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Warren Buffett’s investing tips (infographic)

I quite like this investing infographic explaining how to make money like Warren Buffett. I am a sucker for both Buffett and the Muppets, and he looks a bit like a Muppet mogul who never was here.

I’m even prepared to overlook the errors, such as the glaringly weird one near the top that says Buffett has lived in an apartment for 55 years! Buffett is famously stingy, but he’s not so stingy that he couldn’t bust out for his own roof and yard. Someone clearly wasn’t paying attention when they were Googling. (Spell checker doesn’t like that word. Googling. Wonder how much longer for?)

[Note: Sadly the info-graphic was taken down by its creator in 2019 so I can no longer embed it here, but you can still view it in the Internet Archive.]

Want to know more about Warren Buffett?

 

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Too big to scale: Long-term stock market returns

An inflatable globe of the Earth is an example of bringing big numbers down to size

Always be alert to the different ways in which large numbers can be (mis)interpreted when trying to make sense of the world.

Never forget: You’re an upgraded ape with delusions of grandeur, designed to hunt gazelles and run away from lions. You’re prone to fear and greed, you love being in with the crowd, and you’re afraid of heights and of the dark.

And all this equally well applies when investing – because what else have we got to go on?

We need to quieten the chimp within us to get unemotional about data, in order to invest through the cycles of boom and bust without getting giddy in the good times, or paranoid in the bad.

The view from the stock market’s summit

Let’s consider how a superficial read can mislead us by considering the long-term returns from the US stock market.

Below is a pretty typical graph, of the sort you see in the introduction to many investing books. It shows how the US stock market has risen from the 1930s until a year or two ago:

usstockmarket

How do you feel when you look at this graph?

A pretty normal reaction might be: “Oh my goodness, we’re doomed!”

It looks as if the stock market only really got going in the Yuppie era of the mid-1980s. Until then, the City was asleep. How Warren Buffett made his billions seems a mystery, given the near flat line he had to trudge along for most of his career.

In short, we still appear to be in the midst of an enormous stock market bubble that is certain to burst! (Again!)

And indeed I have seen this graph used to make exactly that claim.

Now, this data is not wrong – the US stock market did indeed rise as indicated in the graph.

But if we consider its ascent in the light of various other factors, we may decide we look far less likely to be heading for a nasty fall.

Getting real about returns

The first thing to point out is that this graph shows the nominal price level. That means the data has not been adjusted for inflation.

Considering that inflation tends to run at 2-3% a year, this makes a big difference once compound interest has done its work over several decades.

The next graph is one of several I am going to use from Visualizing Economics.

Again it shows a huge spike in the past three decades for the equity market, compared to what has gone before – this time taking us back to 1880:

Click to enlarge

Click to enlarge

At first glance you might not see much different about this graph compared to my first graph.

However compare the two more carefully. This time you can clearly see several previous peaks, along with those double stalagmites of the recent highs (tested again, incidentally, since this graph was created in 2010).

By adjusting like this for inflation, we can more easily see the big run-up in stocks that occurred in the late 1960s. This graph also makes plain the 1920s bubble (which was already underway just as the first graph gets going – but even if it were fully shown, it would just look like a blip).

Displaying the market’s ascent in real terms like this helps us see that investors didn’t spend every day asleep at the office until the 1980s. There were plenty of roller-coaster rides on the way.

Tackling those twin peaks

The next and arguably the most crucial adjustment we need to make to the data is to change the scale we use.

Currently, we’re looking at it in a linear scale. This is misleading. Why?

Well, simply by eyeballing the graph above, we can see the US market went up about 50% between 1900 and 1906. That’s quite a move in just six years.

However on the graph as a whole this surge barely registers, compared to those Peaks of Doom to the far right of the graph.

This is because by the time we get to our era, the market is up at levels some 10-20x higher in absolute terms compared to the turn of the century, even after adjusting for inflation.

Again, the data is not wrong, but visually it exaggerates the recent past and tricks us into thinking we’re looking at an enormous and unusual bubble.

