The Weird Portfolio
The Weird Portfolio
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Introduction
This book describes an approach to investing that I developed for myself and I
thought it might be useful for others.
It may not be for everyone. All investors have different risk tolerances and core
beliefs. People are unique. This approach isn’t for everyone.
The portfolio utilizes six low-fee ETF’s to create an investment regime that is
designed to deliver a satisfactory rate of return in multiple economic environments.
Like the title says: this portfolio is designed to avoid financial bubbles, limit losses
during recessions/depressions, and safely grow wealth over a long period of time.
Each ETF represents an asset class. On their own, all of the asset classes are highly
volatile. When lumped together in a portfolio, volatility is reduced and the portfolio
still earns high returns. Because the asset classes all deliver returns during different
environments, volatility is reduced and the portfolio delivers a consistent result.
I’ll cut to the chase: these assets, when lumped together in a portfolio, deliver a
return similar to owning 100% US stocks but with significantly less volatility and
more shallow drawdowns. Most importantly: all of these asset classes are available
to everyday investors in cheap and tax efficient ETF vehicles. You can jump right to
the back-testing data at the end of the book to see these results.
However, the historical results aren’t the whole story. For this portfolio to continue
to deliver results in the future, then these asset classes must continue their
historical relationships. If these relationships don’t persist, then the portfolio won’t
continue to deliver the fantastic results that it has in the past.
That’s why it is important to understand why these asset classes deliver their returns
when they do. This book explains why I think that these relationships are likely to
persist into the future. That’s what this book is all about, but you’re free to skip
ahead and cut to the chase if you would prefer.
I would like to give a special shout out to the author of the Portfolio Charts blog, who
was gracious enough to let me use his data for my back-testing. By far, his blog on
asset allocation is one of the best resources that you will find.
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“The only true wisdom is knowing that you know nothing.” — Socrates
I’m not Warren Buffett. I’m not Stanley Druckenmiller. I am not a sage of investing.
I’m just an anonymous financial blogger and a corporate drone who tries my best to
figure out what’s happening in the crazy world of finance.
In more practical terms, I’m trying to deploy my savings. My savings isn’t much in
the grand scheme of things, but I take growing and protecting my savings very
seriously.
I have been fascinated with investing since my teen years during the internet bubble
in the late ’90s. I’ve been trying to figure this out for a long time, and I still struggle
to do it.
Back in 2016, I started a blog where I tracked the actual performance of one of my
brokerage accounts. In this brokerage account, I express my opinions about
individual companies and the economic environment. My track record leaves a lot
to be desired at the moment.
I often pick the wrong stocks, and I’m often wrong about the future. I put a lot of
emotional effort into managing this account. The fruits of my efforts have mostly
been the loss of hair.
I am a stubborn guy, so I keep trying and plugging away. I find the game fun, and it
challenges me mentally. I enjoy it. Other people might choose a fantasy football
team; I try to figure out the economy and which stocks will perform the best.
With that said, my results made me realize that I should develop an approach for
most of my money that doesn’t try to predict the future because I get it wrong so
often. I also wanted something much less stressful than owning 100% stocks. After
all, the stock market has maddening levels of volatility and terrifying drawdowns.
A few years ago, I started to pursue financial independence, inspired by the likes of
people like Mr. Money Mustache. I didn’t want to retire, but I wanted to have enough
money to be a bit choosier about my time and mental energy.
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I often think in terms of worst-case scenarios. WebMD is a dangerous place for me. I
know that the worst-case scenario won’t happen all the time, but thoughts of
disaster always plague me.
I’m not a doomsday prepper with a fully stocked pantry of emergency food rations
and ammunition, but I’m always thinking of what could go wrong.
Risk-averse people like me often choose risk-averse investments. The most risk-
averse investment is cash in a bank account, but that is a guaranteed loser over the
long run. The interest on a bank account is never going to overcome inflation. Cash
will gradually decline as inflation (which advances at roughly 2% a year) chips away
at the purchasing power of money.
As for actual physical cash sitting in a safe — forget about it. If it’s earning no
interest at all, then it’s guaranteed to lose over the long run.
Cash can be useful to deploy at opportune moments in the stock market, but an
investor needs to accurately identify those moments. Warren Buffett has done this
throughout his investing career. He accumulates cash when markets are frothy and
then deploys it during bear markets. This is something that I attempt to do with my
own money, but sadly, I am not 1/10 as good as Warren Buffett.
The only way to build wealth is by making money grow at a rate that exceeds
inflation. Cash, therefore, is a guaranteed way to get crushed.
Sometimes people like me — who think in terms of worst-case scenarios all the time
— get attracted to things like gold. Gold has been a safe asset for thousands of years
of human history.
Gold has a lot of positive attributes (it’s a part of my investment approach), but the
most an investor can expect from gold is to meet the rate of inflation over the very
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long run. With that modest return, gold endures tremendous volatility and terrible
drawdowns. Gold lost 60% from 1981 through 1999, for instance.
So, if we want to make money, we have to take risks. There isn’t any way to
completely get around that fact. Unfortunately, there is no such thing as return
without risk. What risks should I choose? What would be an approach to investing
that negates the need for a forecast but can reliably grow wealth over time?
One suggestion would be to buy a US market cap weighted index fund like the S&P
500.
If you can’t beat the market, the thinking goes, then obtain the average performance
from the market.
This approach didn’t sit right with me, either. For starters, I know enough about
market cap weighted stocks to see that it is expensive right now. When it gets
expensive, it usually delivers low returns over the next decade or two.
I also know that the stock market can go through long periods where it does nothing
but deliver agony.
There was a period from 1929 to 1954 (25 years), where the Dow Jones Industrial
Average was flat. The market was also flat from 1966 to 1982 (16 years). In the 2000s,
due to the tech wreck and the real estate bubble collapse, stocks did nothing. Stocks
were flat for that decade but put investors through a high level of stress in the form
of two nearly 50% drawdowns.
During the history of the US stock market, investors had to endure horrifying
amounts of pain. There was an 80% drawdown in the early 1930s — a 50% drawdown
in the 1973–74 bear market. There was also a 45% drawdown in the early 2000s, and
a 50% drawdown during the 2007–09 financial crisis.
As for less catastrophic declines, they happen constantly. 10–30% declines happen
all of the time, often without any reason.
On top of all of that pain, there are long stretches of time where stocks deliver no
return. Imagine enduring all of that pain and then going through a 10- or 20-year
period where you earn nothing. It has happened before and isn’t outside the realm
of possibility for the future. This was the experience of American investors in the
1930s, the 1970s, and the 2000s.
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Index funds also don’t sit right with me because I know that the experience of
American investors — stocks usually go up and bounce back from declines — is
unique.
In the rest of the world, stocks don’t always go up. The Japanese stock market, for
instance, still has not returned to the highs of 1989. Imagine waiting 30 years,
buying and holding, and not making any return on your savings but still going
through massive drawdowns and pain.
For these reasons, I am not interested in buying and holding an index fund of US
stocks. I realize this is the typical investment approach of most people who pursue
financial independence, but it is not for me.
