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Weekend reading: Our taxing tax code

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What caught my eye this week.

While it’s been nice to enjoy the Mediterranean weather for the past week – ominous, but nice – we all know Bank Holidays in the UK are a cosmic long con guaranteed to eventually rain on your parade.

By Monday your family and friends will be watching you through the bifold doors as you valiantly cook sausages in the drizzle.

Or you’ll have had enough of the heat and taken to wedging yourself between the open fridge doors.

Or – the biggest prize of all – your sister-in-law will phone to say little Marcus isn’t feeling up to it today (translation: little Marcus got a better offer) and so their BBQ is regrettably cancelled, and so you have a blissful windfall Bank Holiday Monday to do with entirely as you please.

Which, naturally, means cracking out the iPad and a glass of something cool and reading about stock markets, mortgages, and ISAs.

Or – if that sounds too racy for you on a lazy Bank Holiday – what about something on taxes?

Sam Freedman has written a great article for the Financial Times [search result] about how the UK tax code got into such a mess:

This leads to the ridiculous situation where a London family with two children in full-time childcare would need to earn £150,000 before being marginally better off than they were below £100,000.

But once you start looking the incoherence is everywhere. There’s a VAT cliff edge, where companies can earn £90,000 a year before registering to pay the levy, meaning a significant number of small businesses find ways to restrict their growth to avoid going over the threshold.

Companies just over it are at a competitive disadvantage. VAT classifications are often arbitrary and subjective — as illustrated by a court case last year as to whether Walkers Sensations Poppadoms were in fact potato crisps (which are subject to the standard rate) or a non-potato snack, such as Twiglets or Skips, that are zero rated. Annual compliance costs are in the billions of pounds.

Politics, obviously, is largely too blame.

But what can you do about it? Nothing much. Except to start working early on your tax return this weekend instead of dining on burned-up burgers.

Have a great weekend anyway, whatever the weather!

[continue reading…]

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Moguls membership logo

From the earliest days of Monevator I’ve betrayed a soft spot for income investing. My 2008 article at the end of that link doesn’t claim pursuing income will beat the market. But I did suggest it might be a mental better fit for some people in retirement.You discount psychology in investing at your peril.

To be sure though, my timing wasn’t great.

This article can be read by selected Monevator members. Please see our membership plans and consider joining! Already a member? Sign in here.
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A quick guide to asset classes

One of the most fun things about managing your own investments is coming up with an asset allocation strategy to diversify your portfolio. You get to tinker like an alchemist to find a blend of asset classes that will weather the inevitable financial storms ahead – and hopefully someday leave you dancing upon the sunlit plains of financial independence.

So what asset classes make suitable straw for your passive investing nest?

The main asset classes

In this post I’ll run through the most important asset classes you need to know about as a passive investor, highlighting the pros and cons of each.

Main asset classes

The main asset classes will already be familiar to many Monevator readers, of course.

However it’s always useful to have a frame of reference – especially as the investing world can rarely agree on a single definition for anything!

Cash

Filthy lucre, spondoolicks, the root of all evil… We’re all familiar with money, though perhaps not as much as we’d like to be.

The simplicity and familiarity of cash is one of its biggest advantages, but excessive devotion to it can be the undoing of the cautious investor:

A chart showing UK money market real total returns 1870-2024

Data from JST Macrohistory1 and Heriot-Watt/ Institute and Faculty of Actuaries/ESCoE British Government Securities Database. February 2025

Good

  • You normally can’t suffer a capital loss with cash (but do pay attention to your financial protections in the face of a bank failure).
  • Cash is liquid like water. If you lose your job and need some food or rent, your cash reserves can quickly be converted to satisfy whatever need is at hand.

Bad

  • Cash will be clobbered by inflation over time. £100 will only be worth £74 in ten years, if the ongoing inflation rate matches the historical average of around 3%. Another 20 years of that and £100 will only be worth £55. (So chase decent interest rates to at least offset inflation!)
  • Cash can lose value even more quickly during periods of high inflation. 
  • Historically, cash has earned the lowest returns of the major asset classes.