We can see this by using a logarithmic scale. With a logarithmic scale, percentage changes appear the same, even if the absolute changes are massively different. Using a log scale, a 50% rise between 1900 and 1906 would look the same as a 50% rise from 2003 to 2008.

Here’s how the long-term US stock market graph looks in log terms:

Click to enlarge

Click to enlarge

Now we’re getting somewhere!

When looked at in log terms, the stock market return over the last couple of decades – those big twin peaks of recent infamy – look positively ordinary. As indeed they should – due to the bear markets of 2000 and 2008 that wiped out most of the excesses of the late 1990s, stock market returns from 1990 to 2011 were actually below the long-run average! 1

For the avoidance of doubt, I am not saying the market wasn’t grossly overvalued in the year 2000, or anything like that.

But I am saying it’s been grossly overvalued and undervalued before.

The inflation-adjusted log graph shows us very clearly how the market has endured all kinds of booms and busts, and also how overall it has marched pretty steadily higher, provided you stand far enough back (and squint a bit!)

Real versus nominal, side by side

If you compare that inflation-adjusted log graph with the very first graph that showed nominal growth in linear terms, I think you’ll agree we’re now seeing a much less scary – and more informative – picture of stock market growth over the long-term.

The next graph illustrates the same point, via two log views of the US market.

The blue line has not been adjusted for inflation, whereas the black line has:

real-versus-nominal-US-stocks-growth-log

I wish I could show the blue line in linear terms, to ram the point home.

Perhaps that’s a project for a rainy day…

Dividends do it again

I’m not quite done yet. These graphs still don’t show the complete picture.

I mean, some of you may feel as deflated as the graphs by now. Why invest in equities, I hear someone cry, if over 120 years you just get a crummy line that limps higher from left to right?

To which a couple of points:

  • First, the linear graph still shows you how your money would grow – it’s just not as clear as the log graph at showing the rate of change. You still get rich!

Annual dividends are a huge part of the stock market’s total return, and the graphs we’ve seen so far assume you spent all your dividends partying with cads, flappers, hippies, punks, and ravers as the decades rolled by.

What if you sensibly reinvested your dividends for your long-term wealth?

Here’s what:

Click to enlarge

Click to enlarge

Who wants to be a millionaire? As you can see by the green line, reinvesting dividends makes an enormous difference to your return. Pumped up by dividends, the log graph now looks perky again.

Remember that the visual impact of this return is flattered by compound interest being applied over more than a century. Somebody reading this might have 100 years to live, but such precocious seven-year olds aside, that’s not a realistic investing time frame for most of us.

But by now you know to look twice at any data before reaching a conclusion, right?

Why equities grow over time

One more thing. There are some out there who think the whole stock market is a Ponzi scheme, built on suckers selling paper shares to other suckers, and so forth.

As such, these folk think even the steady growth we see in the later graphs is too good to be true.

I haven’t got much time for these people. Frankly I’m glad they tend to live in the caves and the backwoods of North America. (I get the impression that most of them don’t have much truck with fancy consumer goods such as soap and hot water.)

Nevertheless, it’s important to remind any doubters that there’s a good reason why equities can be worth more over time, even after inflation. And that’s that economies – or at least the one’s we’re concerned about – have tended to grow their GDP over time, too.

As GDP grows, listed companies benefit by expanding their share of business. So there’s a direct (if imperfect) relationship.

And here’s how US GDP grew during the last century and a bit:

Click to enlarge

Click to enlarge

Woo hoo! We’re going to the moon!

What’s that I hear you say? This is a linear scale, and you’d rather see it in log terms?

Absolutely right – well done young padawan. Double extra pudding for you for paying attention, plus your wish is my command:

Click to enlarge

Not so crazy now, is it?

The bottom line: Returns can be calculated and illustrated in many different ways, and whoever is doing so may well have an agenda. Meanwhile your first emotional reaction may well be your least reliable one.