I also know that I am often wrong and often do a lousy job of predicting the future.
I set out to develop a unique approach that would work for me. I wanted to design an
investment strategy that could handle multiple economic environments, avoid lost
decades, minimize drawdowns, and would negate the need for an accurate forecast
about the future.
3) It would be easy to implement. I don’t want to have to spend hours every week to adjust
and hedge positions.
4) It wouldn’t rely on the genius of a manager whose genius can fade, or whose judgment
can be affected by personal trouble.
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5) It would have protection for all of the different kinds of economic environments that the
world can throw at it — depressions, recessions, strong dollars, weak dollars, inflation,
deflation, prosperity, or the disappointing ending to Game of Thrones.
7) I wouldn’t have to endure long, lost periods (like 10–25 years) where I didn’t earn any
return on my money.
I believe that I’ve developed a plan that meets all of these objectives. It’s how I invest
my own money outside of my “speculative” account that I track on my blog where I
go after the maddening pursuit of trying to outperform the market.
I thought I would share my approach because I felt that people needed to know that
there is a different way to invest outside of mainstream financial advice. There
aren’t many books that show an alternative path, so I thought I would write one.
Most books about investing recommend holding stock index funds forever and not
worrying about the market.
Do stocks drop 50%? Have faith, and they will always return! For some reason, the
authors take 250–500 pages to tell you this. It’s odd to me that the authors think their
book was necessary when hundreds of investing books tell you the same thing.
This book takes a different approach. This book is an investment approach that I
designed for myself. I think it offers a satisfactory return that meets my goals. I
know this approach won’t make me fabulously wealthy, but I think it’s a sound way
to invest money, grow wealth, and not have to chug Pepto Bismol when looking at
the brokerage statement.
My approach isn’t for everyone, but it works for me. I thought it might resonate with
people in a similar situation.
It might not resonate with you, and that’s okay. It’s a weird approach to investing. It
uses controversial asset classes, like gold and small cap value. It has no weighting to
US large cap market cap weighted index funds, which are foundational to most
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portfolios. It’s a weird portfolio. (This is my favorite part of the movie — when the title is
awkwardly dropped.)
Anyway, even though this portfolio isn’t for everyone, I thought it might help some
folks in a similar position to me. It might not be for you, and that’s okay. Everyone
has a different personality, different goals, and different approaches to investing.
There are many valid approaches to managing money, and there isn’t one true faith.
The most crucial part is finding a plan that works for you.
Also, this is intended to be a short read. I’m a big believer that too many books about
investing are too long when they are communicating a simple message. I do not
understand why someone needs to write a 250-page $40 book that simply says, “Do
not try to outperform the market and buy an index fund.”
Personal Finance
The focus of this book is on investing, not personal finance. This book outlines an
approach to investing that works for me.
The reality is that investing is only a small portion of the battle. Saving money in the
first place is the critical step in the process of building wealth. The importance of
investing pales in comparison to the importance of personal finance. It took me a
long time and some horrible experiences to realize this truth, but it is indeed the
truth.
The core issue in personal finance is consistently spending less than you make.
If someone consistently spends more money than they make, they are going to
accumulate debt. Debt has the damaging effect of making compound interest work
against you. When compound interest is working in your favor, it snowballs over
time and builds wealth. When compound interest works against you, it slowly ruins
your life.
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It’s hard to find an investing strategy that can achieve a 7% rate of return after
inflation over the long run. Meanwhile, the average credit card interest rate is 18%.
It is virtually impossible to find an investment strategy that will yield 18% over a
long period, so someone paying this type of interest regularly is in a terrible
situation.
Bill Burr once remarked that the mafia became irrelevant because their businesses
became legal. He’s right. 18% is the kind of interest rate that mafia loan sharks used
to charge degenerate gamblers in the 1950’s. Now, banks can do it legally thanks to
the repeal of usury laws.
The average American has a credit card balance of $6,200. At an average interest
rate of 18%, they’re paying $1,116 in interest a year. If that $1,116 could be invested
every year into a strategy that yields 7%, in 30 years, that money would accumulate
to over $100,000.
It’s also important to look at debt not in raw mathematical terms — but through the
lens of the behavior which creates debt.
If a person’s debt is rising, then the person is living beyond their means and saving
nothing. If someone makes a habit of living beyond their means, they are
guaranteed never to accumulate wealth.
Debt isn’t a mathematical problem; it’s a problem of behavior. Debt can arise
through no fault of the person — such as medical debt. In most cases, though, debt
is a lifestyle choice and an American addiction.
It’s vital in this case to distinguish between needs and wants. In the United States, we
find it hard to differentiate between the two. You need a roof over head and water to
survive. You don’t need a new car. A $5,000 used car can get the job done just fine.
You don’t need a big house. You need a place to live. You don’t need a premium cable
package or the latest iPhone. A used model will do just fine. Get an HD antenna and
a cord cutter cable package. You don’t need to eat at a restaurant every week. You can
prepare a perfectly adequate meal in your kitchen for a few dollars. You don’t need to
take on debt to go to an expensive private college. You can go to a cheaper state
school. There are plenty of job opportunities in the trades or from fields that only
require a two year degree.
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A good exercise to figure out what’s really important in life is to make a list of all of
the things in life that bring you joy. I’m willing to guess that most of these things are
free.
What brings you joy in life? I’m willing to guess that they’re probably things like the
time you spend with a loved one, a walk on a sunny day, or helping others. Your list
is probably not stuff you can buy at a store. Buying the latest gadget or the smell of a
new car provides only fleeting pleasure that quickly dissipates.
The average home in 1960, for instance, was 1,300 square feet. Today, it is 2,700
square feet. They likely didn’t have a brand new car. They didn’t have iPhones, a big
cable TV bill, a vehicle for every adult in the house. They lived a more
straightforward, cheaper lifestyle. They were also happier. Talk to your
grandparents and you’ll see this to be true. More stuff doesn’t make us any happier
in life.
If money can’t buy happiness, then what’s the point of pursuing it?
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Here is a life that you can visualize. Imagine that you have no debt and don’t owe
anyone on Earth a cent. You own your home outright. It’s not an extravagant home,
but it’s all yours. You have an investment portfolio that generates a passive income
for you year after year. You can work on your terms. You don’t have to answer to a
boss. You have a cheap, paid for, car in the driveway. If your boss asks you to do
something unreasonable, you can say no. If something breaks around the house,
you have the cash to pay for it and don’t have to go into debt.
You own your time, and you have a lot of it. You can use this for money-making
pursuits, but they are money-making pursuits that bring you joy and not a job that
trades agony for money. Maybe you like to write books or volunteer. Perhaps you
want to create art and sell it online. Whatever it is, you can pursue what makes you
happy, and you don’t have to do unpleasant things to earn a living. You don’t have to
do things that make you miserable until you drop dead.
That’s financial independence. That’s a goal worth pursuing. That’s not a car, a
bigger house, or luxury.
