managers who are bottlenecks … where every decision comes from one person. Having a disciplined, rules-based process allows Kevin to show you through real-life examples the methodology behind the decision-making.
In investing and life, we have knowns, unknowns, and unknown unknowns. When I left my first job out of Harvard Law School at Goldman Sachs to run a money management firm, I was a naive 32-year-old living in the mid-1990s who confused brains with the bull market. My foray into politics as a leverage mechanism to network and grow my career in finance, evolved into letting my ego and pride take me somewhere not well-suited for my personality. I’ve learned there are things you think you know with great confidence that you get wrong.
Kevin works to remove emotion from investing with his tried-and-true, disciplined process to help limit ego-driven mistakes and manage risk. Every decision to invest or not is based on his rules-based approach that remains the same no matter what’s happening in the market. As you’ll learn, knowing what to do, instead of focusing on the cause of high volatility or a market correction, is key.
When it comes to decision-making, conviction is good. Overconfidence and ego are not. Don’t ever put your pride and ego into your decision making. Whether you’re a seasoned investor or just getting started, this part of the human condition is the great equalizer.
More important than money, it’s the human condition that connects us all. With wealth, we can do things for ourselves, families, communities, and the world. Beyond wealth, recognize that you’re on a journey and enjoy it.
- Anthony Scaramucci
Founder and Managing Partner of SkyBridge Capital
PREFACE
Invest and save wisely.
– Cecilia Kopcinski
Cecilia didn’t invent value-investing, and she wasn’t the Oracle of Omaha, yet her words resonate with the same telling veracity of Benjamin Graham’s or Warren Buffet’s. Who was she? Cecilia was my grandmother. And although she (Babcia, as we lovingly called her), along with my grandfather, Pop-Pop, fell squarely in the lower-middle class demographic, their fiscal responsibility and shrewd approach to saving made them the richest people I knew.
Surprisingly, I received a letter from Babcia just a couple years ago that was written 30 years prior. At the time, she purchased a zero-coupon bond in my name with a 2020 maturity date. When it matured, I received a $10,000 check and a handwritten letter:
Dear Kevin,
You know we love you very much, and hope you spend this money wisely. I hope you appreciate this act of love as we both worked hard to earn it. You know your grandfather was only a laborer at the Frankfort arsenal. I handled the money and invested and saved wisely, because it always gave us so much joy to give to our children. We love you all. God bless you, dear Kevin.
- Babcia + Pop-Pop
This is an incredibly powerful life lesson — one that bears repeating to yourself, your clients, and even to your family, no matter the market environment or pressing issues at hand. It’s always relevant to share the importance of having a long-term timeframe, committing to an investment strategy, and allowing the power of compounding to do its work.
Where it all began
During the stock market crash in 1987, I was a senior in high school, and we had very little business education as part of the curriculum. The crash dominated the news cycle for weeks. I asked my father, a schoolteacher, about it, but it wasn’t his area of expertise. My mom had her hands full with me and my younger brother, Keith, and didn’t participate in the stock market either. But I was immediately interested and relentless in my pursuit of knowledge about the markets, going back to the crash of 1929.
When I was in high school, we didn’t have the internet, so this research was all done in a library. It was incredibly fascinating. The more I learned, the more I wondered, Why didn’t anyone see the crash coming? Why was the market correction in 1987 a surprise?
And that’s how I became passionate about the markets.
Where we are
My goal in writing this book is to provide everyone, from the ordinary investor to the experienced wealth advisor, insight from the most seasoned portfolio managers. For a long time, the benefits of portfolio hedging have only been accessible to professional wealth managers and wealthy financiers. In this book, I’ll share two important strategies to improve your investment returns: writing covered calls and purchasing proven, dividend-paying equities.
The first of these strategies, writing covered calls, is designed to provide additional income, and they reduce volatility along the way.
The other strategy, purchasing proven, dividend-paying equities, is one of the secrets to obtaining regular income. I use easy-to-understand language to show you how you can create real wealth for yourself. This book is for anyone who’s eager to learn ways to grow their wealth. It doesn’t matter where you fit on the investing knowledge spectrum. And as the title suggests, my focus is on investing for the long term — making steady gains — instead of foolishly chasing the market.