Think first, and ask questions later.

  1. 20 year annualized real returns to the end of 2011 for US equities were 5.6%, versus 6.6% over the full 86 years for which data is available. Source: Barclays Equity-Gilt study 2012[]
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The Slow and Steady passive portfolio update: Q1 2013

The portfolio is up 9.93% on the year (to date).

Well now, it probably hasn’t escaped your notice that the markets have been dancing a merry jig since our last check-up in January. Clap your hands and say, “Yeah!”

Everywhere you turn it’s good news, if you like drawing ‘up’ arrows on your graphs:

  • Our US fund has leapt 20% since the start of the year.
  • The UK allocation swelled nearly 10% with Europe not far behind.
  • Even Japan climbed out of the red to put on 17%. Roll those printing presses.
  • The worst news we had to bear is that our Gilt fund could only manage a 0.25% gain over the last quarter. Not bad considering the hysteria about bond time bombs. Can’t hear any ticking… must be a good sign.

In raw numbers, our little portfolio is up over 17% on purchase, and we’re sitting on a £1,500 cash gain – considerably better than last quarter’s £600.

The portfolio tracker has got more complicated since we've sold several funds. The red annotations show you which funds we still hold.

The portfolio tracker has spawned complications now that we’ve swapped some funds. The funds inside the red boxes are the ones we still hold.

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 £750 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.

It’s impossible not to feel good about the gains even though we know that a rising market is making our next purchases more expensive.

Without doubt, sober-me prefers to buy shares when they’re cheap, but I’m also the kind of chimp who loves a bit of short-term success. I’m sure I’ve been warned about people like me in the behavioural economics books.

Luckily our passive plan is a straitjacket for the senses, or else we’d probably do something daft like sell our gilt funds.

Portfolio management

OK, fun time is over. Now we’ve got to re-enter the world of faffdom that is post-RDR brokers.

Last time, I sold up the majority of our retail funds because online broker TD Direct was touting cheaper clean class funds with nary a sniff of platform fees.

Well, it didn’t take long to discover I’d fallen for the cheap perfume of teaser marketing.

TD will be charging 0.35% platform fees on all funds from August. That means they’re knocked into a cocked hat by the best of our broker comparison table.

So what to do now?

I’ve decided to hold off on a wholesale bail from TD.

That’s because further upheaval is nigh. A decision is due shortly on the banning of commission for execution-only brokers.

  • If commission is reprieved then any Slow and Steady style portfolio worth under £46,000 would be best off going back to the way things were. That means investing in retail class index funds free from trading fees or platform fees, bought from a platform like Cavendish Online.
  • If commission is axed then everything is chucked up in the air again. Existing commission-troughing brokers will have until some point in 2014 to bedazzle us with new offerings.

Some industry insiders think we’ll enter a confusing twilight world where commission morphs into fund unit rebates rather than straight cash rebates.

Whatever, it seems unlikely that the best broker and portfolio selection I could make now will still be the best in a few months. Rather than continue to chop and change, we’ll assess the situation again at the next Slow and Steady update.

If you must invest straightaway then you can use the broker comparison table and these portfolio calculations to make a good decision now.

Even if your broker isn’t topping the best-buy tables, you’re better off waiting to see the lie of the land over the next six months than being a broker tart who gets whammy-ed with exit fees on multiple occasions.

All that said, I am going to sell out of the L&G Global Emerging Markets R fund in exchange for the L&G Global Emerging Markets I fund that’s now available with TD Direct.

It’s the same fund but a different share class that more than halves the Ongoing Charge Figure (OCF) from 1.06% to 0.52%.

As our funds are snugly tucked away in an ISA, there aren’t any capital gains tax issues to worry about, and even if there were, our gain is too tiny to trouble our CGT allowance anyway.

New transactions

Every quarter we lob an additional £750 into the maw of the market. Our cash is divided between the funds as per their target asset allocations.

We use Larry Swedroe’s 5/25 rule to trigger rebalancing moves, but all’s quiet this quarter.