I’ll bet that a person in a simple situation of financial independence with modest
spending is a lot happier than a high powered investment banker in Manhattan
earning millions every year. The investment banker has to work 100 hours of work
under constant stress and pressure to maintain their multi-million dollar luxurious
lifestyle. They have to keep their kids in the most excellent schools, pay the
mortgage on a $10 million penthouse, own a vacation home, buy the most beautiful
suits, pay for incredible cars. None of it makes them happy, but they have to work
continuously in something that brings them no fulfillment to maintain a lifestyle.
They live a life of luxury, but they are not free. If they lose their job or take their foot
off the gas, they can lose it all.
The goal, as I see it, isn’t to buy more stuff or increase prestige. The goal is to have
enough money and a cheap enough lifestyle that you can do whatever you want. You
want to own your time and energy.
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I entered my twenties with a very unhealthy relationship with money and life. I
thought of money as a tool for pleasure and not as a tool for independence.
It brought me no happiness, and it left me utterly miserable. The worst part is, it led
me to accumulate a significant amount of debt.
I was out of college for a couple of years. I lost my first job and was a year into my
new one. I had no savings and was sitting on a significant amount of debt. I was
struggling to get by. I had no savings. My checking account would often go negative
as I approached payday.
Lehman Brothers then collapsed, and it looked like the other banks are going to fall
with it. The world economy and financial markets blew up spectacularly. Absolute
terror gripped the world.
I always followed the markets closely, and at that moment I was aware that we might
be facing the second Great Depression.
My credit card interest rates got jacked up to 30% as I digested what was happening
to the economy. I was already down, and it got worse. Most of my income was being
eaten up by interest.
Nearly 40% of my income was going to payments, and most of those payments were
interest.
I also had no idea how much longer my job would last. What if my employer went
out of business? What if I got laid off?
It was a horrible situation, and I’ll never forget how I felt. I felt desperate, and my
life felt like it was out of control.
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I thought of myself as someone who knew about money, but the truth was that no
matter how much I knew about investing, I didn’t know anything about life. I didn’t
understand that buying the coolest gadget or having a fun night out at a luxurious
bar wouldn’t bring me any happiness.
At the age of 26, my life was a total and complete mess. I thought back to the person
I was at 18. How full of optimism I was about the future. I felt like an actual failure
in comparison to those ambitious dreams I made for myself.
I’ll never forget the way that this moment in my life felt. I felt hopeless, and I felt
utterly broken as a person. I felt trapped and scared. The future was unknowable.
Financially speaking, I was unprepared for what was unfolding. I was only 26 years
old, and I already felt like a washed-up failure of a human being.
I vowed to end the situation. I vowed that I would never experience that kind of self-
created mess ever again.
To save money, I took extreme measures, like renting out a cheap basement to live
in. I did everything and anything to cut costs and minimize my expenses. I tried to
spend no more than $50 a week on food, for instance.
I would often contemplate the mess I created for myself and ask myself questions
like: “How could I have been so careless?” “Why was I so stupid?”
The truth was that it was the best thing that ever happened to me. It helped me
become a more disciplined person. It took discipline that it took to get out of debt,
save money, and end my addiction to alcohol.
I quit drinking and ultimately got out of debt. I took extreme measures to lower my
expenses and live beneath my means. It ultimately paid off and I got out of the hole.
If you have a lot of debt, if you consistently spend more than you make, then my
book about investing won’t be of much help. There is no way to get ahead if you can’t
actually save any money.
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If you have a lot of debt, you should probably read Dave’s book — The Total Money
Makeover — which will give you simple and practical advice to pay off your debt and
start to change your life.
I used Dave’s plan — the debt snowball — to get out of debt. He advocated listing
debts in terms of amounts, not interest rates, and systemically paying them off,
using the larger cash flows to reduce each larger debt. This strategy is
mathematically unsound, but Dave’s insight is that debt has nothing to do with
math. It’s about behavior and the debt snowball helps your attack debt in a
behavioral way. Each victory over each debt balance gave me momentum. By the
time I was finished, I felt victorious and I swore never to get into a situation like that
again.
Dave also has some great, practical advice to stay on track. He recommends staying
out of debt and having a cash emergency fund with roughly six months of expenses.
The purpose of this is to keep you from going into debt to pay for an emergency (like
a loss of a job or a major home repair). It also keeps you from dipping into your
investments.
Many personal finance books focus on things like cutting $5 latte’s or other minor
expenses. I like the Ramsey approach better. Go after your debt with a bazooka.
Downgrade your house if it’s too much. Downgrade your car. Slash your grocery
budget. No half measures. As he puts it, go on “beans and rice” until the job is done.
While Dave gives practical, step-by-step instructions for getting out of debt and
establishing a strong personal finance foundation, I think there is a better book for
changing your fundamental relationship with money. The book that accomplishes
this goal is Your Money or Your Life by Vicki Robin and Joe Dominguez. While Dave’s
book gives some excellent practical advice for getting out of debt and establishing a
firm financial foundation, Your Money or Your Life provides a more philosophical
approach to money.
The book shows the reader that money is not a source of happiness, but a tool to
achieve freedom.
The book also contains an essential exercise. It recommends that you figure out
how much money you have earned in your adult life and compare it to your net
worth. For most people — including myself — this is a sobering and eye-opening
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experience. You’ll see how much money you’ve worked for in your life and how little
you have to show for those efforts.
The point of this exercise isn’t shaming. The purpose is to make it clear that we all
have an unhealthy relationship with money and spending.
When you sit back at think about all the money you have wasted in your life — on
overpriced cars, expensive meals at restaurants, gadgets gathering dust, overpriced
drinks at bars — it puts into perspective how wasteful our lifestyles are. The point of
the exercise isn’t to shame your past, but hopefully, help you develop a healthier
relationship with money for your future.
It is only by establishing a healthy relationship with money that a person can move
forward and stay out of debt and consistently accumulate wealth.
Once you’ve paid off your debts, are living beneath your means, and have a good
emergency fund — then it’s the time to talk about investing. To get to that point, a
healthy mental attitude towards money and life is necessary. Without that attitude
and without the actions required to achieve that, then your investment strategy
doesn’t matter.
Without this foundation, there isn’t much of a point to learning about investing.
Without savings — without capital — it doesn’t matter what kind of portfolio you
chose.
So — how do we invest?
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There are two basic ways to attempt to beat the stock market:
1) Pick the asset classes that will perform best. Stocks or bonds? US Stocks or
international stocks?
Both of these things are an attempt to predict what will happen in the future.
In the absence of a Flux Capacitor and 1.21 gigawatts of electricity, this is a difficult
feat to accomplish.
Warren Buffett has focused on strategy #2. Buffett does this by finding stocks that
are cheap relative to their fundamentals. He then tries to make a reasonable
prediction about the future. He likes companies that have a “moat” to defend
themselves from the competition while simultaneously earning large profit
margins.
The most famous example of this is his investment in Coca-Cola. Buffett realized
that Coke was an incredible global brand. People will buy Coca-Cola over a cheap
store brand cola. Coke’s brand power allows Coca-Cola to charge more in price and
earn a higher margin. Meanwhile, he also recognized that Coke could grow over
time by expanding internationally.
