Investment Philosophy

We believe in long-term investing. We subscribe to the Modern Portfolio Theory and effective diversification across dissimilar asset classes. We invest in a wide variety of asset classes with the goal of capturing the return on capital that inevitably global capital markets produce.

  • We're located in beautiful Historic Downtown Chestertown

    We're located in beautiful Historic Downtown Chestertown

  • Move your "Someday" closer with our IRA's.

    Move your "Someday" closer with our IRA's.

Financial Services

Financial Services

We provide investment and financial advice across the entire financial spectrum—and strive to make an extremely complicated field simple again
Read More
Advisors

Advisors

Martin Knight is a Certified Financial Planner™ and has passed the Series 7, Series 24, Series 31 and Series 66 exams. He is licensed to sell securities and to offer investment advice for a fee in Maryland. He also holds a Maryland Life and Health insurance license.
Read More
Articles

Articles

Our collection of articles on investing strategy and market insights. The articles were written by advisors on our team.
Read More
FINRA'S BrokerCheck

FINRA'S BrokerCheck

Check the background of this investment professional on FINRA's BrokerCheck
Read More

Newsletter #7, 03-13-2018

March 13, 2018

I think our start to March weather qualifies as lion-like (or at least an angry cat) so maybe we can look forward to a lamb-like finish.  The markets seem ready to turn the corner from the down and volatile February.  This would be nice and might allow us to sleep a bit better, but a quick turnaround is not necessary for our long-term goals.  Remember, markets fluctuate and the longer our favorite investments are undervalued, the better the buying opportunities.

Spring is on the way.  Heck, it may have even arrived by the time I get this newsletter out—by the calendar, it arrives on Tuesday, March 20th.  On that day darkness and daylight equally split that day.  The internal clock of things that are alive roll over from dormant to growth.  We humans de-winterize our boats, drag-out lawn-mowers and prepare to leave the stale air of indoor living and get outside.  We can perhaps wash the car without our fingers falling off!

Read More

Newsletter #6, 02-13-2018

February 13, 2018

So far, February has reaffirmed itself as my least favorite month of the year.  We have had snow, freezing rain, hard rain, super cold winds and now the markets just kicked us in the shins.  Frankly, I am ready for March and a bit more normalcy.  Perhaps a month where the word, volatile is neither uttered nor thought of.

Enough complaining, let’s talk about what we are going to do about these darn markets.  The only correct response to this momentary loss of investor sanity is to do nothing.  Our job is to simply ignore these daily and temporary market gyrations.  This is like the weather; not many people like February in Maryland, but it does not materially affect our long-term outlook on our lives.  It is just the weather, and what it did in the first two weeks of February will be long-forgotten in July.

Read More

Newsletter #5, 1-17-2018

January 17, 2018

Financial News Media is in the entertainment industry and the creators, producers, writers, and the actors are not in that industry to inform anyone how to invest or make investment decisions.  The primary goal of these entities is to generate higher ratings so their sales’ teams can then use those ratings to price and sell more profitable advertisements.  Achievement of this goal pays them all a nice salary.

There is nothing wrong with their business model, I believe these organizations make a decent return for their efforts and the actors/reporters make a decent living doing what they do.  They are certainly entertaining and if you view them in that light then you surely will get your money’s worth.   A few of the print media sources create some decent reading and they are easier to ignore the ads.  The televised broadcasts are visually entertaining and can offer up some information around earnings season.  Their sets, by the way, are designed to look like pre-game football sets that show activity and action with numbers and graphs popping up all over the place.  There are even “experts” who forecast future market results with as much flare as football analysts predicting the winners of the NFL schedule that week.  Unfortunately, with the same dismal records of successful predicting.

Read More

Newsletter #4 12-15-2017

Owning equities in 2017 has once again proven its value to our financial health.  As of December 11, the S&P 500 sits in the neighborhood of 2,657 and, not even counting dividends, has returned about 18.7% for the year.  Now, just to keep compliance content and happy, we need to note that none of us can invest in the S&P 500 directly, it is an index.  Furthermore, we want our investments to be diversified so we would not invest in only the top 500 companies in the USA.

While we want diversification we will always want a sizable portion of our investments in equities.  By the way, when we say equities we are referring to shares or pieces of ownership in public companies.   And we want to own our part of these companies so we can participate in their success.  Ownership of the top 500 companies (S&P 500) has returned a very nice 8.5% average since 1980.  (J.P. Morgan’s “Guide to the Markets” Sept. 30, 2017.)

Read More

Newsletter #3, 11-13-2017 The Wealth Effect

The Wealth Effect!

