CRTO - this is a speculative buy. No dividends here, just chasing capital gains.
ARCP
KMI
The Celine Fund
Tuesday, May 6, 2014
Sunday, April 20, 2014
The Ages of the Investor: A Critical Look at Life-Cycle Investing
This is a not so brief summary that I wrote for this book. It was basically a work assignment and I believed that writing a "book report" would be the best way for me to read it actively. So here it is:
The book
basically talks about what Bernstein thinks people should do with their money
when they are young, old, and during the middle he years. He begins by touching
on a few investment strategies that people follow such as the rule of 110 and
the age equals bonds rule. He then dispels them and why they are not the most
effective.
The Beginning
Lump sum vs.
periodic investing. Most people do not have a lot initial capital outlay, so
they are forced to use the periodic investing method, although lump sump would
be superior. Inheriting money in lump sump amounts provides more dollar
exposure to equities throughout your lifetime than working and saving which
gives you almost no exposure relative to the size of your total capital when
you’re young.
Young people have
the most of their net worth in capital. They should invest aggressively, but
the common problem is young people are more risk averse than they should be and
once they experience their first financial crisis, they become even more risk
adverse. There are also two things a young person needs to realize in why they
should invest more aggressively: 1) when investing relatively constant stream
of real income, stocks are less risky with time 2) young people have a small
amount of capital to begin with.
To counteract
this problem of not having your lifetime capital immediately:
Nalebuff/Ayres
suggests 2:1 leverage until you reach about middle age and then deleverage from
there. Leveraging early champs the rule of 110 and 100% stock exposure based on
a study using Shiller’s securities returns. However, the problem with using 2:1
leverage is there is not any proper implementation. There are 2:1 leverage
vehicles such as mutual funds and options, but the shortfall is high expenses
and limitation to the S&P 500 respectively. There is no real way to
leverage without using derivatives which strikes psychological terror to
investors. Additionally, not many people can tolerate a 1.0 beta, let alone a 2.0
beta.
Fama and French
small and value factors. Typically these types of stocks have high returns and
low correlation to the U.S. market. Since the small/value strategy has higher
volatility than the S&P, the small/value strategy will always beat the S&P
because more opportunities to buy at a lower price. Pushes you in the direction
of DFA funds, but if unavailable suggests a few ETFs.
The End Game
Nest Egg – sum you save up fore specific purpose – i.e. Retirement.
Liability Matching Portfolio (LMP) – adequate lifetime income
Risk Portfolio (RP) – excess to LMP for luxuries &
request
This part of the
book talks about what you should do once you reach the end. The investor should
build two separate portfolios, the Liability matching portfolio (LMP) and the
Risk Portfolio (RP). By age 70, an investor should accumulate enough safe
assets to fund a bare minimum of 20 years after social security and pension
payments.
The three strategies that he presents is: 1)
fixed annuities 2) deferring social security 3) TIPs ladders.
1) Fixed
annuities in the form of longevity Insurance Combination of TIPS Ladder &
deferred annuity that would not pay until age 85. Hard to actually get a quote.
Downfalls: 1) Hard to find a real product 2) No inflation adjusted deferred
annuity 3) Legal issues around required minimum distributions (RMD) 4) Hard to
find joint lifetime deferred annuity 5) If company goes under = 100% loss.
2) LMP should
have inflation adjusted highly secure annuity. The cheapest annuity is defer
social security. In the meantime you should draw down your nest egg. (Most
preferred – actuarially makes sense) Max out! Stocks/FI instruments thereafter.
3) TIPS Ladder –
when using TIPS to fund retirement do with ladders whose maturities
approximately matches your projected needs not a TIPS mutual fund which may
suffer capital loss when you need it most.
Rules for retirement
spending under 65:
2% bulletproof,
3% safe, 4% taking chances, 5% dying poor
The middle
This part of the
book talks about the transition from the beginning to the end.
The LMP magic
number is 20/25 x annual cash flow beyond social security. Once you’ve reached
this magic number, you should start bailing, once you acquire enough TIPS, CDs
& treasuries, feel free to start adding to RP.
He talks about
how depending when you were born, even a few years a part may have different
lifetime investing experiences. He presents some data showing that those who
were employed during disasters fared well, while those who were employed during
the good times, did less well.
Tuesday, April 15, 2014
Hello World
Hello World.
You may be wondering...what's a Celine fund? As of some walk ago where I saw someone carry a Celine nano bag, I fell madly in love with it and decided to myself that I simply must own one (how could I not? The bag smiles at me!). As my infatuation grew, it wasn't even about the Nano bag anymore. It was about any Celine bag. I want it and I want it so much!
But how can I justify buying a bag that starts at $2600? The correct answer is...I can't. With bills, rent, food, cost of living, etc...no one in the right mind at my income level would or should think about it.
So instead of throwing $2600 into a new bag, I decided to throw it into an investment account. I've thought about it for a while now and am really kicking myself for not starting in 2013, where I could've benefitted from the bull market. But I'm still young and the year over year compounding would definitely help me in the long run. I'm sure this won't be the only bull market in my lifetime, so I should feel hopeful for the future.
I haven't really thought about what type of stocks I want to buy at the moment, but Target (TGT) and Coca Cola (KO) are the two that have been on my mind. My investing adventure starts tomorrow. Wish me luck!
Happy Tax Day!
You may be wondering...what's a Celine fund? As of some walk ago where I saw someone carry a Celine nano bag, I fell madly in love with it and decided to myself that I simply must own one (how could I not? The bag smiles at me!). As my infatuation grew, it wasn't even about the Nano bag anymore. It was about any Celine bag. I want it and I want it so much!
But how can I justify buying a bag that starts at $2600? The correct answer is...I can't. With bills, rent, food, cost of living, etc...no one in the right mind at my income level would or should think about it.
So instead of throwing $2600 into a new bag, I decided to throw it into an investment account. I've thought about it for a while now and am really kicking myself for not starting in 2013, where I could've benefitted from the bull market. But I'm still young and the year over year compounding would definitely help me in the long run. I'm sure this won't be the only bull market in my lifetime, so I should feel hopeful for the future.
I haven't really thought about what type of stocks I want to buy at the moment, but Target (TGT) and Coca Cola (KO) are the two that have been on my mind. My investing adventure starts tomorrow. Wish me luck!
Happy Tax Day!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