Ray Dalio has focused on point #1. Dalio is adept at identifying where we are in a
business cycle. Before the global financial crisis, he pivoted to asset classes — such
as long term government bonds — that would benefit from the financial crisis.
The problem is, few investors succeed in picking stocks or choosing the right asset
classes. There are plenty of people who have consumed Warren Buffett’s letters, but
few that have been able to replicate his returns. Dalio has written much about his
approach, but there are few investors who have been able to pivot to the right asset
classes at the right times.
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It would be nice if we had Dalio or Buffett’s skills and intelligence, but the sad reality
is that very few of us do.
Buffett makes picking stocks look easy. Find a moat and a margin of safety and bam,
buy.
The problem is that this is extremely hard to do. Even Buffett makes mistakes, and
his stock picks can turn against him. There are many examples of Buffett’s mistakes,
but one that sticks out is his purchase of Dexter shoes in 1993. Buffett paid $433
million for the shoe company, which slowly became worthless as the company
fought off cheaper shoes from low-wage countries.
Dalio gets things wrong, too. Dalio proclaimed that “cash is trash” in January 2020,
shortly before the market collapsed due to COVID-19. Throughout the 2010s, Dalio
also frequently compared the market environment to 1937, but the 1937-style
market crash never arrived.
The future is hard to predict, even for the greatest investors of all time. The
difficulty of prediction is a phenomenon studied carefully by Philip Tetlock, who
observed that experts often fail to predict the future. Experts fail to predict the
future even when equipped with high quality and confidential information. I highly
recommend his book, Superforecasting.
If great investors like Warren Buffett and Ray Dalio make mistakes and everyone
(including experts) are terrible at predicting the future, then what are the odds that
you and I are going to get things right?
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For this reason, I set out to design a portfolio that keeps prediction to a minimum.
My goal was to create a portfolio with different asset classes that would perform well
in different economic environments without attempting to predict which economic
environments will arrive.
What are some of these economic environments that are possible in the future?
Here are some possible scenarios.
Inflation — The US Federal Reserve has been furiously creating money since the
financial crisis. So far, this hasn’t increased the inflation rate. This money creation
kicked into overdrive with COVID-19. Inflation begins to soar into the double digits
in the 2020's, with no end in sight. To combat inflation, the Federal Reserve needs to
increase interest rates massively. The increase in interest rates means that stocks
should be valued less, and stocks fall. The interest rate hikes also lead to bond prices
declining, as bond prices and interest rates are inversely correlated.
Deflation — The US faces a shock that the Federal Reserve can’t handle. Terrorists
detonate a nuclear weapon at the heart of New York City. They launch smaller
battles throughout the country, aided by sleeper cells. US economic activity
plummets, and the country gears up for total war. Directly printing money will do
nothing to revive a shell-shocked economy that is terrorized by fear. Deflation sets
in, with the price of goods plummeting. The stock market crashes in reaction to
these events.
Secular Decline — Decades of deficits finally catch up with the United States. The
United States finds it difficult to sell bonds, and interest rates increase. The US
dollar loses its place as the global reserve currency. The decline in the dollar’s value
strengthens international markets at the expense of the United States economy.
The above scenarios represent a handful of situations that I can imagine in our
unknowable future. I have no idea if any of them will happen and neither does
anyone else.
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I wanted to design a portfolio that would be able to handle all of these outcomes. I
wanted a portfolio that could survive anything that the world could throw at it.
I wanted an iron portfolio with the resiliency to survive anything, but also one that
could grow my wealth over time assuming that the global economy continues to
grow over the long run.
I used to think that the way to do this was to choose the right stocks, but I soon
realized that stocks are only a single asset class. I also realized the profound
difficulty of selecting the right stocks in my attempts to beat the market.
I quickly realized that the way to grow wealth and control for different outcomes
was asset allocation, as opposed to stock picking.
A phenomenon I observed, for instance, was that no matter what stocks I chose,
once I owned enough of them, my portfolio of stocks would move in lockstep with
the US stock market. It didn’t matter if the composition of my portfolio was entirely
different from the overall US stock market; it still moved in tandem with the market.
If the market crashed, then my portfolio would crash as well. Usually, my portfolio
would crash more than the market.
I also realized that there were asset classes would do well if stocks went down. Why
not own some of them as insurance?
So, how do we do this? How do we design a portfolio that will be able to handle a
different outcomes in an ultimately unknowable future?
If the future is unknowable, and it is hard to predict, then what is the best way to
invest?
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When most people consider buying stocks without making decisions about the
economy or stock selection, they turn to index funds. These are funds that charge
low fees and own the entire stock market.
Buy an index fund, and you won’t outperform the stock market, but you’ll do
average.
Over time, average returns in the stock market are quite spectacular. $10,000
invested in US stocks in 1970 would be worth over $1.1 million by the end of 2019.
That is over a 10% rate of return.
Not only do US stocks perform well, but the theory behind an index fund is intuitive
and easy to understand.
There are many participants in the stock market, attempting to make bets about
which company will perform best. They talk to management; they research
companies in depth; they pore over data.
All of these participants are trying to figure out which stocks will perform best in
the future. Some investors succeed in doing this, but most do not. Research
indicates that the typical active manager underperforms the market. The
underperformance of active management is probably best documented in Burton
Malkiel’s book, A Random Walk Down Wall Street.
The situation is worse because these active managers charge high fees, while an
index fund is virtually free.
The math behind fees is pretty simple. Let’s say an investor opens an investment
account with $10,000, earns a 10% annual return, and then contributes $10,000 to
the account every year.
At the end of 30 years, this investor should have $1,809,434.25. However, if the same
investor pays 1% a year in fees, that amount is reduced to $1,456,975.47. Fees cost
this investor $352,458.78. They have only 80% of the money of our hypothetical
index fund investor.
It’s also important to remember that most active funds underperform the market.
This investor likely paid high fees and simultaneously earned a lower rate of return
than the index investor.
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The evidence is loud and clear: active management sucks. Active management
consistently underperforms the market and charges too much in fees. Even if they
could outperform, the fees of most active managers would eat into the high returns.
Sure, there are stellar active managers — like Peter Lynch, Ray Dalio, or Warren
Buffett — but what are the odds that you found the next Peter Lynch, Ray Dalio, or
Warren Buffett?
Due to fees and the inability of active managers to outperform, index funds seem
like a pretty good bet for a long term investor. Index funds charge low fees and
deliver decent performance. It seems likely that corporate America will continue to
grow earnings and sales, and an index fund investor can expect to share in those
rewards.
1) I want to weight my portfolio towards cheap stocks and away from popular stocks.
When you ask an average person how an index fund works, they will likely say that
the index is composed of the biggest companies.
Most people think that the index tilts towards the companies that make more
money.
Surprisingly, that is not how index funds work. Index funds are built based on
market capitalization. Market capitalization is the number of shares multiplied by
the price. In other words, index funds are weighted not based on any fundamentals,
but simply based on what investors are willing to pay for the stock.
Market cap weighting leads to an interesting dynamic. Index funds purchase more
of the stocks that are going up. As the price of a stock rises, the index systematically
buys more of it.
