Brooks Wealth Management LLC (BWM)

Investment Philosophy

Built on Structure, Not Speculation

Your portfolio is a tool—built around your broader plan—with structure, tax awareness, and disciplined execution.

Structure

Speculation

Stocks & bonds

What this mix can expect over time

What are stocks? Ownership in companies with higher long-term growth potential and bumpier short-term swings.

 

What are bonds? Loans to governments or companies with steadier behavior and lower expected returns that help stabilize the ride.

 

Illustrative only—not advice. Final allocation depends on goals, horizon, taxes, and your total plan.

0% stocks • 100% bonds

An all-bond portfolio prioritizes stability and income. Lowest volatility, but limited growth and higher inflation risk; best for near-term spending and safety reserves.

10% stocks • 90% bonds

Very conservative. Bonds dominate to dampen swings; a small stock sleeve adds growth potential. Suitable when capital preservation matters most.

20% stocks • 80% bonds

Conservative. Emphasizes steadier returns and income while accepting modest equity exposure for growth to offset inflation over time.

30% stocks • 70% bonds

Conservative-balanced. Bonds provide strong base; stock exposure supports long-term growth without large equity concentration.

40% stocks • 60% bonds

Balanced tilt to stability. Noticeably smoother ride than higher-stock mixes; growth expectations moderate.

50% stocks • 50% bonds

Even balance. A middle path—meaningfully steadier than stock-heavy mixes with more growth than bond-heavy designs.

60% stocks • 40% bonds

Balanced growth. A classic 60/40 profile—aims for growth with meaningful stability; bonds cushion declines and enable rebalancing.

70% stocks • 30% bonds

Growth-tilted. Higher long-term return potential with more frequent and deeper drawdowns; bonds still help during stress.

80% stocks • 20% bonds

Growth-focused. Expect larger swings and patience requirements; the bond sleeve is a smaller, but useful, shock absorber.

90% stocks • 10% bonds

Equity-dominant. Highest reliance on stock returns; bonds provide minimal ballast—for long horizons and strong risk tolerance.

100% stocks • 0% bonds

All-stock portfolio. Highest long-term growth potential with the largest and longest drawdowns; requires discipline and a long time horizon.

Investment location

Why it matters: Putting the right investments in the right accounts can improve after-tax results without changing your risk level.
Guidelines only; specifics depend on your bracket, state taxes, and account sizes.

Taxable (brokerage)

You pay taxes along the way on dividends/interest and when you realize capital gains. Flexible and liquid.

What fits here: tax-efficient equity index funds/ETFs; where appropriate, municipal bonds. Use loss harvesting and manage capital-gain distributions.

Pre-tax (Traditional IRA, pre-tax 401(k)/403(b))

Contributions may be deductible; growth is tax-deferred; withdrawals are taxed as ordinary income.

What fits here: less tax-efficient assets (e.g., taxable bond funds or higher-turnover strategies). Rebalance without current-year taxes.

Roth (Roth IRA/Roth 401(k))

Contributions are after-tax; qualified withdrawals are generally tax-free. Powerful for long-term compounding.

What fits here: highest expected growth assets (often equities) to maximize tax-free compounding—within your risk tolerance and overall plan.

What we believe

A disciplined, evidence-based approach to investing that prioritizes diversification, long-term growth, cost efficiency, and smart risk management.

Efficient portfolio construction through diversified asset class exposure

Diversification reduces reliance on any single company, sector, or country. It aims to smooth the ride while keeping you exposed to long-term growth engines.

Appropriate exposure to both stocks and bonds

Your mix balances growth and stability. Stocks drive wealth creation; bonds steady the plan and create rebalancing opportunities when markets move.

Participate in markets consistently rather than timing them

Compounding needs time in the market. Chasing entries/exits risks missing a handful of strong days that often drive a large share of returns.

Manage taxes from placement to withdrawal

Asset location, tax-efficient funds, loss harvesting, and smart withdrawal sequencing can add meaningful after-tax value—without changing your risk.

Costs matter

Every basis point saved in expenses is a basis point that compounds for you. We keep costs low and intentional.

Follow a disciplined process, not short-term noise

Rules, rebalancing, and periodic reviews help prevent reactive decisions. We reinvest systematically, including during downturns, within your risk plan.

Reinvest during market downturns when opportunities improve

Lower prices raise expected returns. A plan-based approach lets us add to targets when markets are on sale—never guesswork, always within your guardrails.

Avoid speculation; use evidence-based strategies

We prioritize broad diversification, low costs, and tax efficiency over predictions and fads. The focus is long-term outcomes, not headlines.

Less Selling. More Listening.

Financial advice shouldn’t feel like a sales pitch. Brooks Wealth Management is an independent fiduciary firm built to simplify your financial life — through honest advice, evidence-based investing, and relationships designed to last decades.

Out of 834,000+ financial services professionals, fewer than 5% are fiduciary fee only CFP® professionals.

Most advisors are paid to sell — not to serve. Brooks Wealth Management exists to change that standard by combining comprehensive planning with independent investment management.

Fiduciary Obligation

We’re legally bound to act in your best interest — not a company’s sales targets.

Independent Custody

Investments are held at Charles Schwab, ensuring institutional-level security and full transparency.

Evidence-Based Investing

Our portfolios are globally diversified, low-cost, and grounded in academic research — not speculation.

Start with a Financial Plan

See what it’s like to work with a fiduciary before committing to ongoing management.

Choosing wisely matters.

Here’s what to look for in an advisor — and what to avoid.
What to Look For
What to Avoid

Fiduciary & Independent

A fiduciary is legally required to put your interests first. Independence matters just as much. When an advisor is not tied to a bank, insurance company, or product provider, advice can stay focused on what fits your life rather than what needs to be sold. This alignment creates clearer recommendations and fewer conflicts over time.

Comprehensive Financial Planning

Good advice is not just about investments. It is about how everything fits together: cash flow, taxes, retirement decisions, risk management, and long-term goals. Comprehensive planning provides context, helping each decision support the bigger picture rather than existing in isolation.

Transparent Fees

You should clearly understand how your advisor is compensated and what you are paying for. Transparent fees make it easier to evaluate value, build trust, and make informed decisions. When compensation is straightforward, the relationship stays focused on guidance, not questions about incentives.

Product Pushers

Some advisors are incentivized to sell products rather than give advice. When recommendations are driven by commissions or quotas, decisions can prioritize sales over what actually fits your situation. Good advice should start with understanding your life, not selling a solution.

Hidden Fees

Complex fee structures can quietly erode trust and results over time. If it is hard to understand what you are paying, how an advisor is compensated, or why certain investments are recommended, it becomes difficult to make confident, informed decisions. Transparency should be the baseline, not a bonus.

Lack of Longevity and Alignment

Financial planning works best as a long-term relationship. If advice is built for the short term or tied to one stage of life, it can break down as priorities change. The goal is to work with someone you can grow with over decades, align your goals over time, and not feel the need to start over every few years.

Licenses, Registrations & Memberships

Scott Brooks Advisor Registration (CRD #7227609)

Brooks Wealth Management Firm Registration (CRD #332237)

Scott Brooks CFP Board (Certified Financial Planner)

National Assocation of Personal Financial Planners Membership

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