How to Maximize Your Retirement Portfolio with These Top-Ranked Dividend Stocks

For members of the middle class, who only have a moderate amount of money to invest, every move you make counts and can have a big impact on your net worth. Millionaires, on the other hand, often have more room to play with a wider margin of error.

Learn More: I’m a Financial Advisor: 4 Investing Rules My Millionaire Clients Never Break

Read Next: Are You Rich or Middle Class? 8 Ways To Tell That Go Beyond Your Paycheck

Here, William “Bill” London, a finance expert and partner at Kimura London & White LLP, explained what kind of moves millionaires can make that the middle class just can’t, and how to think of investing.

When millionaires play with money, their investments often have qualities that middle class can’t achieve, London said, including “high capital, long horizons and privileged access to markets.”

Millionaires are investing in hedge funds, venture capital or high property syndications that “are frequently typified by limited accessibility, low liquidity and high levels of risk,” he said. The average middle-class person is lucky to have retirement accounts and maybe a high-yield savings account or money market account.

Millionaires can invest big money because they have the financial buffer to incur “little more than slight hardships instead of severe life-transforming effects, a situation that normally applies to most families holding middle incomes,” London explained.

Find Out: Money Influencer Delyanne Barros: Why Boring Could Be Best for Investing

Tax-loss harvesting — essentially where investors reduce their taxable income by selling investments that have lost value — is another strategy millionaires use because they have “substantial taxable investment portfolios and sophisticated tax planning,” London said. For the average person with a 401(k) and limited brokerage activity, the benefits are small and often not worth the complexity.

Private equity, in general, is typically reserved for high-income earners because you have to commit large amounts of capital over longer durations, London explained. Millionaires have the kind of liquidity that allows for them to extract big sums of money without suffering to pay for their basic expenses.

To a middle-class earner, liquidity might just mean a slim buffer “to take care of unexpected situations, educational expenses or retirement goals which makes this investment strategy risky and often undesirable,” London said.

Not only do millionaires have the ability to borrow against investment portfolios or real estate at low interest rates to reinvest or defer taxes, “They have the liquidity and safety nets to handle downturns,” London said.

A middle-class investor just isn’t likely to have the financial buffer or willing to take a risk refinancing a home to invest. “If the market moves in the wrong direction, they may not have the flexibility to recover.”

In a nutshell, millionaires can absorb losses without major lifestyle changes. “They are able to take on high-risk, high-reward opportunities with patience and backup plans,” London pointed out. Middle-class investors usually cannot afford that luxury; a major loss could delay retirement or put essential life goals at risk.

While almost anyone can get some kind of tax benefit for making a charitable contribution, where the benefits really kick in is at a level of money the middle class is unlikely to have.

“The tax benefits that are available for donor-advised funds and other sophisticated trusts are relevant more frequently in situations that involve large charitable gifts or intergenerational transfers of wealth,” London said. For most families, the administration and maintenance costs of setting up such funds and trusts alone would be worth more than their potential savings.

Most middle-class people live, if not quite paycheck to paycheck, not far ahead of that, with a small emergency fund or buffer, and with every dollar of income counting.

Millionaires, on the other hand, can actually delay income to affect their taxes. “They may delay bonuses, use stock options, or receive investment returns structured to maximize long-term capital gains rates,” London explained. That’s a flexibility the average person earning a fixed paycheck simply does not have.

So maybe you’re not a millionaire — yet. You still can and should continue to invest. London suggested that the best strategy for long-term investment success for middle-income investors is as follows:

Building a diversified investment portfolio

Participating in frequent contributions

Reducing fees

Avoiding emotion-driven decisions

As compelling as these millionaires’ big moves may look at a distance, London warned that it’s “often counterproductive” for the middle class to try to replicate them. “Time-tested and simple investment methods often provide the most predictable results.”

More From GOBankingRates

7 McDonald's Toys Worth Way More Today 

4 Companies as Much as Tripling Prices Due To Tariffs 

3 Reasons Retired Boomers Shouldn't Give Their Kids a Living Inheritance (And 2 Reasons They Should) 

How Much Money Is Needed To Be Considered Middle Class in Your State?

This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: 6 Investing Moves That Benefit Millionaires, but Can Hurt the Middle Class

Scroll to Top