In my view, this is the opposite of what an investor should do. An investor should
buy undervalued companies. An undervalued company will likely have recently
gone down. I want to weight my holdings towards companies that are a bargain.
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The research shows that merely weighting a portfolio towards cheaper companies
works very well.
From 1972 through 2018, owning small, cheap stocks (known as “small-cap value”),
has delivered a 13.9% rate of return compared to the market’s 10.4% return.
In other words, small-cap value turned a $10,000 investment in 1972 into $5.2
million. The market would have turned the same investment into $1.17 million.
US stocks delivered a 10% return since the 1970s, which is outstanding. However,
during that period, they went through many horrible declines.
From November 2007 through February 2009, a $100,000 investment turned into
$49,000.
In the most extreme example, from 1930 through 1932, stocks experienced a 80%
decline in value. A $100,000 investment turned into $20,000.
It’s easy to look at a long-term chart of stocks and advocate that people “stay the
course” and buy and hold, but it’s an entirely different experience when you are
living through these drawdowns.
When a portfolio becomes large enough, these drawdowns are terrifying and
painful. It’s one thing to have a $3,000 account and see it chopped in half. It’s a
completely different experience when dealing with large sums. A $1,000,000
portfolio in 2007, for instance, turned into $490,000 by the bottom of the market in
2009. It is incredibly painful to live through something like that.
US stocks can remain flat for long periods of time. Many people might think of the
“long term” as 5 or 10 years. Unfortunately, the long term is longer than most people
think.
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From 1969 through 1979, in inflation-adjusted terms, the stock market declined by
13%. Would you want to save and invest for 10 years and lose money?
Another example of a lost decade is 1999 through 2009, a decade in which the stock
market declined by 27%.
After the crash of 1929, the Dow Jones Industrial Average did not return to its
previous high until the 1950's.
Needless to say, the long term isn’t 5 or 10 years. The long term is 30–40 years and
stocks can lose money over periods as long as 20 years.
Meanwhile, these lost decades take place in the United States, whose stock market
performed better than any other in the world.
During the 1980s, Japan was the envy of the world. It was the world’s best-
performing stock market.
There was an excellent narrative to go along with this stock performance. Japanese
companies were better and more disciplined, using novel methods of
manufacturing, such as just in time inventory. Japan also had the most excellent
education system in the world, producing the most intelligent and skilled workers.
Japanese companies performed marvelously, and money poured into the Japanese
stocks and real estate.
In 1989, Japan’s Imperial Palace was worth more than all of the real estate in
California.
The Japanese stock market has never returned to those highs. 30 years after the fact,
the Japanese stock market has still not returned to those lofty heights experienced
in 1989. The index currently stands at 20,750, 46% less than what it was at the 1989
peak.
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The value today even obscures the depths of the crash in Japanese stocks. In 2003,
the index was worth 8,057.61, a 79% decline from the peak in 1989.
Index investors advocate “buy and hold” for the long term. They say that you should
hold stocks through thick and thin because it will always rebound. In the United
States, that rebound can take a very long time. The worst-case scenario is the 22-year
lull after the Depression. Less extreme, but still horrible, instances are lost decades
like the 2000s and 1970s. Investors in other countries, such as Japan, have faced
much more dire situations.
This knowledge of history is lost on investors who have been investing in the United
States since the early 1980s. Investors since the early 1980s have been taught a
simple lesson: buy every dip and stocks usually go up. Looking further back in
history, this is not always the case.
For these reasons, I don’t invest in index funds. I have a different approach.
Asset Allocation
How do we prevent drawdowns? How do we avoid lost decades? More importantly,
how can this be done in a way that will grow wealth over a long period and do so in a
way that minimizes fees and taxes?
The US stock market is only one ingredient in the vast menu of components
available for an investor.
The world is full of different kinds of asset classes. The beauty of these various asset
classes is that they all do well at different times.
There are asset classes that do well when US stocks suffer, like US treasury bonds.
There are also asset classes that should perform well when US treasury bonds are
doing poorly, like gold.
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A portfolio of different asset classes can smooth out the returns and volatility of a
portfolio, while still delivering a satisfactory performance over the long run.
We can build a portfolio that won’t go through the horrible drawdowns of a 100% US
stock portfolio. We can also build a portfolio that can deliver a more consistent
return than a single asset class, with no lost decades.
To do this, we need to look at some of the ingredients that are available for investors.
Short term US treasury bills — This is debt issued by the federal government for short
time frames. They provide a low rate of return, but the stability of principal.
Long term US treasury bonds — Long term treasuries are bonds issued by the federal
government over long periods, such as 30 years. These bonds fluctuate more in
price than short duration bonds because the interest rates can be volatile, but they
are still backed by the full faith and credit of the United States government.
Junk-rated corporate debt — Junk-rated debt is also known as “high yield” debt. Junk is
riskier debt issued by corporations that is on the more dangerous end of the
spectrum. It typically offers a higher yield than investment grade but is more likely
to default.
Foreign sovereign bonds — These are bonds issued by non-US governments. The
bonds could be for developed countries, such as Japan or Great Britain, or they
might be for riskier emerging markets (like India and China).
International developed stocks — These are stocks in developed countries like Japan or
Europe.
Emerging markets stocks — These are stocks in countries earlier along in their
development. They are growing faster than the developed world, but are also riskier
because their economies can suffer more significant shocks.
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Real estate — Real estate operates in a class of its own and delivers a return through
rising property values and income paid on real estate investments.
Gold — Gold is an asset class of its own. It is the oldest asset class in the world.
Countries and empires have risen and fallen throughout human history, but gold
retains value. As an asset class, it is a controversial one, but it is the oldest store of
value in human history.
Cash — Cold, hard, cash. You can either keep it in your wallet, in a bank account or a
safe. It is guaranteed to lose money over the long run due to inflation. Still, it’s not
going to experience significant drawdowns, and you can be reasonably sure that you
will be able to use it for whatever you want. PJ O’Rouke said that “No government
proposal more complicated than ‘this note is legal tender for all debts, public and
private’ ever works.”
The above asset classes are only a small snippet of the asset classes available to the
average investor. The beauty of all of them is that, like a US stock index fund, they
can be accessed cheaply by anyone for a small fee. Anyone could open a brokerage
account and buy all of these asset classes cheaply.
There are other asset classes that institutions and wealthy people have access to, like
hedge funds, private equity, and venture capital, which aren’t available to ordinary
people like you and me.
But that’s okay. Fancy asset classes don’t often do much better than basic asset
classes available to everyday investors.
Warren Buffett famously made a bet with Ted Seides in 2007 that a cheap US index
fund would outperform a basket of hedge funds.
Hedge funds have access to all of the fanciest strategies imaginable, but index funds
still won the day. A big part of the reason is that rich people compete with each
other chasing these strategies. A more significant reason is that these fancy
strategies often come with an equally lavish fee, which digs into returns.
Hedge funds, for instance, often charge “two and twenty,” which means that they
charge 2% of the total assets invested and take 20% of the profits. As most hedge
funds underperform the market, this makes it a particularly painful way to invest.