Risk/Reward trade-off

  • Risk = Low
  • Reward = Low

Note: the risk/reward trade-offs in this article describe the expected trade-off based upon the historical returns of each asset class. Actual risks and returns can turn out very differently.

Time horizon

Cash is useful over any time frame, but you are likely to get poor slowly if you hold excessive amounts over the long term. Spicier investment options are needed to achieve most financial goals.

More on cash

Nominal bonds

Bonds are I.O.U.s issued by an entity such as a company or government. In exchange for your loan, the bond issuer will pay you a guaranteed stream of interest over the loan period, plus you’ll get your original stake back after an agreed number of years. (Unless the issuer defaults, that is).

Passive investors should only concern themselves with investment-grade bonds, and there are strong arguments to restrict your portfolio allocation solely to high-quality government bonds. Doing so limits your exposure to the risk of default. High quality means a bond with a credit rating of AA- and above (or Aa3 in Moody’s system).

A nominal bond pays interest at a fixed rate – e.g. 2% or 3% or whatever – just like a savings account. The original loan amount (the principal) is also paid back as a fixed sum. Say £100 a bond.

This contrasts with index-linked bonds, whose equivalent cashflows are adjusted for inflation. Such inflation-linking is a highly valuable feature. We’ll come back to it in the index-linked bond section below. 

A chart showing UK government bond real total returns 1870-2024

Data from JST Macrohistory2 and FTSE Russell. February 2025

Good

  • Government bonds are much less volatile than equities.
  • Historically they’ve provided a better long-term return than cash.
  • Nominal government bonds often (but not always) rise in value when the stock market crashes. That’s the main reason ordinary investors hold them: because they help defend against terrifying falls in stock values. For example, world equities lost 38% at the height of the Global Financial Crisis. But a diversified portfolio split 60% equities and 40% UK government bonds, only lost 7%. That’s a much easier blow to cope with. 

Bad

  • Bond returns historically lag equities.

Risk/Reward trade-off

  • Risk = Lower than equities, higher than cash
  • Reward = Lower than equities, higher than cash

Time horizon

You can duration match your bond holdings to any time horizon and know exactly what your return will be, if you hold the bonds until maturity.

Sub-classes 

  • Government bonds (e.g. UK gilts, US Treasuries)
  • Corporate bonds
  • Inflation-protected bonds (e.g. index-linked gilts, TIPS)
  • Local government bonds
  • Junk bonds, i.e. high-risk bonds with terrible credit ratings

More on bonds

Equities

Equities (commonly known as stocks or shares) are historically the riskiest and best rewarded of our main asset classes.

Because equities are so risky, investors demand high potential rewards to play the game. Note that word: potential. There is no guarantee that equities will deliver; they do not provide a guarantee of income or capital. Instead, they offer part-ownership of a company and thus a claim on its future earnings.

A chart showing World equities real total returns 1900-2024

Data from JST Macrohistory3, The Big Bang4 and MSCI. February 2025

Good

  • Equities have traditionally outgunned every other asset class when it comes to long-term returns. They are the most powerful asset class in your diversified portfolio.
  • Equities are capable of outstripping inflation. World equities have historically delivered a long-run return of 6% after inflation.
  • The longer you hold equities, the better your chance of achieving your financial goals.

Bad

  • Severe losses can occur at any time and frequently do. You could easily lose 30% of your capital in a single year.
  • The highs and lows of equity ownership can feed all kinds of irrational behaviour, from panic-selling in the face of loss to piling into a bubble market. Fear and greed rule.

Risk/Reward trade-off

  • Risk = Higher than bonds, commercial property, or cash
  • Reward = Higher than bonds, commercial property, or cash

Time horizon

The longer you can hold the better. Five years is the bare minimum, 20 years is a more comfortable stretch.

Sub-classes

More on equities

Property

As an investment asset class, property (or real estate) refers to commercial property that delivers returns in the shape of rent and the appreciation of building values. It doesn’t refer to your house.

Exposure to commercial property is generally achieved through ETFs or real-estate investment trusts (REITS).

