Preserve and Build Wealth Through Uncertainty.
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With a constant stream of market headlines, interest rate debate and economic predictions, it’s understandable to feel worn down and even tempted to tune it all out.
But when it comes to building long‑term wealth, doing nothing can quietly become an expensive decision. Parking money in cash, postponing investment choices or overlooking the impact of regular contributions can gradually undermine your future plans without much warning.
The reality is that small, deliberate actions taken consistently can make a powerful difference over time.
One of the biggest risks of inaction is inflation. Cash may feel secure sitting in a savings account or term deposit, but each year it buys a little less.
To put that into perspective, $10,000 set aside in 2014 would have had the purchasing power of just $6,926.70 by 2024, assuming an average inflation rate of 2.7 per cent. That’s a real loss of more than 30 per cent without spending a dollar.
Even when inflation is relatively subdued, after accounting for tax, cash frequently delivers a negative real return. Your balance might not fall, but the value of what it can buy certainly does.
Cash serves a purpose: liquidity, flexibility and short‑term security. But it isn’t designed to generate meaningful long‑term growth.
History highlights the difference. Over the past 30 years, Australian shares have produced average returns of around 9.3 per cent per annum, compared with roughly 4.1 per cent from cash.
When compounded over decades, that gap becomes substantial. An initial investment of $100,000 growing at the share market rate could be worth about $1.4 million after 30 years. The same amount left in cash may reach only around $330,000.
By staying on the sidelines, investors often miss the growth engine that assets like shares, property and professionally managed funds can provide.
Starting an investment plan is a great first step. But leaving it untouched for years at a time can create unintended consequences.
Over time, market movements may alter your original asset mix, potentially increasing risk without you realising it. Dividends paid out but not reinvested can dilute the power of compounding. And as your personal circumstances evolve, an unchanged portfolio may no longer reflect your goals or risk tolerance.
Regular reviews at least annually help ensure your strategy stays aligned with where you are today, not where you were when the portfolio was first set up.
Compounding is one of the most powerful forces in investing but it rewards consistency.
Imagine two investors who each start with $10,000 and earn an average of 7 per cent per year. One adds an extra $5,000 annually, while the other makes no additional contributions.
After 30 years, the investor who keeps contributing could build a portfolio exceeding $500,000. The investor who stopped after the initial amount may end up with only around $76,000.
The difference isn’t market timing or clever stock selection it’s regular investing and time in the market.
Even modest contributions, started early and maintained consistently, can snowball into a meaningful nest egg. Tools such as ASIC’s MoneySmart calculators make it easy to explore how this works in practice.
For higher‑net‑worth investors, the cost of inaction can be even more significant. When larger balances sit idle or strategic decisions are deferred, the lost growth potential can run into millions of dollars over time.
Preserving capital is important but so is ensuring it remains productive. A well‑structured, diversified portfolio can help manage risk while still working toward long‑term objectives.
Periods of uncertainty often encourage caution, but excessive caution can leave capital underutilised failing to keep pace with inflation or evolving financial goals.
Beyond investments, structures such as tax planning, philanthropy, succession strategies and estate planning all require active oversight. Without regular engagement, these arrangements can drift out of alignment with personal circumstances, regulatory changes or market realities.
Staying involved doesn’t require dramatic action. Small adjustments reviewing a trust structure, rebalancing a portfolio or updating an estate plan can have a meaningful impact over time.
Doing nothing can feel comfortable, even sensible. In practice, it’s often the riskiest option of all. Inflation chips away at savings, excess cash limits growth and missed opportunities can delay or derail long‑term objectives.
The good news is that progress doesn’t require bold or rushed decisions. Regular contributions, reinvesting returns and reviewing your strategy periodically can help you build momentum steadily and sustainably.
If you’d like to check whether your current approach is still fit for purpose, we’re here to help. Sometimes, the most powerful step forward is simply getting started again.
Important Information:
Primary Wealth Management Pty Ltd (ABN 71 694 757 885) is a Corporate Authorised Representative (Representative No. 001319586) of Guidance Advisers Pty Ltd (ABN 65 653 468 832, AFSL 540341).
Any financial product advice provided in this article is general advice only, meaning it has been prepared without taking into account your personal objectives, financial situation, or needs. Before acting on any advice on this website, you should consider the appropriateness of the advice, having regard to your own objectives, financial situation, and needs. If the advice relates to the acquisition, or possible acquisition, of a particular financial product, you should obtain a copy of, and consider, the Product Disclosure Statement (PDS) for that product before making any decision
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