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Most rich people don’t want to invest in cheap asset classes for the masses, so they
love these expensive and complicated choices. They like them because they’re
exclusive. A rich person is accustomed to paying up for exclusivity — which often
means higher quality in most arenas of life.
What would be the point of that when it’s easy to do that on your own?
A rich person doesn’t want to drive a Honda. They want to drive a Ferrari.
Unfortunately for them and happily for us, investing isn’t a game where a higher
price means better results.
I think we can do perfectly fine without messing around with the Ferrari’s of the
investment world.
One of the most classic diversified portfolios available to average investors is the
60/40 portfolio: 60 % US stocks, 40% US bonds.
Let’s take a look at a portfolio of 60% index funds and 40% in the 10-year Treasury
bond.
From 1972 to 2019, this portfolio delivered a 9.6% rate of return, turning $10,000 into
$815,000. That’s not as good as investing in the stock market alone, but this portfolio
avoided the horrors like lost decades and 50% drawdowns.
In 2008, for instance, US stocks declined by 37%. This 60/40 portfolio lost only 14%.
During the lost decade for US stocks of the 2000s, this portfolio delivered a 3.5% rate
of return while US stocks were flat. It’s not a lot, but it’s a return that turned $10,000
into $14,115. It accomplished this result without the pain of two horrible drawdowns
for US stocks: 45% from 2000–2003 and 50% from 2007–2009.
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Common sense tells us that we can expect the performance of the portfolio to
mostly equal its weightings in the portfolio.
US stocks returned 10.44% from 1972 through 2019. 10-year treasury bonds returned
7.09%.
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60% of 10.44% (the return on the stock market) is 6.26% and 40% of 7.09% is 2.84%.
Add it up, and you get the expected return of the portfolio: 9.1%.
In the real world, something happens that is unexpected and very counter-intuitive.
When rebalanced annually (an investor lets the portfolio run every year, then
returns the portfolio to the 60/40 weighting at the end of the year), the actual return
of the portfolio is higher than 9.1%. The real return of this portfolio is 9.6%. It’s not
much of a difference, but it is still astounding: the portfolio adds up to a result that
is greater than the sum of its parts.
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Why does this happen? Why does this portfolio create a result greater than the sum
of the parts?
I think it happens because of the way that treasury bonds and stocks interact with
each other. Treasury bonds do well when stocks do well.
When the portfolio is re-weighted, the investor is selling what went up and buying
more of what went down. To meet the target of 60/40, they must regularly buy and
sell the stocks and bonds to keep it in balance. The investor systematically buys low
and sells high.
After a year like 2008, this investor would sell their treasury bonds and use the
profits to buy more stocks. They are buying stocks when they are attractive. After a
year like 1999, when stocks did incredibly, the investor is selling stocks when they
are expensive and buying bonds.
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There are segments of the US market that have the potential of outperforming, like
small value stocks. There are also asset classes that can do well when US treasury
bonds under-perform. There are also segments of the US treasury bond market that
perform best when US stocks do poorly.
Treasury bonds are also not guaranteed to be a “safe” investment class. When
interest rates rise, for instance, the value of treasury bonds goes down. The
principal of a treasury bond is also reduced in purchasing power if we experience
inflation.
As I write this in May of 2020, the 10-year treasury only yields .63%. The low yield
means that while the price will fluctuate over the next ten years, the investor will
only earn a .63% rate of return.
US stocks are also costly at this moment and likely to deliver a low return over the
next decade.
One method is the Shiller PE. The Shiller PE is a popular method of valuing the
stock market based on the research of Robert Shiller, a Nobel Prize winning
economist and historian. The Shiller PE takes the market’s total price and divides it
by the average earnings over the previous ten years.
That PE currently stands at 29. For historical comparison, this is similar to the level
in 1929 and at the end of the 1960s boom. In the late 1990’s bubble, the PE went up to
an extraordinary level of 45.
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What followed the bull markets of the 1920s, 1960s, and 1990s? Lost decades.
Decades where stocks delivered no returns and a lot of misery.
I think it is likely we are about to experience another one of these lost decades in the
2020's.
By another metric — stock market capitalization to GDP — the stock market became
the most expensive in history in January of 2020. This metric takes the total value of
the stock market and divides it by the total economic output of the United States. In
January of 2020, it was beyond the levels last experienced during the internet
bubble.
Stock markets experience bull markets and lost decades because investors are
continually shifting between periods of euphoria and despair, fear, and greed.
Unfortunately, while the stock market grows over time, it doesn’t do so in a
consistent way. There are always going to be long periods where it delivers nothing
but pain, like the 2000s. There are going to be fast and furious bull markets, like the
1990s, when stocks advanced by nearly 400%.
My goal in creating a portfolio was to build something that would perform more
consistently than US stocks and not experience such extremes in fear and greed.
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I also wanted to create a portfolio that mostly avoided the issue facing US stocks and
bonds: high valuations (stocks) and low yields (bonds).
3) US real estate. US real estate via vehicles known as REITs offers a higher return
than US stocks (this is “offense”). It does this because it consistently produces
dividends and the value of real estate will increase over time with inflation. While it
isn’t immune to bubbles, it enters bubbles less frequently than the overall stock
market.
4) Foreign real estate. My goal with the “offense” elements of my portfolio was to not
only invest in US assets, but to split equally between the US and the world for
diversification benefits. For that reason, I split my real estate investments globally.
5) Long term treasury bonds. Treasury bonds tend to increase during periods of
economic difficulty, making them the perfect “defensive” asset. Long term
treasuries are the most volatile slice of the treasury market. They have the most
extreme reaction to recessions. They tend to draw down more than other segments
of the bond market when interest rates are going up. However, they also go up more
than any other segment of the treasury market when interest rates are coming
down, which is usually the case during recessions and depressions. For this reason,
they are an excellent “defensive” element to a portfolio.
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6) Gold. Gold tends to decline less than stocks during bear markets, while often
remaining stable or even increasing. This makes it a good defensive asset during a
stock drawdown, even though it isn’t as effective as long-term treasuries. Gold also
tends to do well during lost decades for US stocks. Meanwhile, gold also helps
balance out the risk of owning long term treasuries. Gold should do well during
periods of time when long term treasuries suffer, such as inflation. Over the long
run, gold tends to only deliver the rate of inflation, but it helps cushion drawdowns
and perform well during periods when both stocks and long-term treasuries are
weak.
These asset classes are all highly volatile on their own. When mixed a portfolio,
volatility is reduced. Drawdowns are reduced. Lost decades are avoided. While there
is no guarantee that these relationships will persist into the future, I think it makes
logical sense that they should persist into the future.
This happens because of the way that these asset classes interact with each other,
helping create a more consistent rate of return.
To understand why they should persist into the future, we need to look into the
nature of each asset class. We need to understand why they all deliver their returns.
We need to understand when they deliver their returns. Once we understand that,
we can better understand how they should interact with each other in a portfolio.
I think a significant reason is because of the way that market capitalization weighted
portfolios are constructed.