In contrast, sticking all your money in a buy-to-let concentrates rather than diversifies your holdings, and represents a big punt on the everlasting strength of the UK residential market.

Good

  • Historically, the risk and rewards of property have been a halfway house between equities and bonds.
  • It can be a useful diversifier, although global property is strongly correlated with global equities so it’s far from vital. 

Bad

  • Property bubbles can pop and inflict large losses on funds.
  • Property is illiquid, which can lead to certain property funds (not real-estate index trackers) imposing exit restrictions on investors during periods of market stress. In other words, they can’t sell their buildings quickly if everyone wants their money back at the double.
  • UK investors tend to have a rose-tinted view of property due to the strength of the home market. However the asset class has historically lagged equities.

Risk/Reward trade-off

  • Risk = Higher than bonds or cash, but lower than equities
  • Reward = Higher than bonds or cash, but lower than equities

Time horizon

As per equities.

More on property

Commodities

Commodities investing is tricky to understand but it can be a very useful diversifying move.

Commodities of course are the raw materials that fuel commerce: cows, wheat, oil, sugar – all that good stuff. 

However there are very few opportunities for ordinary investors to bet directly on the spot market price of commodities, because not many of us can actually store several million barrels of oil.

With the exception of some precious metals like gold then, an ordinary investor’s only option is to instead invest in commodity ETFs and funds that provide exposure to the price movements of commodity future contracts5.

Commodity ETFs make their money from the spot price, trading futures contracts, and earning interest on collateral. It’s best to stick to broad commodity ETFs because they diversify across many different raw materials. 

A chart showing commodities real total returns 1934-2024

Total return data from Summerhaven6 and Bloomberg. February 2025

Good

  • Can perform in punishing conditions like stagflation when both nominal bonds and equities falter.

Bad

  • Commodity ETFs are a volatility rollercoaster – delivering huge highs and lows that can be psychologically hard to live with.
  • Bad commodity returns often show up during economic contractions when equities are under pressure. On these occasions, commodities can make portfolio returns worse at just the wrong moment. 
  • Not a beginner’s investment. It’s best to find your investing feet with more familiar assets first and to think about commodities later. 

Risk/Reward trade-off

  • Risk = Approximately the same as equities
  • Reward = Lower than equities, higher than bonds and cash

Time horizon

Commodities should be thought of purely as a portfolio diversifier. Their role is to pay off when equities and / or bonds are down. 

Sub-classes

  • Energy (e.g. oil, gas, coal)
  • Agriculture (e.g. wheat, corn, rice, soybeans, cotton, sugar, coffee, cocoa)
  • Industrial metals (e.g. aluminium, copper, zinc, rare earth metals)
  • Livestock (e.g. live cattle, feeder cattle, lean hogs)
  • Precious metals (e.g. silver, gold, platinum)

More on commodities

Gold

Gold is a commodity but it deserves its own slot on our investible asset classes list because it’s a potentially useful diversifier in its own right.

Gold is one of the simplest asset classes to understand. We all know what it is. Some of us wear it on our necks, bury it on islands, or stay up all night counting it while cackling.

The point is humans love the stuff and that’s what you’re betting on. You’re hoping that in the future someone will give you a higher price for your gold than you paid for it.

If they don’t, then you lose because gold – unlike most of the other assets on our list – doesn’t pay out any cashflow.

No interest, no dividends, no rents. Gold is just a lifeless lump of metal of limited inherent worth unless others covet it too. 

A chart showing gold GBP real returns 1900-2024

Gold GBP data from The London Bullion Market Association and Measuring Worth. February 2025

Good

  • Gold often (not always) rises in value when equities slump. That makes gold a useful counter to stock market shocks.
  • Bonds and gold are complementary defensive diversifiers. That’s because they respond differently to economic conditions, meaning that gold can sometimes ride to the rescue when bonds don’t and vice versa. 
  • Like commodities, gold can reduce portfolio volatility because it can work when equities and bonds stumble simultaneously. This is especially useful for older investors who need to protect their nest egg against all eventualities.
  • Shiny!

