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The Slow and Steady passive portfolio update: Q1 2014

The portfolio is up 0.37% year-to-date

How often do you look at your portfolio? Once a year? Once a month? Once an hour?

If you check your portfolio like you check your email then you’re probably going to drive yourself up the wall and do something you regret – like a teenage conscript nervously fingering his Kalashnikov, you’re primed for action and desperate to relieve the tension.

All this waiting! Let’s do something! Buy something. Sell something. I gotta make a difference!

Well, I haven’t looked at our demo portfolio in the three months since our last Slow and Steady portfolio updateI’m only looking now because I have to write this post. Ideally I’d only take a peek once every six months on preordained dates.

In between times:

  • No fretting.
  • No impulsive acts.
  • No buying yesterday’s winners that turn into tomorrow’s chumps.
  • No reacting to the market trader cries of pundits and salesmen.

Ignorance is bliss.

Up, up, and away (a bit)

So did we miss anything while I was asleep?

Not a lot.

The portfolio made £107 last quarter, which finally pushes our gains through the £2,000 barrier after three years. We’re up over 16% on purchase.

The Slow and Steady portfolio is Monevator’s model passive investing portfolio. It was set up at the start of 2011 with £3,000 and an extra £850 is invested every quarter into a diversified set of index funds, heavily tilted towards equities. You can read the origin story and catch up on all the previous passive portfolio posts here.

Here’s the portfolio lowdown in spreadsheet-o-vision:

On the up

This snapshot is a correction of the original piece. (Click to make bigger).

Japan dropped 5% over the last three months while the US and UK were at a virtual stand still. Europe ticked up 3%. We’ve made precisely £1.08 on our Pacific Rim fund and we’re still up over 2% on UK gilts despite the warnings of Bondageddon.

The only asset where we’re still down on the money that we’ve invested to-date is emerging markets (Russian equities look very cheap!).

This all contrasts very notably with the popular mood when we started our portfolio. Back then – just 36 months ago – emerging markets were all the rage, while Europe was about as popular as sensible haircuts in Shoreditch.

Trends will come and go but our portfolio is designed to suit all seasons. Our hardest task is to stick with it.

Dividends

Our Vanguard UK Equity index fund paid out £65.68 in dividends. Ker-ching! All our dividends are automatically reinvested into more shares – compounding our wealth at an increasing rate. This is accomplished by investing in the accumulation versions of our funds.

New transactions

Every quarter we place an £850 down payment on our future happiness. Our cash is divided between our seven funds according to our soberly planned asset allocation.

We use Larry Swedroe’s 5/25 rule to trigger rebalancing moves. All’s quiet for now though, so on with this quarter’s purchases.

UK equity

Vanguard FTSE U.K. Equity Index Fund – OCF 0.15%
Fund identifier: GB00B59G4893

New purchase: £127.50
Buy 0.66 units @ 19318.5p

Target allocation: 15%

Developed World ex UK equities

Split between four funds covering North America, Europe, the developed Pacific and Japan1.

Target allocation (across the following four funds): 49%

North American equities

BlackRock US Equity Tracker Fund D – OCF 0.18%
Fund identifier: GB00B5VRGY09

New purchase: £212.50
Buy 160.5 units @ 132.4p

Target allocation: 25%

European equities excluding UK

BlackRock Continental European Equity Tracker Fund D – OCF 0.17%
Fund identifier: GB00B83MH186

New purchase: £102
Buy 60.391 units @ 168.9p

Target allocation: 12%

Japanese equities

BlackRock Japan Equity Tracker Fund D – OCF 0.17%
Fund identifier: GB00B6QQ9X96

New purchase: £51
Buy 41.096 units @ 124p

Target allocation: 6%

Pacific equities excluding Japan

BlackRock Pacific ex Japan Equity Tracker Fund D – OCF 0.2%
Fund identifier: GB00B849FB47

New purchase: £51
Buy 24.673 units @ 206.7p

Target allocation: 6%

Emerging market equities

BlackRock Emerging Markets Equity Tracker Fund D – OCF 0.28%
Fund identifier: GB00B84DY642

New purchase: £85
Buy 82.285 units @ 103.3p

Target allocation: 10%

UK Gilts

Vanguard UK Government Bond Index – OCF 0.15%
Fund identifier: IE00B1S75374

New purchase: £221
Buy 1.718 units @ 12864.9p

Target allocation: 26%

New investment = £850

Trading cost = £0

Platform fee = 0.25% per annum

This model portfolio is notionally held with Charles Stanley Direct. You can use its monthly investment option to invest from £50 per fund. Just cancel the option after you’ve traded if you don’t want to make the same investment next month.

