THE FINANCIAL COMMUTE
Hosted by Wealth Advisor Chris Galeski, THE FINANCIAL COMMUTE is a weekly podcast that gives the rundown on what's going on in the current market, how it affects you, and what you can do about it – all designed to fit into your commute. Each week Chris welcomes an expert guest, including Morton Wealth advisors, fund managers, and investment analysts, to break down complex financial topics. Our goal for this podcast is to provide you with the tools to help you navigate this challenging environment, leading to a path of more confident investing.
THE FINANCIAL COMMUTE
How Does Morton Wealth Actually Pick Its Investments?
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Most clients trust their wealth manager to make sound investment decisions on their behalf. Far fewer ever get to see exactly how those decisions are made. This episode is for the ones who want to know.
In this special edition of Financial Commute, Executive Vice President Eric Selter sits down with Chief Investment Officer Meghan Pinchuk to pull back the curtain on Morton Wealth's full investment research process. From what triggers a new idea to how funds get vetted, how structures get scrutinized, and what it actually takes to earn conviction, this is the conversation most firms never have in public.
Key Takeaways
- The investment process starts long before any money moves. From initial sourcing to final funding, a new investment can take 18 months or more. That is not a flaw in the process. It is the process.
- The structure around an investment matters as much as the investment itself. A great underlying asset in a poorly structured fund can leave you locked out, illiquid, or exposed to risks that have nothing to do with market performance.
- Good market conditions hide a lot. It is easy to look like a strong fund in a good market. The real test is how someone handles adversity. Morton Wealth actively looks for funds that have been tested and can clearly articulate what they learned.
- People are still the most important variable. AI can streamline data processing. It cannot assess character. Whether a fund will do the right thing when things are hard is a judgment call that requires real relationships and real time.