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Getting that 8% return in the twighlight of your life comes with greater risk . That 20-30% drawdown at the wrong time can devastate income earning ability . The amount of coin required to retire relatively stress free and comfortably is 7 figures . Proactive approaches required and for most thats impossible skillset to learn at this stage of life . Managed funds are hamstrung and the only real way of proactively managing your retirement is SMSF . The average punter has almost zero hope .yes getting a positive return after real inflation , can be very challenging , a term deposit rarely does it nor does a Treasury Bond , you can be lucky sometimes and do it with ( some ) corporate bonds
when setting up mine , i wasn't planning any draw-downs , in fact i was hoping to continue in selected DRP s to slowly bulk up the core asset base , in shares like CSR ( no a take-over target ) RFF and such to resist the inflation ( that i knew had to come )Getting that 8% return in the twighlight of your life comes with greater risk . That 20-30% drawdown at the wrong time can devastate income earning ability . The amount of coin required to retire relatively stress free and comfortably is 7 figures . Proactive approaches required and for most thats impossible skillset to learn at this stage of life . Managed funds are hamstrung and the only real way of proactively managing your retirement is SMSF . The average punter has almost zero hope .
My SMSF is 70- 80% cash a couple times a year , i dont hold stocks that are going down when i can help it . Time in the market is risk in my world and no point risking anything when stocks and or indice are unlikely to go up . I have put a lot into timing the market and it is possible to do with edge . I also will use BBOZ occasionally as well for short exposure although limited size . Its a tough gig ...when setting up mine , i wasn't planning any draw-downs , in fact i was hoping to continue in selected DRP s to slowly bulk up the core asset base , in shares like CSR ( no a take-over target ) RFF and such to resist the inflation ( that i knew had to come )
but tapped the portfolio to help buy the current property
going to be trickier now , but have some home-grown produce to offset that
imagine hitting 65, knowing that you might live till 95, which is 30 years away and going 100% cash because you were worried about volatility.Getting that 8% return in the twighlight of your life comes with greater risk . That 20-30% drawdown at the wrong time can devastate income earning ability . The amount of coin required to retire relatively stress free and comfortably is 7 figures . Proactive approaches required and for most thats impossible skillset to learn at this stage of life . Managed funds are hamstrung and the only real way of proactively managing your retirement is SMSF . The average punter has almost zero hope .
am trying to grab some BBOZ ( at a lower price ) as small parcel as a liquidity insurance if there is a big drop ( surely there will be a top soon , say the lead up to May or June )I also will use BBOZ occasionally as well for short exposure although limited size .
imagine hitting 65, knowing that you might live till 95, which is 30 years away and going 100% cash because you were worried about volatility.
so would be eaten Alive by inflation, far more than you would by a temporary 30% draw down.
so if going 100% cash is dumb, being 50% cash is 50% dumb in my opinion.
sure you might see a 30% - 50% draw down at some stage but that is only normally after huge booms, and extra dividends with franking attached more than offsets that risk over time.
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I would rather own gold than cash, and as I have said I hate holding gold.
VAS was only slightly superior if you needed to force extra growth ( by going a little out on the risk curve ) as i did back in 2011 ( as a novice starting way late )This is a screen shot of monthly prices STW from 2007 to 2009. I held this from early 2000's but swapped out (dumb move) to VAS when it listed. The best buying time? Anytime after Jan 2008 to August 2009. Man, the fear was palpable so made it a fabulous time to buy. Not only the index but LICs I still hold and have added to over the years. 2020 was good but not so good as 2008 - 2009. Or 1987, or 1994, or 2000. It's running out of cash to buy is my greatest worry.
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i prefer to take opportunities rather than deliberately exit/re-enter , i tried that early in my journey with mixed success ( even when i sold at a profit , it was very hard to get a good re-entryI am on a hiding to nothing here but this is a reality that can be lived outside of buy and hold . This is a backtest of exactly what i do , BHP traded from start 2016 , hypothetical 10k starting account compounded size according to strategyprofit with ZERO leverage . Now the total amount is not tax adj so annual return will be a realistic 20 -25% depending on the vehicle used to trade . The max DD on this is 11% over a period BHP had 3 DD of 20% + ( one over 40% ) and a couple close to 20 . Am i going to give you details on how this works ? no but i gave some clues in Skates DUMP thread . Can you time the market ? according to most of the world .. No . If you dont believe it thats fine , i dont really care . I dont think i am in the right place for what i do .. such is life
Being mostly cash at times is not dumb , there you go . Tell me what your gains are total return starting with the same 10k
(http://imgur.com/a/d66QjpH)
Reduce/Add better than doing nothing imo , it's half way therei prefer to take opportunities rather than deliberately exit/re-enter , i tried that early in my journey with mixed success ( even when i sold at a profit , it was very hard to get a good re-entry
reduce/add seems to work better for me ( unless i really want to permanently exit a stock )
You will often see people make statements like long term investing doesn’t work because look at the GFC it took X number of years for the market to get back to where it was.This is a screen shot of monthly prices STW from 2007 to 2009. I held this from early 2000's but swapped out (dumb move) to VAS when it listed. The best buying time? Anytime after Jan 2008 to August 2009. Man, the fear was palpable so made it a fabulous time to buy. Not only the index but LICs I still hold and have added to over the years. 2020 was good but not so good as 2008 - 2009. Or 1987, or 1994, or 2000. It's running out of cash to buy is my greatest worry.