Take a look at our online broker table for other good platform options. Look at flat fee brokers if your portfolio is worth substantially more than £20,000.

Average portfolio OCF = 0.17%

If all this seems too much like hard work then you can always buy a diversified portfolio using an all-in-one fund like Vanguard’s LifeStrategy offering.

Take it steady,

The Accumulator

  1. You can simplify the portfolio by choosing the do-it-all Vanguard FTSE Developed World Ex-UK Equity index fund instead of the four separates. []
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Weekend reading: Honey, I shrank the financial advice

Weekend reading

Good reads from around the Web.

Morgan Housel at the US Motley Fool did a smashing job this week in whittling 5,000 years of financial advice down 61 pithy one liners.

Here are some of my favourites:

1. Dollar-cost average for your entire life and you’ll beat almost everyone who doesn’t.

3. Every five to seven years, people forget that recessions occur every five to seven years.

15. The more you learn about the economy, the more you realize you have no idea what’s going on.

16. Start saving for college before your kid is born, and start saving for your retirement before you graduate college. You’ll feel silly when you start and like a genius when you finish.

24. Respect the role luck has played on some of your role models.

28. Read last year’s market predictions and you’ll never again take this year’s predictions seriously.

34. You can probably afford not to be a great investor — you probably can’t afford to be a bad one.

40. Admit when you are wrong.

47. During the last 100 years, there have been more 10% market pullbacks than Christmases. Everyone knows Christmas will come; think of volatility the same way.

48. Don’t attempt to keep up with the Joneses without realizing the Joneses aren’t any happier than you are.

56. Most people’s biggest expense is interest, which comes from living beyond your means, and buying things they think will impress others, which comes from insecurity. Avoid these two and you’ll grow richer than most of your peers.

57. Reaching for yield to increase your income is often like sticking your hands in a fire to warm them up — good in theory, disastrous in practice.

Morgan wrote his one liners with a US perspective.

Any British ones we can add?

[continue reading…]

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How should you invest for your age?

Photo of Lars Kroijer hedge fund manager turned passive index investing author

Former hedge fund manager Lars Kroijer now advocates passive index investing as the best approach for most people. You can read more in his book, Investing Demystified.

How you should allocate your portfolio across the main asset classes – shares, bonds, cash?

Like most things in investing (and in life) it depends on your circumstances and your tolerance for risk.

Age is a big factor for nearly everyone, though.

The following diagram shows how your portfolio allocation may shift between equities (shares) and the minimal risk asset (government bonds for UK and US readers) over the course of your lifetime.

Graphic showing typical asset allocation at different ages

(Note: To keep things simple I’m ignoring the complications of riskier foreign government bonds and also of corporate bonds.)

As you can see, most people should start off with a relatively heavy allocation to shares. Over their lifetime this is gradually tapered and replaced with a growing allocation to government bonds.

The rest of this post explains why this is usually a good idea.

How should younger savers invest?

Generally speaking, young savers should allocate a greater portion of their portfolio to riskier assets.

Young people are in the early stages of saving, and the cumulative benefits of even a small outperformance from a riskier allocation can add up to a large amount of extra money over the coming years.

If the markets turn south, young savers have decades before they need the money. They have more time for their investments to recover and make up the shortfall, or for them to adapt their lifestyles or increase their saving rate to fix the problem.

The best time to learn about the markets and how to deal with its risks is when you’re young. Getting into the habit of saving money and sticking with it will serve you very well over your lifetime, particularly as you begin to see the cumulative gains from being a saver due to compound interest.

My advice if you’re young is that you take a risk with your savings and put a lot in the equity markets. Be ready to see it rise and fall in value – perhaps dramatically – and keep enough cash in the bank so that you can afford to ride out a big fall in the stock market (known as a “drawdown” in investing circles).

You should also familiarize yourself with all the tax benefits that might arise from pensions or other savings vehicles, such as ISAs in the UK, in order to ensure you keep as much of the return as possible.