All you need is an open mind and a willingness to learn. With those two qualities in place, your next steps involve the disciplined application of the strategies discussed. Creating wealth and building financial independence are not limited by inheritance or luck. We live in a time when you can build wealth through the consistent application of time-tested, proven investment strategies.
You may be wondering how this book differs from others you may have seen, or how the advice it offers is different from what you frequently hear from financial pundits. To be clear, this is a strategic plan that adds value to your long-term investments and isn’t a get-rich-quick scheme.
Maybe you’re intrigued by covered calls. Or perhaps regular dividend income appeals to you. Whatever the reason, I’m grateful for your interest in creating a better return on your invested wealth. The steps you’ll learn here work in both bull and bear markets.
As Babcia taught me, investing and saving wisely is a legacy for our loved ones. I hope you take away an abundance of knowledge from what I’m about to share with you and pass these ideas to future generations or people you care about. After all, investing wisely and sharing our success with others is a matter of love and pays the ultimate dividend — joy!
Thank you, Babcia and Pop-Pop.
INTRODUCTION
The best way to measure your investing success is not by whether you’re beating the market, but by whether you’ve put in place a financial plan and a behavioral discipline that are likely to get you where you want to go.
- Benjamin Graham, economist, professor, investor, and author of The Intelligent Investor
It may come as a surprise that information on wealth-building isn’t available to everyone. Lack of investment knowledge is actually quite common among people of all ages, in almost every profession. It’s not anything to be ashamed of, but it’s something that can hold you back from reaping the best returns on your hard-earned savings. This is where I’m eager to congratulate you for picking up this book. Your desire to learn is a testament to not only your personal inquisitiveness, but an excellent reason to be optimistic about your future.
I’ve been investing professionally since 1992, when I joined W.H. Newbold’s Son & Co., shortly after graduating from The George Washington University with a degree in finance. Subsequently, I worked for seven years at Wheat First Butcher Singer (later, Wells Fargo) where I helped institutions and high-net-worth individuals plan and achieve their financial goals, utilizing stock, bond, and option-based strategies. After this, I worked at Sterling Financial before opening my own wealth-management firm, Capital Wealth Planning, in Naples, Florida, in 2005. It was here that I began to practice the strategies outlined in this book and apply institutional investment management strategies to diversified equity and option portfolios.
While politics and opinion are woven into everyday financial news, we’re going to disregard those concerns. Instead, we’re going to focus on how to make the most of your investments, the same way a professional money manager would — through the conservative income-oriented combination of covered calls and dividends.
We will avoid speculative talk about the latest and greatest hot
stock and casino-like investing in the stock market. News cycles tend to be more about moving in and out of stocks than investing in great companies. It’s unfortunate because the latter is key to being successful. I’m passionate about teaching others to invest in individual stocks. It’s an imperfect-yet-consistent way to receive profit streams from public companies in return for the capital invested in them. While stock prices and portfolio values fluctuate in the short term, quality investments tend to steadily appreciate in the long term.
Famous value investor Benjamin Graham made an important distinction between investing and speculating in his book, The Intelligent Investor. He said, An investment operation is one which, upon thorough analysis, promises safety of principal and an adequate return. Operations not meeting these requirements are speculative.
Graham also observed how intelligent, serious individuals who had carefully accumulated wealth through hard work and diligence were often indifferent and lackadaisical when it came to investing those same hardearned dollars. Graham pointed this out saying, It is amazing to see how many capable businessmen try to operate in Wall Street with complete disregard to the sound principles through which they have gained success in their own undertakings.
To his point, far too many individuals haphazardly buy and sell financial instruments they know little about, frittering away wealth that took years — and often the majority of their lives — to build.
Investors who speculate are often undisciplined, erratic, and impatient, wanting immediate returns without understanding how the stock market works. These investors fail to realize that time and quality investments are your best friends when it comes to increasing your net worth.
I’m not interested in wild speculations or rash decision-making based on impulsive choices, website chatter, or adrenaline rushes. Instead of trying to interpret the varying and often conflicting information that can push people toward buying or selling any in-favor or out-of-favor stocks, we’re going to focus on the two time-tested and proven investment strategies.
It’s worth repeating that investing in a diversified portfolio of great companies at reasonable prices, holding them (or occasionally replacing one), receiving dividend payments,