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Because indexes are buying more of the most popular stocks as they go up, the
index is doubling down on the most expensive stocks. Meanwhile, indexes are
systematically selling stocks that are going down.
Warren Buffett likes to say that investors should be “greedy when others are fearful
and fearful when others are greedy.”
An index systematically does the opposite of this. It is selling the stocks that people
are fearful of and buying the stocks that people like.
The best investors in history are known as value investors. They are attempting to
purchase stocks for less than those stocks are worth. Value investors conduct in-
depth research and try to ascertain whether or not those stocks sell for an attractive
price relative to what that business is worth.
For those of us who don’t want to do in-depth research and spend all of our time
researching stocks, is there an alternative to in depth and research-intensive value
investing? Is there a way to systematically recreate the returns of the best investors
of all time?
In the early 1990s, economists Kenneth French and Eugene Fama attempted to
identify factors that lead to the out-performance of stocks. The determined “value”
was a critical factor in returns.
“Value” was defined as stocks that trade at a low multiple versus the value of their
assets and/or earnings.
French and Fama were attempting to replicate quantitatively what the best investors
of the past did through analysis and research.
Their findings showed that purchasing large groups of cheap stocks, ranked by
simple metrics of value, outperforms the market. They also discovered that “value”
works best among smaller capitalization stocks. This makes sense intuitively. There
should be more cheaper stocks in the smaller segments of the market.
This asset class is called “small-capitalization value,” and it has a historical track
record of outperforming the market as a whole. Since Fama and French published
the paper in 1993, small-capitalization value stocks have continued to outperform,
delivering an 11% return against a 10% return for US stocks.
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I think this difference is understated, as that period includes the bubbles of the
1990s and 2010s.
My opinion on the 2010s is controversial, but I believe it was a large cap growth
bubble much like the 1990s.
If we take the data back further to 1972, the difference between small cap value and
US stocks is more extreme.
Small-cap value has delivered 14% from 1972 through 2019, compared to 10% for US
stocks.
In other words, small-cap value turned $10,000 into $5.2 million, compared to $1.17
million for the US stock market.
Other quantitative investors have similar conclusions. One example is the book
What Works on Wall Street by Jim O’Shaughnessy. O’Shaughnessy confirmed that all
methods of statistical cheapness — price/sales, price/earnings, price/book, or
sophisticated ratios like Enterprise Value/EBITDA — outperform buying a market-
cap-weighted index of US stocks.
Why does this strategy work? How can a simple price ratio deliver out-performance?
What causes this value anomaly, and will it work in the future like it did in the past?
The value anomaly is one of the most hotly debated questions in finance right now.
It has turned into an existential problem for some.
Eugene Fama and Kenneth French argue that the out-performance of small-cap
value is compensation for risk. Smaller companies are in a more vulnerable position
than larger companies. Stocks that trade for cheap multiples are likely cheap for a
reason. There is something wrong with the company that makes the market
concerned. This means that the stocks may be riskier.
In markets, risk should be rewarded. The thinking is that smaller companies are
more vulnerable and cheap companies are going through problems. By this logic,
small cap value delivers a return because it is risky.
I think that risk is a part of the equation, but I also think that something else is at
work.
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When a stock encounters problems, the market tends to throw the baby out with the
bathwater. Investors overreact. When a stock is doing well, the market will also
reward it with an equally absurd multiple.
In some cases, of course, the stocks deserve these low multiples. Whenever I pull up
a stock screener of stocks with cheap multiples, it is usually an ugly sight. You’re
buying healthcare stocks in 2010 when the US is discussing healthcare reform that is
endangering their profits. Right now, in 2020, these screens are filled with
companies in the oil & gas sector, shortly after oil went negative during the COVID-
19 crisis.
The market is sometimes right about these stocks. Often, these businesses are in
significant trouble and will suffer a permanent impairment.
However, this isn’t always the case. Often, investors have overreacted and the cheap
multiple is not deserved. When conditions return to normal for these companies,
the multiples increase and the stock price goes up. A value investor purchases these
stocks when the market is pessimistic about them and then sells when conditions
have returned to normal and the stock price has increased.
Investors like Warren Buffett or Seth Klarman do this through intensive research
and thought about the business itself. What Buffett and Klarman do is known as
discretionary value investing.
The idea behind a portfolio of cheap stocks is simple. For some of the companies,
the market will be right in assigning at a low price. However, for a majority of them,
the market will have overreacted. By buying a basket of these stocks, an investor is
taking advantage of market mispricings. The bad ones (also known as “value traps”)
will go down. Meanwhile, many of the stocks in the portfolio will go up when their
situation improves. In a portfolio, the net result is a gain for the investor.
Small-cap value tends to under-perform in fast and furious bull markets like the
1990s and 2010s. It tends to shine in flat markets like the 1970s and 2000s, when the
overall market is working off a past period of excess.
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While small value delivers a lower return than the market during bull run, the
results are still pretty good. The performance is only poor compared to the overall
stock market, which is usually experiencing a bout of euphoria that won’t last
forever. Meanwhile, small value delivers a lower but perfectly adequate rate of
return.
Small-cap value stocks have never experienced a lost decade in US history. I think
this is due to the way that the asset class delivers its return. In flat markets and bear
markets, there are always going to be out of favor stocks that will later be re-rated to
a higher multiple. This is happening all of the time; no matter what the broader
stock market is doing, decade after decade. For this reason, small value tends to
deliver a more consistent return than US stocks. It doesn’t participate in bubbles,
creating a greater consistency to returns.
Many are currently doubting the small-cap-value premium after the bull run of the
2010s in large cap growth stocks.
Of course, in the late 1990s, investors said the same thing. What happened after the
1990s?
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While the indexes were negative in the 2000s, turning $10,000 into $9,700, small
value delivered a 7.7% rate of return. This turned $10,000 into $20,977.
While the indexes needed to come down to Earth after the late 1990’s bubble, value
stocks continued to do their own thing, delivering a distinctive return from the
market.
An investor in a small-cap value strategy will lag the stock market during bull
markets but should experience a more consistent return than market-cap-weighted
US stocks over the decades.
With that said, small-cap value doesn’t offer any protection when the economy
enters a severe recession and stocks endure a severe drawdown.
In 1973–74, for instance, small-cap value experienced a 40% decline. During the
financial crisis of 2007–2009, small-cap value experienced a severe 56% decline.
Thus, I don’t want to rely on small-cap value alone as my sole source of returns. I
think it deserves a significant place at the asset allocation table. I am willing to rely
on historical data and make it the core of my portfolio’s strategy. I am even willing to
take the unusual step and own small-cap value alone, without holding market-cap-
weighted indexes at all.
Additionally, I do not want to rely on small cap value as my sole source of “offense”
in a portfolio. I believe that global diversification is necessary.
International Investing
We live in a world that would be unimaginable to previous generations. You can hop
on a plane and go anywhere on the planet quickly. You can take your phone out of
yourinpocket
Open app and interact with people all over the world. You can quicklySign
flipupon aSign in
translator and translate emails and communications with people all over the world.
Search
Money can move around the globe at the click of a button.