The Wall Street Journal is my paper of choice.  I get the online version and one of the primary perks of that is a morning email sent every weekday titled, The Daily Shot.  The Daily Shot or DS is worth the price of the whole subscription.  The DS sent on October 31 had a few charts which shows that we may be experiencing what Behavioral Finance defines as The Wealth Effect.  We will cover The Wealth Effect this month and see how it might be affecting our personal financial behavior.

The charts in question show that as of last month, the US Household Savings Rate had fallen to just 3%, the lowest level in ten years.  At the same time, households are saving less, we are spending more.  Pretty simple, if you are not saving it, you must be spending it.  Real Personal Consumption Expenditures (Spending) surprised to the upside with a .6% uptick in September and is at its highest level since the start of the measurement in January 1999.[i]  The two measures are obviously related; not saving, more spending.  My job is to help make sure we are not a party to this foolishness—or, if nothing else, make you feel guilty about it.

Read More

Newsletter #2, October 15, 2017

2017—October

Opportunity Cost

Our first topic this month is Opportunity Cost.  Simply defined, Opportunity Cost is the value of one decision over another.  It is the difference between choosing Option One over Option Two.  If it is possible and you execute both decisions equally well, then there is no lost opportunity or cost, it is just a busy week.  In personal financial matters and this newsletter, we are referring to spending resources (time and money) on one thing, rather than on some other thing.

Lest I appear holier than thou, every weekend as I walk my dock toward our boat “Summer Knights,” I am confronted with a constant reminder of opportunity costs.  While we preach prudence, we are human and thus not perfect.  When we fail, we should at least be aware of our frivolity.

Read More

For Immediate Release

January 3, 2017

For Immediate Release

Contact:  Glenn Wilson, President and CEO
Chesapeake Bank and Trust
245 High Street
Chestertown MD 21620

410-778-1600, gwilson@chesapeaketrust.com

 

Contact:  Martin Knight, CFP® MBA, Owner and President
Chesapeake Investment Advisors, Inc.
106 Spring Ave.
Chestertown MD 21620

410-810-0735, mknight@chesadvisors.com

 

Chesapeake Investment Services and Chesapeake Investment Advisors Begin New Partnership in 2017

Chestertown, Maryland – January 3, 2017— Martin Knight, owner of Chesapeake Investment Advisors and Kristen Owen, of Chesapeake Investment Services (a division of Chesapeake Bank and Trust Company) are pleased to announce a new partnership which will provide valued clients with a team approach to financial planning and investment services.  Both Martin and Kristen are licensed to sell securities and offer investment advice, and have over twenty years of combined experience building relationships and serving clients in Chestertown.  Martin and Kristen will maintain separate offices, but will work together under the same broker-dealer, Geneos Wealth Management.  With no proprietary products, Martin and Kristen have the flexibility to offer their clients the best solutions to their unique needs.

Martin has been offering Financial Planning and investment advice for over 11 years.  He took over Chesapeake Investment Advisors from former owners Bob and JoAnne Gerhardt in 2008 when they retired.  He has over $48 million in assets under management.  Martin is a Certified Financial PlannerTM and has passed the Series 7, 24, 31 and 66 exams, and holds a life & health insurance license.

Kristen has been with Chesapeake Bank and Trust for over 11 years and has served as Investment Adviser Representative since February 2015. Kristen has passed the Series 7 and 66 exams and holds a life & health insurance license.  Highly active in our local community, Kristen is President of Downtown Chestertown Association and a member of the boards of Garfield Center for the Arts and Chestertown Main Street.

Glenn Wilson, President of Chesapeake Bank and Trust Company, remarked “Kristen and I are very excited that we’ll be working with Marty to help our clients pursue their financial dreams and goals. Marty’s experience and expertise in the field of financial planning and advising will be a complement to Kristen’s strong relationship skills and help build on Chesapeake’s strong financial services foundation.”

“I am pleased to be working with Chesapeake Bank and Trust, which is so highly respected in this market,” said Mr. Knight.  “Our firms share a commitment to our clients and a focus on tailoring solutions to meet individual needs, which makes us well-suited for a partnership.”

Chesapeake Investment Advisors is located at 106 Spring Avenue, and Chesapeake Investment Services is located at 245 High Street, both in Chestertown’s Historic District. For more information, or to schedule an appointment, you can contact Martin at 410-810-0735 or Kristen at 410-778-1600.

Securities and Advisory Services offered through Geneos Wealth Management, Inc. Member FINRA/SIPC

College Tuition up in Smoke

The other morning I was standing in front of my office window pouring a cup of coffee when I saw two brand-new Moms pushing baby strollers. As they paused to cross Calvert Street, I couldn’t help but notice one Mom had a cigarette in her left hand. It brought to mind a gas-station advertisement promoting a pack of cigarettes for only $6.73.