How should you invest in middle age?

Once you’re into your 30s and 40s, you’ve passed into the ranks of the mid-life savers.

You could well be at your prime in terms of earnings power and you’re probably getting a sense for how things are going to turn out for you career-wise, too.

You might also be starting to get a feel for what your expenses in retirement will look like. And maybe how many income-earning years you have left before retiring.

Often you’ll want to allocate a greater fraction of your portfolio to your minimal risk asset, perhaps in longer-term bonds, than you did a couple of decades earlier.

But whilst you could already have accumulated a fair amount of money in your portfolio by this age, in most cases the potential extra return from keeping a continuing allocation to equities will be important to reaching your financial goals in retirement.

Should the equity markets be bad going forward, you still have some working years to address the losses on your investments, either by saving up more and reducing your current spending, planning to work longer, or reducing your expected spending power in retirement.

For many mid-life savers, tax considerations should again play a major role in the execution of their portfolio.

Make sure you’re thinking with a multi-decade time horizon when deciding where to shelter your assets, and keep up-to-date with the latest government legislation.

Asset allocation for retirees

At the other end of the spectrum we have someone already in retirement – perhaps without a huge excess of savings to get them through their remaining years.

This group of savers should have a far lower tolerance for risk. That’s because they have fewer options to make up for a shortfall if the stock market turns against them.

At the risk of over-simplifying, if you are not going to benefit very much from the upside of having more money (with limited years left to enjoy it) because you already have enough – but you would experience the painful downside of having to eat beans on toast in your old age if your investments go down – then don’t gamble with your retirement and stay with minimal risk bonds.

Of course estate planning and passing on assets to the next generation could well play a major role here, in terms of the exact structuring of your portfolio.

Also consider what non-investment income you can expect – company pensions, social security, and so on – and compare that to your expected outgoings.

The difference between the two will need to come from investment income, or by liquidating part of your portfolio for cash or a guaranteed income such as an annuity.

While rules of thumb don’t apply universally, if you retire at the typical age and stick to only spending 4% of your portfolio per year, you will probably be fine. (You can increase that percentage as you grow older – we’re all living finite lives and you can’t take it with you!)

A realistic and slightly morbid point – I would also encourage you to get ready for the day when you can no longer handle your savings yourself, or even plan to pass it on.

Keep things simple in your older years. Have only a couple of accounts and not too many investments, and make clear to whoever is going to take over the management of your assets how you think they should be managed and why.

You can look at Warren Buffett’s estate planning for his wife for inspiration to keep things simple. Buffett’s instructions are merely to divide his wife’s money between a Vanguard equity tracker and short-term US government bonds.

What about if you’re rich and old?

You should note though that Buffett has instructed his executors to keep a far higher proportion of his wife’s assets in equities than would be sensible for most retirees.

We can presume that’s because the sums involved are relatively massive, and thus a fall in the stock market would not be a big threat to his wife’s standard of living!

If you retire with much more money then you need, then the risk profile of your portfolio may be different, too.

Rich retirees are often no longer investing only for their own needs, but also for the longer term needs of their descendants or whoever the assets will be going to, such as a charity or a bequest.

Since the time horizon for those descendants can be much longer term and since their own needs for day-to-day living for the rest of their lives are already covered, their portfolio could well include more equities and a generally riskier profile than if it was just for the retirees themselves.

How to shift from one allocation to another

As for the practical matter of reducing your investment in equities and raising your allocation to lower risk assets as you age, it’s usually best to do this as part of your normal investing activity.

For instance, if you’re regularly saving into a SIPP each month, do some sums and over time start to direct a greater portion of the savings towards your bond holdings.

Investing Demystified book coverSimilarly, if you’re paid income from your share portfolio as a dividend, as you get older you could reinvest that money into bonds rather than buying more shares.

The idea here is to reduce trading costs, and in some case taxes.

Another option is to use a so-called life-styling product that gradually shifts from equities to shares as you age. These are already very popular in the US, but watch out for high charges and hidden fees.

You could use something like Vanguard’s cheap LifeStrategy fund. This automatically splits your assets between global equities, bonds, and other assets, with a fixed allocation to equities.

Monevator has previously discussed how to gradually transition your money across two such funds to create your own simple DIY life-styling strategy.