Bad

  • Long-run returns are difficult to gauge because gold was price-controlled for many decades. The free market era only began in the 197os. (See the sudden price spike on the chart above.)
  • There is no convincing theory that explains gold’s returns, unlike the other assets here. 
  • The gold price is subject to violent market mood swings. It’s highly unlikely to continue its hot streak indefinitely. 
  • Pirates!

Risk/Reward trade-off

  • Risk = Approximately the same as equities
  • Reward = Highly uncertain over the long term. Assume cash-like returns

Time horizon

Gold is highly unpredictable. Like commodities, it is probably best held in limited amounts as a portfolio diversifier.  

More on gold

Index-linked bonds

Index-linked bonds are a type of government bond that protects against inflation. They do this by increasing their interest and principal payments in line with official price measures (currently RPI in the UK) to provide a reliable inflation hedge when properly used. 

Index-linked bonds (nicknamed ‘linkers’) typically respond like other government bonds in most situations, although there is a distinction to be drawn:

  • Nominal government bonds are expected to respond more positively during ‘negative demand shocks’ when confidence crumbles, the economy contracts, and recession looms. 
  • Index-linked bonds are designed to thrive during ‘negative supply shocks’ when demand outstrips production and inflation takes off.

Index-linked bonds can also be expected to do reasonably well during demand-led recessions. 

Good

  • Specifically designed to guard your wealth from inflation. 
  • Ideal for dreaded stagflationary scenarios that throttle equities and nominal bonds.
  • Particularly suited to retirees who are highly vulnerable to inflation wrecking their purchasing power. 

Bad

  • You have to use individual index-linked gilts,7 held to maturity, to guarantee the inflation hedge. The only reason that’s bad is because investing in individual gilts involves quite a steep learning curve. 
  • UK index-linked gilt funds and ETFs are particularly unlikely to perform as expected in inflationary scenarios when they’re highly exposed to interest rate risk. 

Risk/Reward trade-off

  • Risk = As per nominal bonds
  • Reward = As per nominal bonds but potentially lower due to demand for their valuable inflation protection

Time horizon

Hold each individual linker to maturity. When they mature either spend the proceeds or invest in new index-linked bonds. Building an index-linked gilt ladder is an excellent wealth preservation technique for retirees.

More on index-linked gilts

Other asset classes

You’ll no doubt have heard tales of the killings to be made in:

  • Hedge funds
  • Private equity
  • Currencies 
  • Crypto
  • Volatility (e.g. the ‘Fear index’)
  • Collectibles (e.g. art, wine, cars)

A passive investor wades into these waters at their peril. Most alternative asset classes can be discounted on some or all of the following grounds:

  • Their role in a diversified portfolio is highly questionable.
  • They suffer from high costs, or illiquidity, or other barriers to entry/exit.
  • Information asymmetry is high. A high degree of expertise is required to avoid being spanked by other players in the market.
  • Their track record is extremely difficult to independently verify. 

The bottom line is that any investor can construct a diversified portfolio from the main asset classes: cash, bonds, equities, and gold.

More experienced investors who are vulnerable to inflation should consider adding index-linked bonds and commodities.

Take it steady,

The Accumulator

  1. Òscar Jordà, Katharina Knoll, Dmitry Kuvshinov, Moritz Schularick, and Alan M. Taylor. 2019. “The Rate of Return on Everything, 1870–2015.” Quarterly Journal of Economics, 134(3), 1225-1298. []
  2. Òscar Jordà, Katharina Knoll, Dmitry Kuvshinov, Moritz Schularick, and Alan M. Taylor. 2019. “The Rate of Return on Everything, 1870–2015.” Quarterly Journal of Economics, 134(3), 1225-1298. []
  3. Òscar Jordà, Katharina Knoll, Dmitry Kuvshinov, Moritz Schularick, and Alan M. Taylor. 2019. “The Rate of Return on Everything, 1870–2015.” Quarterly Journal of Economics, 134(3), 1225-1298. []
  4. Dmitry Kuvshinov and Kaspar Zimmermann. 2021. The Big Bang: Stock Market Capitalization in the Long Run. Journal of Financial Economics, Forthcoming. []
  5. An agreement to buy or sell a commodity at a particular price, at a set date in the future. []
  6. Bhardwaj, Geetesh and Janardanan, Rajkumar and Rouwenhorst, K. Geert, “The First Commodity Futures Index of 1933,” Journal of Commodity Markets, 2020. []
  7. UK Government index-linked bonds. []
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Weekend reading: risky retirements

Weekend reading: risky retirements post image

What caught my eye this week.