I’m an ex-smoker and basically smoked a pack a day from age 16 till 32. Since the day I quit I’ve become that ex-smoker-jerk that current smokers love to hate. I’ll ask them if they’ve read the side of the pack; you know, about smoking causing death and such? These days I hate-hate-hate even the smell of cigarettes and I’m embarrassed that I was once addicted.

Anyway, the young mother is probably consuming about a pack a day since she can’t even take her little baby out for a morning stroll without lighting up. I started thinking about the $6.73 per pack advertisement and after a back-of-the-envelope calculation; I figured she will send up in smoke about $204 per month, or $2,448 per year. In the next 18 years, or about when her baby reaches college-age, she will have, just in cigarettes alone, with no future price increases, burnt up about $44,064 in after-tax cash.

If the new Mom would sock away $200 per-month in an investment that could earn something in the neighborhood of 7.72% she would have a nice little account for her then college-bound student of about $83,800. And this doesn’t count a most certain health dividend for her or her child.
Bottom-line, if you know someone trying to quit this nasty and expensive habit join me in being that pain-in-their-neck-smart-aleck and give them a little more ammunition in their quest to quit. Tell them they’re blowing their college fund!

Marty Knight, MBA, CFP® is currently a Financial Advisor with Chesapeake Investment Advisors Inc. Securities and Advisory services are offered through Geneos Wealth Management, Inc. Member FINRA/SIPC. He can be reached at 800-994-0221 or emailed at mknight@chesadvisors.com

Same-Sex Marriage Ruling and Social Security Claiming Strategies

Last month the Supreme Court ruled that all States must recognize same-sex marriages in Obergefell vs. Hodges.  The ruling basically federalized what many States (including Maryland) had already been doing on a State level.  What many might not realize is that the ruling may affect the benefits people receive when they begin collecting their Social Security.  Prior to the ruling the Social Security Administration (SSA) did not recognize a same-sex marriage as a marriage for the purposes of Social Security benefits.

Prior to Obergefell married couples had several Social Security claiming strategies to consider before initiating their Social Security retirement.  Throughout the years since its 1935 inception, Social Security has given special consideration to married couples when determining the payouts they may receive from the Trust Fund.  These claiming strategies can now be considered for same-sex marriages.

Ironically, the Supreme Court ruling may or may not be a benefit to a married couple as it pertains to Social Security benefits.  Whether it helps or hinders all depends on the unique circumstances of the individual.  For example, prior to this case, if someone was collecting a divorced-spouse benefit and had remarried under Maryland’s same-sex marriage law they could continue to collect their divorced spousal benefit since the SSA did not recognize the new marriage.  Now, that remarriage can cost them that benefit.

This is the same with a survivor benefit and then a same-sex remarriage.  That benefit is now in jeopardy once the SSA recognizes the new marriage.

However, many claiming strategies once reserved only for traditionally married couples are now in play for same-sex marriages.  These strategies are complicated and are best discussed with someone well-versed in Social Security tactics or by calling the SSA directly.  And it is not too early as some of the claiming strategies are implemented over many years and should be explored and planned for long before the actual SS retirement age (62 to 70 years of age).  If you are old enough to think about how and when you’re going to retire, then it is not too early to think about how and when you’re going to collect Social Security.  It is a vital part to most people’s retirement income.

One last thing, deciding whether to get married or not based on your Social Security situation is probably not a good idea.  All things being equal, this is just another thing in the marriage decision conundrum to think about.

 

Martin Knight MBA, CFP®
Chesapeake Investment Advisor, Inc.
106 Spring Ave.
Chestertown MD 21617

 

The Best Advice Ever Received

This coming July it will be nine years since I retired from MSP and as I was telling someone the other day, I still have dreams about being a State Trooper.  Sometimes they are so vivid I’ll wake up and look outside to make sure there’s not a roller parked in front of my house.  I loved MSP and really enjoyed the people I worked with.  It is not just a job; it’s a lifestyle.   Anyway, these days I keep track of what’s going on in the Department through an awesome Facebook page called, “MSP, The People Behind The Shield.”  I think a Sergeant named Doug Forrester started it up sometime around the beginning of the year.  It was a great idea and if you’re not a member you should be.

The page has about 1,200 former or current MSP employees who follow it.  Almost every day I stop by and check it out and I’ve been very impressed by the posts.  We’ve had intelligent arguments from drug legalization, to the role and mission of the Department, to the sad state of the patrol vehicles.  Anything under the sun can and does come up on that page.  It’s usually very positive dialogue always with well-reasoned comments.  The third floor would do well to monitor and participate on the page to get valuable feedback on the problems and concerns of our MSP family.  Of course, I’m sure the brass are probably upset by some of the posts and most certainly there is someone somewhere at HQ trying to figure out how to squelch it.  (Just like they tried with G-Rat at Westminster back in the day.)  A few weeks ago a trooper posted a photograph of his odometer on his patrol car—it read 365,000 miles!  They’re lucky the guy isn’t posting it in the front page of the Baltimore Sun.  The page is not about complaining though—it’s about information and idea exchange among people with similar backgrounds and interests.  It is healthy for the Department and they should embrace it, not fight it.

