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The behavioural finance gurus tell us we’re a bunch of weak-willed monkey brains who chase performance like the world’s tastiest banana. We look in the mirror and see King Kong, rather than a PG Tips chimp in a nappy. We have a great time at the watering hole and think the future will always be lush, forgetting the drought of five years ago.

In short, we’re excitable apes, swinging from mood to mood like our ancestors swung from branch to branch.

And I admit I can see all that in myself.

However amid the daily bombard of advice for puny humans, I do wonder if we forget how far we’ve come.

Undertaking and sticking to a passive investing strategy is a huge self-improvement venture, for example.

You’re not building muscles, but you are building a financial exo-skeleton that will see you punch a hole through the walls of your old life and into the wild yonder.

Or maybe we’re building an ocean-going escape raft. Lashing together our savings so we can get off this overgrazed continent and row over the horizon to the land of financial independence (FI).

Voyage of self-discovery

A voyage of self-discovery

Our adventure demands:

The determination to stay the course no matter how turbulent the seas. You may be adrift or lost or seemingly sinking, but you cast aside doubt – the mental image of FI island and an “aloha” greeting keeping you going.

The discipline to stick with the strategy. Save, buy, hold, rebalance. This is the drumbeat that rows your boat across the uncertain ocean. It’s dull. Your mind screams for an end to the monotony. Willpower must be the galley master to instinct.

The fortitude to resist the siren song of instant gratification. This is particularly true if you’re living on restricted rations. It would be so easy to beach yourself on some sandy reef. Break out the rum, party with the natives, and ignore that smoking caldera and the giant pot that everyone’s so excited about. Hot tub anyone?

The resolve of self-reliance. You increasingly realise that you can fix, patch, or workaround any problems that you face. The comforts and status symbols of your old life fade in significance. You find new pleasure in simple things and in a grander narrative of discovery.

I salute you

It’s a lonely journey at times. It’s not something that many other people want to talk about. Often because they worry about being judged: either because they’re doing nothing to help themselves or because they’re too concerned with the size of their boat.

So it’s hard to get positive reinforcement that you’re doing the right thing – except through communities like the one here at Monevator.

And that’s what I want to acknowledge. Whether you’re a young 20-something who’s making an early start; or a 30-something who’s late on board but throwing everything at it; or a weather-beaten 60-something about to make landfall: you’re doing something tough.

You’re building or have built up large reserves of willpower. You’re forging good habits that are transferable to other parts of your life, like work and health.

And you’re doing it in the face of the general scepticism, ignorance, and dismay of the wider community.

You’re sticking to the strategy even when it’s a slog. You’re resisting the desire for instant results to build something enduring that will only reward you many years from now.

You’re determined. You’re committed. You won’t give up.

That’s mental toughness.

Take it steady,

The Accumulator

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Weekend reading

Good reads from around the Web.

Now that he’s just three years from financial freedom, blogger R.I.T. is rethinking how much he can withdraw from his retirement portfolio.

This week he decided that for a UK investor, 3% looks much safer than the oft-quoted 4%:

Staying with only UK stocks and bonds in your portfolio and following the 4% Rule over a 30 year period would have resulted in you running out of assets 23.8% of the time.

To be 100% “safe” you have to drop to a safe withdrawal rate of 3.05%.

Switch to global stocks and bonds and the news isn’t much better. 100% “safety” and your safe withdrawal rate is still only 3.26%.

The comments following the article are also worth reading. There are some real-life stories from the frontline of early retirement, and more than one millionaire who doesn’t think a million is enough.

I tend to think a million is the bare minimum for me today, the way I intend to do it – which is to replace my drawn earnings from work with investment income and not to touch my capital. (The pot can mainly go to charity when I’m gone, to make me feel less terrible about a life obsessed with finance!)

But if you intend to run down your capital, then your numbers will be very different. A million may well be overkill, depending on your retirement age.

Let’s have a few opinions: What’s your number for a safe withdrawal rate, and what size pot do you need to get it?

[continue reading…]

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Investing lessons are in session

Though it might not always feel like it, you have one big advantage over City fund managers.

True, they have the training, best research, computers and analysts.

But they’re also judged daily by their bosses and their clients, and woe betide any manager who starts to lag their peers or the market. A mere 6-12 months behind the pack can be uncomfortable. Underperforming for a couple of years or more can be deadly.