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but if you assume you are retired and spending all the dividends (without spending the capital) then in the majority of stocks and indexes you are not keeping up with inflation.
How is the share market not keeping up with inflation? And would you be keeping up with inflation if you were invested in cash and spending all the interest?What is scary in Australia is whether you look at the market indexes or individual stocks over time the vast majority fail to keep up with inflation in terms of purely capital growth. Yes with dividends reinvested many stocks and the indexes will beat inflation but if you assume you are retired and spending all the dividends (without spending the capital) then in the majority of stocks and indexes you are not keeping up with inflation. You need to either look at a handful of individual high growth companies or look into overseas markets (e..g U.S.A) where growth is higher.
Cash is even worse. I most certainly would not advocate cash. I am just saying in Australia it would stock picking (and being good at it) to receive a meaningful return. Or investing in other markets.How is the share market not keeping up with inflation? And would you be keeping up with inflation if you were invested in cash and spending all the interest?
Take Look at the chart I put up, you can see the ASX200 was below 2000 in 1995, it only had to be slightly under 6000 to beat your enlarged inflation rate of 3.9% but it’s now close to 8000, so since 1995 just the index price has beaten inflation.Cash is even worse. I most certainly would not advocate cash. I am just saying in Australia it would stock picking (and being good at it) to receive a meaningful return. Or investing in other markets.
I do not think I am cherry picking data as you assume. Let's assume that a retiree wanted to receive returns similar to the market but wanted their dividends to be fully franked (highly beneficial for a retiree on a zero tax rate) so let's assume they invested in a LIC that produced a similar return to the market such as AFIC or ARGO or BKI, etc.
For example look at the chart of one of the biggest LICs (that has a low fee) AFI
It was around $2.90 per share in September 1997!! and today it is $7.37. 1997 was more than 2 years before the tech bubble burst so not at the peak of a market bubble.
According to the offcial RBA inflation calculator https://www.rba.gov.au/calculator/annualDecimal.html $2.90 in 1997 is equivalent to $5.83 in 2023. Officially over that period the offcial CPI index has only compounded at 2.7% annually.
So according to that even if you spent the dividends your capital grew a little in real terms.
However does anybody here feel that their cost of living over a long period has only risen by 2.7% annually? Can anybody on this forum tell me that over a long period (10 plus years) their cost of living has only risen by the level of CPI?
We all here are smart enough to know that governments (the ABS is not independant from the government despite what they may say) tend manipulate inflation statistics downward for various reasons (whether its to make them look good in the polls or to pay less for things such as pensions and government employee salaries, inflation indexed bonds, etc which are linked to CPI).
If you add just 1% per annum compound to the official CPI that would make it 3.7% per annum over that time period (I would even argue adding 2% would be closer to reality but let's stick with 1% for now for argument's sake). At 3.7% per annum $2.90 in 1997 is equivalent to $7.73 today. So the current share price of $7.37 did not even keep up with inflation.
I could give so many other examples but I think the main argument has been demonstrated well enough.
Of course there are many variables exactly what stocks, ETFs, LICs, etc people invested in and during what year and at what price, etc we can all pick individual examples to fit our argument but my general point is that it is far from a given that price performance of the ASX will outperform inflation even over a long period of time. It may happen and it may not it depends on a lot of factors.
P.S. I picked AFI as an example because the was no VAS or VGS in the 1990s and that would (along with ARG) would have been the closest thing to VAS or VGS at the time.
Again you are irrationally ignoring dividends, but no one invests all their retirement at once like that anyway, the recommendation is always to dollar cost average in over time, someone that retired in 2006 would have been putting in funds for many years before that, and someone that started saving in 2006 would have bought some through the peak but lots after it at lower levels.Value Collector even going by the graph you posted if you invested in 2006 when the index hit around 5200 (far from its peak in late 2007) then at the end of 2023 that would be equivalent 8135 according to the RBA inflation calculator website. The index finished the year around 7900 so again below inflation and that is without even considering adding a buffer to account for the fact that CPI inflation is understated. Also that doesn't take into account ETF/product management fees, tracking error, slippage, brokerage fees, etc because you posted a chart of the All Ords (because there was no VAS or VGS back in the 1990s when the graph starts)
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