Increased confidence encourages affluent to expand investments.
Forty-two percent of mass affluent households (those with a minimum of
$250,000 in investable assets and/or annual household incomes of $150,000) plan
to make net increases to their portfolios in the next three months, compared to
only 38 percent reported last year, according to the February 2006 Phoenix
Affluent Marketing Service. The report indicates a continued increase in
investment buying sentiment among mass affluent households, which it first noted
in August 2005.
Retirement accounts were expected to receive the most additional assets (a 70
percent increase in positions) with deposit accounts, mutual funds and stocks
following, with likelihoods of increasing at 62 percent, 46 percent and 42
percent, respectively. Business investments and alternative investments were the
least likely to increase, with 11 percent and 3 percent, respectively.
Additionally, 53 percent of mass affluent consumers are not planning on
making net changes to their portfolios. Only 4 percent expect to make net
decreases to their portfolios in the next three months, which David Thompson,
vice president of affluent practice at Phoenix Marketing International,
interprets as increased economic confidence among a typically skittish
group.
“Affluent consumers, a highly risk-averse group, are showing signs of
confidence in the economy as they move their money back into the stock market,”
Thompson said in a press release. “This continued momentum is an excellent
opportunity for financial planners to expand and diversify their customers’
portfolios.”
The Phoenix Affluent Marketing Service program is the largest continuously
fielded survey of affluent households in the U.S. and provides an ongoing
summary of investment, financial and lifestyle behaviors and attitudes.
|