Lars Kroijer’s Investing Demystified is available from Amazon. Lars is donating all his profits from his book to medical research. Check it out now.

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Estimating your portfolio’s expected return

How can you know how much to invest without knowing what investment gains your portfolio may deliver in the future? Your portfolio’s expected return is the number you need.

Your expected return figure helps you plot a financial master plan that’s more robust than:

  • Sticking your finger in the air.
  • Consulting goat entrails.
  • Getting your other half to pop on a veil on while staring maniacally at your palm and muttering “I see great fortune – but also much loss, my child,” in a cod Eastern European accent.

To calculate this critical number, you first need an idea of the expected returns of the asset classes you invest in. The numbers in our previous article on expected returns is a good starting point.

Especially useful are expected returns figures for individual asset classes as ventured by US passive investing champ Rick Ferri. Tim Hale has produced UK-centric figures in his superb book Smarter Investing.

Expected returns enable you to make projections about your financial future.

Choose whichever expert’s asset class return numbers seem most sensible to you, and then apply them to the asset allocation mix of your own portfolio:

Multiply each asset class’s expected return by its percentage allocation in your portfolio.

This gives you the weighted expected return of each asset class.

Add those numbers up to discover your portfolio’s expected return.

Here’s an example for a portfolio I’ve just made up:

Asset class Allocation (%) Expected annual real return (%) Weighted expected return (%)
UK equities 15 5 0.15 x 5
= 0.75
Developed world equities 35 5 0.35 x 5
= 1.75
Developed world small cap equities 10 7 0.1 x 7
= 0.7
Emerging market equities 10 7 0.1 x 7
= 0.7
Global property 10 4 0.1 x 4
= 0.4
UK government bonds 20 0.5 0.2 x 0.5
= 0.1
Portfolio expected real return 4.4%

Expected return source: Tim Hale’s Smarter Investing, 3rd edition.

Now do the same thing for your own portfolio. The figure you come up with is the real return you can expect your portfolio to deliver annually over the course of your investment time horizon.

See below for the caveats swirling like mosquitos around that breezy statement.

Using your portfolio’s expected return

Pop your portfolio’s expected return into an investment calculator along with your target income goal, time horizon and monthly saving dollop, and you’ve just thrown a rope around the task ahead.

Of course the one thing you can expect from any expected return number is that it will be wrong to some degree. But at least you’re no longer shooting in the dark, and you can correct your trajectory as you go.

Once you know how to estimate your portfolio’s expected returns, you can also start doing groovy things like customising your asset allocation to better fit your individual needs.

For example, if your portfolio’s equity allocation is higher than you’d like – because you’re nervous of volatility – then notch up the bond allocation in your calculations and see what difference it makes to your expected return.

Rerun the numbers and if you can still hit your financial goal within an acceptable time frame then you can afford to take less equity risk.

If you add riskier but higher expected return assets like emerging markets, small cap, and value equities then the expected return (and volatility) of your portfolio heads higher.

Again this may give you the headroom to increase the bond component of your portfolio and lower the equity allocation – potentially reducing risk without sacrificing the expected return you need.

Caveat city

No Monevator post would be complete without a sprinkling of snares, trip-mines, and general financial doo-doo for you to hopscotch over.

Here’s this episode’s selection.

Subtract your fund’s charges and platform’s fees from each line of your expected returns. Ditto for any investments exposed to tax. Nothing is more certain to dent your plans than the ongoing costs of investment.

Make sure you adjust your calculator, too, if it already assumes an allowance for these costs.

Remember to check if your expected returns are quoted as real returns or nominal returns.

Real returns are what you’re left with after inflation has taken its bite. If you’re using nominal returns then just subtract an estimate for inflation before you start: 2 – 3% is reasonable for UK investors.

The current UK government bond yield minus inflation is the best guide to the expected return of UK gilts. Choose the maturity that best represents the average maturity of your bond fund or ladder.

Expect (a bit of) the unexpected

They say always end on a song, but they probably don’t write personal finance articles for a laugh

So I’m going to end with a warning instead: Expected return numbers are expected because they take historical performance and recent valuations into account.

As such, expected returns are more credible than the prophecies of the Ancient Mayans, but they can still be wildly off-beam because the dispersion of investment returns resembles a shotgun blast.

Take it steady,

The Accumulator

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