return objective

Gersonides

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If a question asks you to formulate a return objective, do you need to include a numercal return objective or simply state the specific goal objectives?
In the IFT mock 1, there is a question where the client needs to support her son’s eduction and her father’s nursing home espenses. She would retire 20 years out. So this is a multi-stage horizon. I could establish a numerical return objective for the first 4 years, but there’s not enough info to move beyond that.
I thought I recalled reading that it was a requirement to state a numerical objective along with the stated objectives. In IFT’s answer, he does noyt have a numerical objective, but I wasted extra time on that question trying to compute the required return.
Any idea how this would show up on the actual exam?
 
AM section is all about time management, so there is no time to do both…
i think if the question states “show your calculations” then you need to give them a number, otherwise the % number is not required.
 
Gmax wrote:
AM section is all about time management, so there is no time to do both…
i think if the question states “show your calculations” then you need to give them a number, otherwise the % number is not required.
you dare challenge mrsmart? SMH at you
 
As I understand it, when asked for a return objective - that can be answered just in words. A return requirement needs calculations.
 
MrSmart wrote:Do both
Do not do both.
Formulating a return objective means writing out the words: cover expenses, maintain purchasing power, grow the portfolio, whatever.
If they want a calculation, they’ll tell you to do a calculation. If they don’t say, explicitly, to do the calculation, you’re wasting your time by doing it.
 
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