What is the concept of a total balance sheet approach for a business owner?
Think of your superannuation fund or SMSF. You will likely receive an annual statement and can quickly understand:
As an example, your superannuation might look something like this (in $000s).
So, your superannuation fund generated a return after fees of 7.3%, made up of income and capital growth.
How does this compare to the return on the business (another asset class)? How much of your wealth is trapped in the business?
Consider the following example, with three asset classes including the superannuation fund, all evenly invested (in $000s). These returns are taken from our last article.
So, your investment property contributed an “inherently lazy” 11% with decent capital growth and marginal income given rental yields. In contrast, your business contributed a whopping 30.5% with strong income returns (business profit).
This is the total balance sheet approach to understanding and managing your total wealth, not just your super fund or property investments. Many financial advisors focus solely on the first asset class with little perspective about your broader investment portfolio.
The extra information might help with:
All businesses generate a return, but not all business owners think of this asset as an investment, nor treat it like one.
A private business is an illiquid asset. You can’t convert it into cash, at least not overnight and without a lot of preparation. The value (wealth) is trapped in your business.
Next time we will explore the concept of creating liquidity from your business asset.