A desire to keep their well-paid jobs and be seen to do something – plus an overdose of self-confidence – means some fund managers trade shares almost like gambling chips at Las Vegas in their pursuit of short-term profits.

These fund managers are smart, but the short-term is unpredictable and trading is expensive. Overall this tactic typically hurts their long-term returns.

Other managers avoid getting fired by covertly tracking the index, guaranteeing they don’t lag too much in any given year. The resultant returns are mediocre, yet these closet index funds still charge their investors high active management fees, instead of the rock bottom charges of a true tracker fund.

While this might seem less harmful than actively trading and doing worse than the index, even apparently modest fees add up over the years.

The tortoise that beats the hare

You’re playing a different game to City fund managers. Nobody is watching your month-to-month performance, except maybe yourself.

You can think long-term when it comes to your goals, and how to get there.

And with a longer time horizon, you can turn to the most powerful investing tool of all: Compound interest.

Compound interest is the interest earned on interest, over time.

Think of compound interest like a snowball set rolling from the top of a hill.

When it starts its journey, it may only be the size of a football. But as it rolls down the hill it accumulates more snow.

Soon it’s the size of a beach ball.

As the snowball gets bigger, the area onto which new snow can stick gets larger.

This means that halfway down the mountain and the size of a car, the snowball is adding a far greater volume of snow per revolution than it did at the top, even though the percentage rate of growth is unchanged.

It’s the same with compound interest.

Let’s say you invest £1,000 and you earn interest of 10% a year:

Year Capital Interest earned at 10% New total
1 £1,000 £100 £1,100
2 £1,100 £110 £1,210
3 £1,210 £121 £1,331

Note: The 10% rate was chosen simply for easy maths!

In the first year you earn £100 in interest. But after just three years, you’re earning £121 a year.

That’s 20% more added to your savings in year three than in year one – all without contributing any extra money beyond that initial £1,000.

  • After ten years you’d be adding £259 a year.
  • After 20 years you’d be adding £672 a year.

A few more years again and you’d be earning as much in interest in a year from your savings pot as you first invested1.

All without putting in an extra penny!

Compound interest and long term saving

Let’s consider two investors: Captain Sensible and Captain Blithe.

From the age of 25, Captain Sensible invests £2,000 per year in an ISA for 10 years until he is 35. At 35 he stops and never puts another penny in.

Captain Sensible then leaves his nest egg untouched to grow until he hits 65.

Let’s say Captain Sensible earns an annual return of 8% from age 25. When he looks at his account 30 years later, he has amassed £314,870.

In contrast, his cousin, Captain Blithe, spends all his money between the ages of 25 to 35. Only when he hits 35 does Blithe start tucking away £2,000 per year in his ISA. However he keeps this up for the next 30 years until he reaches 65.

Captain Blithe earns an average annual return of 8% on his money, too. But he ends up with just £244,691.

 To recap…

  •  Captain Sensible invested a total of £20,000.
  •  Captain Blithe invested a total of £60,000.

… yet early-starting Captain Sensible’s pile is worth 28% more than late-starting Captain Blithe’s – even though Sensible only invested a third as much money as Blithe!

That’s the glory of compound interest.

Returning to returns

What’s that I hear you say?

“Good luck getting 8% a year in interest for 20 years!”

Quite right. Nobody is going to guarantee you that rate of return for two decades.

This is where the blended asset allocation that we saw in Lesson Four comes in.

UK equities have returned on average 8-10% a year2. Smaller companies, unloved shares, and emerging markets have generally done even better.

However all equities are volatile.

Young investors saving a lot of money every year might choose to ride out the volatility by investing 100% in equities for a shot at the very best returns. But they are taking a risk – and there are no rewards without real risks.

Older investors have less time to benefit from compounding as well as fewer years in which to add new money to the markets.

So as we age, it makes sense to increase our weighting of less risky assets, in case the stock market crashes in the years before we retire and we need the money.

The ideal long-term portfolio will therefore contain a lot of volatile assets like shares early on in its life, but a greater proportion of safer assets like cash and bonds in the later years, when we have less time to recover from stock market crashes.

The enemies of compound interest

Viewed through a prism of 30 years of compounded returns, short-term results gained from one month to the next – or even one year to the next – fade away.

What’s important is that we maximise our returns for the level of risk we’re prepared to take.