UK equity

Vanguard FTSE U.K. Equity Index Fund – OCF 0.15% (Stamp duty 0.5%)
Fund identifier: GB00B59G4893

New purchase: £112.50
Buy 0.63 units @ 17751p

Target allocation: 15%

Developed World ex UK equities

Split between four funds covering North America, Europe, the developed Pacific and Japan 1.

Target allocation (across the following four funds): 51%

North American equities

Vanguard U.S. Equity Index Fund – OCF 0.2%
Fund identifier: GB00B5B71Q71

New purchase: £187.50
Buy 0.91 units @ 20523p

Target allocation: 25%

European equities excluding UK

Vanguard FTSE Developed Europe ex-UK Equity Index fund – OCF 0.25%
Fund identifier: GB00B5B71H80

New purchase: £90
Buy 0.6 units @ 15074p

Target allocation: 12%

Japanese equities

HSBC Japan Index C – OCF 0.23%
Fund identifier: GB00B80QGN87

New purchase: £52.50
Buy 73.75 units @ 71.19p

Target allocation: 7%

Pacific equities excluding Japan

HSBC Pacific Index C – OCF 0.31%
Fund identifier: GB00B80QGT40

New purchase: £52.50
Buy 19.38 units @ 270.9p

Target allocation: 7%

OCF down from 0.36% to 0.31%

Emerging market equities

Legal & General Global Emerging Markets Index Fund R – OCF 1.06%
Fund identifier: GB00B4MBFN60

Sell: £1005.53

Replaced by

Legal & General Global Emerging Markets Index Fund I – OCF 0.52%
Fund identifier: GB00B4KBDL25

New purchase: £1080.53
Buy 2144.76 units @ 50.38p

Target allocation: 10%

OCF down from 1.06% to 0.52%

UK Gilts

HSBC UK Gilt Index C – OCF 0.17%
Fund identifier: GB00B80QG383

New purchase: £180
Buy 151.13 units @ 119.1p

Target allocation: 24%

OCF down from 0.18% to 0.17%

New investment = £750

Trading cost = £0

Platform fees = £0

Average portfolio OCF = 0.23% down from 0.29%

Finally – 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 series.

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: Easter mindfulness

Weekend reading

Good reads from around the Web.

I am away for the Easter Weekend, so this is a truncated Weekend Reading. I’m writing on Friday morning. Most of the day hasn’t happened. Who knows what Saturday will bring!

However don’t be disheartened, because I’ve got one of the greatest anti-consumerism posts ever written to share.

Sadly, I didn’t write it – and it’s a couple of years old. But I doubt many of you have read it. (I only just stumbled across it via Mr Money Mustache).

So that’ll be coming up in just a second.

Wait! It’s worth it.

After that I’ll have the best of the week’s posts – where the week stopped on Thursday night. It’s a long weekend. I hope you enjoy a bit of reading. And maybe  a bit of thinking, wherever your beliefs lie on the spectrum between Richard Dawkins and the new Pope Francis.

(Incidentally, I’d argue that the spectrum extends a lot further in either direction than those two gentlemen. Dawkins is clearly a spiritual man, if a disbeliever in the supernatural, and I bet you could have an interesting conversation about atheism with Pope Francis. There are plenty beyond these poles).

Post of the week: How to make trillions of dollars

Today’s tasty main course, from the mindfulness website Raptitude, is so good it really needs no introduction.

So I’ll just say I wish I’d written it.

Here’s an extract from How to Make a Trillion Dollars:

Even from a seemingly unempowered starting point — a budget apartment in some forgettable corner of a society that has been designed to make you sick and impotent — these traits will do more for you than any “Anti” stance you can think of.

Hating the system is a favorite American pastime. It feels good, is difficult to stop once you start, and gets you precisely nowhere, not unlike eating Doritos.

Go read the rest of it! It’s better than the extract, or rather the extract is better un-extracted.

[continue reading…]

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