In the early days of the pandemic, Jason Norton was enjoying
the comfortable life he had built for himself. A father of three, he manages
about $220 million for clients around his community in Carrollton, Georgia,
about an hour west of Atlanta.
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But in the course of the past year, he saw employees
struggle financially and emotionally, clients question what they were doing,
and a close uncle die from
COVID-19. His views on wealth began to shift.
“I used to think of wealth as financial independence to do
what you want to do when you want to do,” said Norton, founder and CEO of
Norton Financial, a financial advisory firm. “My perspective has shifted. Now I
view wealth more as a tool.”
Norton is not alone in his evolving attitudes toward wealth.
The pandemic has changed how Americans view wealth in far-reaching ways,
according to two recent surveys.
Even for the wealthiest, the coronavirus crisis challenged
the notion that money could buy anything. Sure, a few could charter a plane to
take them to a private home in a secluded location. But who could go out to
their favorite restaurant or even buy toilet paper during the worst of the
pandemic?
“We thought we’d always be able to do the things we wanted,
but you couldn’t because it was closed,” said Norton, 39. “We thought we could
buy whatever we wanted, but you couldn’t because it wasn’t available.”
People still worry about taxes, and no one likes large,
unexpected expenses, but health — particularly COVID-19-related — concerns have
surged almost to the top of the list of worries, a survey of 400 investors
found. The survey, entitled the “Why of Wealth,” was released Friday by the
wealth management firm Boston Private in a follow-up to a 2018 survey.
About 60 percent of respondents said the pandemic had caused
them to reevaluate their perception of wealth, but there is a huge generational
disparity: 78 percent of millennials and 73 percent of Generation X respondents
said the pandemic had changed how they planned to use their wealth in the
future, but only 26 percent of baby boomers and the same percent of the silent
generation said the same thing.
“Our survey participants don’t necessarily define wealth as
accumulating a lot of financial capital,” said Gerald Baker, a head of the
Center for Wealth Planning Excellence at Boston Private. “It’s about being
successful in what they do. COVID has really made them redefine what it means
to enjoy what they do and to redefine success.”
Several key metrics of defining wealth had fallen in the
past three years. In 2018, 65 percent of respondents felt that wealth gave them
peace of mind, but that number had fallen to 53 percent by this spring. Half
the respondents equated wealth with happiness, 4 percentage points lower than
in 2018.
In another shift, more people said wealth meant success in
life; that was up to 50 percent, from 40 percent last time.
“A big component of success is still making money, but it’s
just not making money to increase your financial capital,” Baker said. “It’s
accomplishing something in the process, to build other things, to take some of
that financial capital and put it into something else.”
Norton said his priorities had shifted to focusing more on
the people around him, so he decided to pay the first half of his company’s
Christmas bonus to employees in May. “I did it just to make sure they were OK,”
he said. “I focused less on my net worth and income and more on making sure
we’re doing the right thing for our clients but also making sure my staff and
my family was OK.”
For others, though, the mandated isolation focused their
mind. Douglas Swets, an angel investor in early-stage startups, said the
pandemic brought greater clarity and focus to the investments he and his
partners were making.
“After a year of Zoom meetings, I can have a lot more meetings,
and it’s improved our due diligence,” he said. “We can have more people doing
reference calls. You get all the questions answered.”
At the same time, Swets, who is married with two adult
children, said the investments that he reviewed were not necessarily better
given the extra time. If anything, they were actually riskier, but the pandemic
gave him a different view on investing.
“One of the things I’m really happy about is, I’m creating
jobs,” said Swets, 75. “I look at this now as my charitable contributions. Last
year, I invested in more companies than I have in any other year. I like the
idea that I can build businesses for other people.”
What is still the same in the
Boston Private survey is that
money does buy comfort, a similar finding in the 2018 report. “I don’t worry
about money as much as I used to,” Swets said.
Americans with more modest incomes and savings were largely
optimistic about the country and the economy coming out of the pandemic,
according to an annual survey by the Charles Schwab Corp. One-quarter of the
1,000 respondents in the survey, which was released in May, planned to splurge
on big purchases.
The marker to be considered wealthy dropped by $700,000:
Respondents said having $1.9 million would make them feel wealthy, compared
with $2.6 million a year ago.
The number of people who identified as savers jumped to 80
percent from 64 percent over the same period. The amount of money needed for
“financial happiness” fell to $1.1 million from $1.75 million, and the amount
needed to be financially comfortable fell to $624,000 from $934,000.
“What we learned from the survey is, more Americans are
refocusing their priorities on their relationships and health,” said Rob
Williams, vice president of financial planning at Charles Schwab. “The amount
to feel financially comfortable has declined, but that’s largely because of a
refocusing of priorities on what money can and can’t do for you.”
Elizabeth Galbut, a venture capitalist, used her time
working from home in New York to reassess where she could live. She decided to
move closer to her parents in Naples, Florida.
“I had to slow down, but it sped up my actualization of my
personal goals and values,” she said. “As an entrepreneur, you’re working so
much that you lose sight of yourself. I moved closer to my family to spend more
quality time with them. I started working out every day. I started nursing
myself with good food.”
That change in priorities helped her stay focused on
investing in companies led by women. Her firm, SoGal Ventures, made more
investments in health care and functional medicine companies, and it reaped
successes from earlier investments.
One of those companies, EverlyWell, made one of the first
at-home coronavirus tests given emergency clearance by the
Food and Drug Administration.
“We want to use our wealth to invest in the change we care
about,” Galbut said. “A lot of these trends have been supercharged by the
pandemic.”
She sees being closer to her family as an example of a
larger positive change.
“My business partner and I used to be traveling 100,000 or
200,000 miles a year to visit everyone,” Galbut said. “I’ll be traveling more
when this ends, but it’s not like I have to be in New York. Hopefully, more of
these meetings will be virtual.”
Some of the biggest areas of concern in the Boston Private
survey were around children: Parents were more inclined to use their wealth to
help children now than to save for their children’s future because of the
pandemic.