If you genuinely can trade shares better than the market, or you can profitably time the shift of your money between one asset class and the other, then trying to ‘play the markets’ will boost your returns.

But most people can’t, or at least not consistently. They will effectively buy expensive and sell cheap, cutting their returns.

What’s more, all this activity reduces your returns in other ways.

Dealing isn’t free, and there are other trading costs, too. If you use a fund manager, she might charge you 1.5% a year. All these costs reduce your returns.

Remember that due to compound interest, small changes in the rate of return make a big difference to your final payout.

For example:

  • £10,000 compounded at 8% for 30 years is around £100,000.
  •  The same amount compounded at 6% is less than £58,000.

Knowing about compound interest doesn’t just tell you why you should own at least some shares with the hope of earning 8-10% on average a year, over multiple decades – even though your share allocation will lurch up and down in value compared to the cash you save in a bank account.

Compound interest also shows you why you really need to keep costs and taxes low, in order to avoid sapping those returns and ending up with much less than you might have expected.

Our compound interest calculator enables you to quickly visualise the impact of compounding the returns on your investments.

Key takeaways

  • A sound investment strategy aims to secure a good annual return over the long-term, not pick the best thing to own in the next month.
  • Compounding a decent annual return every year can grow your wealth like a rolling snowball gathers ever more snow.
  •  Keeping costs low will make a big difference in the long-term.

This is one of an occasional series on investing for beginners. You can subscribe to get our articles emailed to you and you’ll never miss a lesson! Why not tell a friend to help them get started?

  1. I am ignoring the impact of inflation here, which would reduce the worth of that money in real terms. []
  2. Without adjusting for inflation. The exact average return figure varies depending on who is counting and over what time period. []
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Enter The Accumulator’s confession booth

Few among us live blameless lives. We may desire to be good and rational investors, but who here can truly say that he or she is perfect? Who has not succumbed to the temptation to take a shortcut or three in pursuit of higher returns, or an easier life, or because you know – you just know – what’s bound to happen next?

Who has has not coveted his neighbour’s assets?

Ah, yes, brothers and sisters, we are all sinners because we are but flesh and blood.

Each of us is burdened by the hanging weights of our failings. And there is but one way to free ourselves of the guilt of self-sabotage.

Confess! Confess! Confess!

Let us form our own investing Truth and Reconciliation Committee. A place where active and passive believers alike can air the dirty laundry buried at the bottom of the closet of our soul.

Never forget we are in good company. The most famed confession in investing is that of Harry Markowitz. The father of Modern Portfolio Theory once admitted he merely split his wealth 50:50 between stocks and bonds rather than computing his own efficient frontier – the latter being Markowitz’s own concept for maximising return and containing risk that led to his Nobel Prize.

Harry bared his soul so we too could free ourselves of the need to pretend we always act like good little rational economists.

So what have you been up to? Are you:

  • A vicar who invests in arms companies?
  • An active fund manager with a personal portfolio full of trackers?
  • A dart-throwing monkey who secretly uses a stock screen?

Or jut another avowed passive investor who loves a bit of market-timing and runs a 10% ‘fun portfolio’ that somehow gets topped up again after every wipe out?

I’ll go first

Investor's confession time

I have not read a fund prospectus in years. I used to. But I’m not a lawyer and I found that reading 100-page documents full of Legalese and clauses that amounted to, “The fund manager can do what they damn well please at the end of the day” weren’t conducive to breaking the analysis paralysis that sets in if you try and do everything by the book.

I find that the fund factsheet, sticking to plain and simple funds, and reading around the subject are enough to tell me what I’m getting into.

I don’t have a deep knowledge of some of the indices I invest in. Does my emerging markets tracker include South Korea and Taiwan? I really don’t remember. I took a look when I first invested. It was full of BRICS, Eastern Europe, Asia and a little Middle East. It was by MSCI and later FTSE, it’s a Vanguard fund… I’m in the right ballpark and that will do, okay?

I have an active fund in my portfolio despite my position as a passive investing evangelist. The fund is the Aberforth Small Companies Investment Trust. I wanted to invest in the UK small-value sector. There aren’t any passive investing equivalents. The Investor recommended it to me. It was cheap. I researched it carefully and it seemed solid.

It’s done really well! I’m really SORRY!

What do you want from me? I’m only human! [Breaks down and sobs].

Okay. That feels a lot better, thanks.

Your turn.

The Accumulator

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