I noticed an article in This Is Money this week featuring a reader upset that their pension hadn’t been life-styled into lower-risk assets as they’d hoped.

Instead, they wrote:

…my money remained in a fund rated moderate-high risk/high reward until March 2020.

At this point, I realised what had happened and asked for the switch to be made manually. The same month, I asked for my pension date to be moved forward five years to March 2025.

Shortly after, the stock market plummeted due to the pandemic and I am now entering retirement with a shortfall in my fund.

Judging solely on the facts presented, you can see why the reader is aggrieved.

The pension provider seems to have sent out literature describing a de-risking process that was never going to happen to this person’s fund, due to it being from some earlier vintage. Hence the confusion.

What’s more, the reader tried to take evasive action themselves but that ultimately come to naught too.

Apparently the case was investigated by the Financial Ombudsman, and the pensioner provider was not found to be accountable. I won’t second guess that ruling.

However there’s a bigger picture lesson here. It’s reminder that today’s pension freedoms so beloved by the likes of us Monevator types have come with downsides.

Not everyone wanted this job

Trying to manage a defined contribution pension – the biggest lump of money most of us will ever get near to – is daunting enough for most people when it comes to their saving and investing years.

But when it runs into the trickiest problem in finance – the switch to drawing down your pot – the risks multiply faster than you can say “who let the 47th into the war room?” 

Only a couple of years ago, the papers were writing horror stories about the dangers of life-styling pensions after the big bond rout. (The article above cites a nicely balanced one of its own from 2022).

But now global equities have wobbled, it’s understandable that some near-retirees might instead be wondering why they didn’t have a bigger safety cushion.

Unlucky for some

People underestimate how hard this conundrum is to resolve, because we want to believe in certainties.

But in my view it’s not even necessarily that the pension providers – or the investors – should be doing anything different, even though with hindsight there will always have been an optimum course to follow.

Rather, it’s that individuals are running into the maelstrom of sequence of return risk and the complexities of drawing down a pension as, well, individuals, rather than spreading the risks with others as under the defined benefit pensions of old.

We might understand some people will see their pensions plunge before retirement because they took too much risk. Shrug and say that’s on them.

Stock market crashes happen. These guys rolled snake eyes.

But, firstly, the typical person isn’t (sadly) a hyper-aware Monevator reader. And secondly, there but for the grace of God and all that.

Terribly unlucky things can happen in the stock market. Both to individuals and to entire countries and generations.

While the analogy isn’t perfect, you might as well say an overweight person should have seen their heart attack coming even while you splutter through your own deep pan pizza and play the percentages with your own arteries.

We’re not going to go back to defined benefit company pensions.

But thinking about all this, it’s easy to see a case for bigger private/public partnership pensions – where millions of members together smooth the sequence of return risks.

The case for no-hassle annuities looks stronger these days too, as a way of simplifying drawdown.

But again, that’s because payouts are currently pretty good. If taking out annuities becomes all the rage and yet we slide back into a low-rate era again, you can guarantee that trend will overshoot the new reality.

Armed and dangerous

I sometimes wonder if we write too much about pensions, drawdowns, and so on these days. I just about remember being young, and I’m sure it’s all a bit off-putting to anyone under 40 who stumbles across Monevator, compared to if they saw an article about the fun stuff.

But this constellation of issues is why we keep returning to – or even belabouring – the subject. A little knowledge combined with a lot of responsibility for your own retirement is a dangerous thing.

We can try to do our own small part to address the knowledge deficit.

But the heavy personal responsibility part is here to stay.

Have a great weekend.

[continue reading…]

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