To get to my point, one of the questions that started some incredible feedback came just after an academy class graduated from Sykesville.  It asked something like, if you had one piece of advice to give to a new recruit what would it be?  The responses to that question were inspiring and thought provoking.  Most were officer-survival related, some about family and co-workers.  Many were about surviving in a highly politicized department.  The post started me thinking about when I came on the job.

It was January of 1979 and I was just hired as a cadet in the Truck Weight Enforcement Division.  I was slowly working my way through a pile of paperwork for Miss Zelda at the TWED office in Pikesville when a Sergeant walked in and said, “Cadet, first things first, join deferred comp!”  I didn’t know what deferred comp was—heck, I didn’t even know three stripes made you a Sergeant but I did know that he outranked me—even Miss Zelda outranked me—and on that first day I was all about doing what I was told.  So out of the $8,000 or so in annual salary I started setting aside a whopping $30 bucks a paycheck.

That Sergeant was Ken Harry and to this day I think it was probably the best single piece of personal advice I ever received.  Over the next 26 years each time I got a pay-scale-step—we actually got them in those days—or a promotion, I increased my deferred comp deposit.  When I retired it was, and still is, a nice little retirement account.  So for you new people coming on to the Department, or if you’ve never joined to begin with, let me point out some of the exciting features and characteristics of what we call deferred compensation.  (Don’t toss the magazine–stick with me, it’s only a few more paragraphs.)

Deferred Comp in MSP is actually what the IRS calls a 457(b) plan[1].  The 457(b) is only offered to government and non-profit employees.  It allows employees to take money before taxes are paid and set it aside in an investment account (with MSP it must go to Nationwide Retirement Solutions) where it grows (or shrinks) free of taxation.  Employees are allowed to defer up to $17,500[2] of income per year into a 457(b).  The money is available to the employee when they leave the agency free of any penalties.  This is a key difference between the 457(b) and the 401(k) plan—you don’t have to wait until 59.5 years of age to access the plan.  You can take money out of a 457(b) plan without penalty once you leave the job—no matter how old you are.   Income taxes are due once you take it out of the 457(b) but there’s no 10% penalty.  (This does not include DROP money—if you leave the job before age 50 then all DROP money must stay in a qualified account until age 59.5 or else the 10% penalty applies.)

Another benefit of the 457(b) over the 401(k) is that you can contribute the maximum to both plans.  So you can save $17,500 in a 457(b) and another $17,500 into a 401(k) effectively setting aside up to $35,000 of current income until later.  By the way, it is usually not advisable to start the 401(k) until you max-out the 457(b).

Deferring income and its taxation means that you determine when to withdraw the money and pay income taxes on it.  For example, by setting aside $100 now—it only costs you about $70 to $75 in take-home-pay since the rest would be withheld for various taxes.  You can then take that $100 out at some future point when your income is liable to be less and you’re in a lower tax bracket.  You might even move out of a high tax State, such as Maryland, which would take somewhere in the neighborhood of $6 or $7 bucks depending on which county you live to an income-tax-free state and skip that tax altogether.

There is a good chance that after retirement your federal tax bracket is lower due to reduced income (you’re not going to be working NSA overtime forever) and/or maybe you are planning on moving to one of the seven states[3] where they don’t tax income locally.  Now that $100 you put away that was only really worth $75 is maybe worth $85.  And that’s not counting any growth you picked up on the investments along the way.

Finally, we all know what an 18 year-old Marty Knight would’ve done with that deferred income—he probably would’ve spent it on junk.  Stuff that would’ve been tossed in the trash long ago.  (In all likelihood I would have bought more softball bats.)  Now, I have the money safely invested in the market waiting till a time when I might really need it.  And it was all because of a simple piece of advice by then Sergeant Ken Harry.  Thanks Ken.

 

Marty Knight, MBA, CFP® is a retired Captain from the Maryland State Police and is currently a Financial Advisor with Chesapeake Investment Advisors Inc.  Securities and Advisory services are offered through Geneos Wealth Management, Inc. Member FINRA/SIPC.  He can be reached at 800-994-0221 or emailed at mknight@chesadvisors.com

 

[1] 457(b) is the section number in the Internal Revenue Code.

[2] $17,500 for CY 2014.  If over 50 employee is allowed an additional $5,500 per year as a “catch-up.”

[3] Alaska, Florida, Nevada, South Dakota, Texas, Washington or Wyoming.

Call Now Button