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The integration of the planet in the last fifty years has been truly unimaginable. The
growth in global trade and communication has been a tremendous boon for
humanity, with extreme poverty levels falling to all-time lows.
Thanks to all of this integration, international financial markets have also opened
up to investors in the United States. Forty years ago, it was tough to invest overseas,
and most US investors had to invest locally. American investors can now easily
invest all over the world at the click of a button. It is a big blue world, and we don’t
have to invest solely in the United States.
From 1990 through 2019, international stocks delivered a 4.6% rate of return,
turning $10,000 into to $39,000. US stocks delivered a 9.9% return for the same time
period, turning $10,000 into $171,600.
Of course, much of this atrocious performance has to do with the aftermath of the
Japanese bubble. The Japanese stock market comprised a bulk of global stocks in
1990, and the deflation of that bubble adversely affected the performance of
international stocks. In 1989, Japan was the largest stock market in the world.
Japan’s stock index collapsed over the next decade and has still not fully recovered.
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While international stocks as a whole delivered poor performance since 1990, there
are segments of the international market that performed well.
Emerging markets are one example. Emerging markets provided a much higher rate
of return since 1990, clocking in at 8.5%. This performance is not as good as the
United States, but it is still much better than the overall international market.
International stocks have a much better track record when viewed over a more
extended period. Since 1970, foreign stocks delivered an 8.65% rate of return, which
is much more respectable and closer to the return of US stocks.
It appears that returns were front-loaded in the 1970s and 1980s due to the Japanese
bubble. In fact, from 1970 to 1990, international stocks outperformed the United
States, delivering a 12.73% rate of return compared to 10.6% in the US.
An investor looking at the recent track record of international investing might want
to give up entirely on the asset class, but a broader perspective reveals that
international investing is better than it looks on the surface. While market cap
weighting the world will likely lead to poor performance, there are segments of the
international market that can deliver a satisfactory return.
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A loaf of bread in Germany cost 160 marks in 1922 and increased to 200 billion
marks in 1923. The hyperinflation in Germany caused massive political instability
and misery. It was this environment which allowed Adolf Hitler to take power, who
plunged the world into a devastating war and unleashed unprecedented evil on
humanity.
The currency collapse in Zimbabwe and 1920’s Germany are extreme examples that
likely won’t happen in the United States, even though it is a remote possibility.
Even if such a currency collapse does not happen, there are still other reasons to
diversify currency exposure due to the cyclical nature of the US dollar.
The US dollar goes through cycles of strength and weakness. When it is going
through periods of weakness (such as the 1970’s and 2000’s), US markets tend to
deliver poor relative returns. When the dollar is going through periods of strength
(like the 1990’s and 2010’s), US markets tend to perform well. Owning stocks in
different markets can diversify these cycles and reduce exposure to a single
currency, reducing the risk of a portfolio.
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and trade arrangements without the world. As the largest economy with the world’s
largest military, it is the dominant power and the dominant economy.
While the US has been the most attractive environment for capital, will that always
be the case in the future? Could our political environment fall apart? It’s hard to
imagine how US supremacy could fall apart, but it can happen, and a balanced
portfolio ought to be prepared for this possible outcome.
The possibility of the US falling apart politically is not zero. Political risk is real.
International investing helps diversify this political risk. Even if the US falls apart
politically, there should still be other countries that will stay strong. I think it makes
sense to spread political risk across the globe. Some countries will win, some will
lose. If an investor exposed to all of them, it diversifies the bets and guards against a
permanent loss of capital, which investors in countries like Russia and China
experienced when they fell to Communism.
I would love to invest solely in US stocks and US assets, due to the track record and
affection that I have for the country. Unfortunately, I don’t think that my biases are
an optimal way to invest. I want a portfolio prepared for all possible outcomes, even
the ones that I don’t wish to happen.
I also think it makes sense to diversify from a valuation perspective. All countries
throughout the world won’t enter bubbles at the same time. For instance, the
Japanese bubble remained localized to Japan, while the rest of the world was
reasonably valued. A globally diversified investor limited their exposure to Japan.
While Japan rose to a price/earnings ratio of 100 in 1989 (indicating extreme
overvaluation) — the United States was reasonably valued at a ratio of 15.
Right now, the US stock market is the most expensive in the world (with a P/E of 30),
although not anywhere as expensive as Japan in 1989. Meanwhile, most of the stock
markets around the world are reasonably priced or cheap.
However, just like I pivot my domestic portfolio away from market-cap weighting, I
want to do the same thing with my international investments and make a pivot to
small-cap value.
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Unfortunately, I was unable to find a low expense ratio vehicle to own international
small-cap value, so I settled for international small-caps without the value tilt.
Since 1975, this asset class (small cap international stocks) has beaten international
stocks as a whole, delivering a 9.9% rate of return than 9.4% for foreign investments.
From 2000 to 2019, international small-caps performed very well, delivering a 6.3%
rate of return compared to 3.7% for global stocks.
The asset class has the added advantage of avoiding large-cap bubbles that arise
from time to time, such as the United States in the 2000s or Japan in the 1980s. It is
my choice for international stock investment.
Real Estate
Real estate is a unique sector of the market, and my asset allocation has a specific
focus on real estate.
Real estate can be purchased directly, but an easier way to do it is via financial
markets and purchase REITs (real estate investment trusts).
In the United States, REITs are entities set up to invest in real estate and generate
cash flow (derived from income on properties) to investors. To enjoy certain tax
benefits, REITs must pay out 90% of their taxable income to shareholders. This tax
rule means REITs aren’t simply a way to obtain real estate exposure; they are also an
effective way to make a portfolio generate income thanks to their high dividend
yields.
Since 1972, REITs have outperformed market cap weighted US stocks. They have
delivered a 11.6% rate of return in comparison to 10.6% for US stocks.
I prefer to invest in real estate via the stock market rather than buying properties on
my own. When I buy REITs in the public markets, I get the benefits of owning real
estate but I don’t have to do any of the work of maintaining a property or dealing
with tenants and yet I can still enjoy the benefits of income and property
appreciation.
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There is also the benefit of liquidity. I can access the cash in my REIT investments at
the click of a button. Try doing that with an actual house or building, which can take
months or years to unload.
Real estate in one area can decline significantly, and geographic concentration is a
risk. What if all you owned was Manhattan real estate, and then Manhattan was hit
with a nuclear weapon? What if all of your property was in San Francisco in 1906,
shortly before an earthquake destroyed the city? What if your real estate was in a
coastal area of New Orleans before Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and was flooded and
destroyed?
Global warming is a rising concern. What if all of your real estate is in a place like
Miami? Miami is a place that might be underwater by the end of the century.
In a less extreme example, what if you all of your real estate is in one state in the
country, and then that state dramatically raises taxes significantly, causing a mass
exodus of the population? What if all of your property is in one town dependent on a
single major employer, and then that employer folds or moves overseas? You
suddenly have an entire town of unemployed people who can’t pay their mortgages,
which will undoubtedly bring down the value of the property and reduce the ability
of those properties to generate income.
It’s vital to diversify against geographic risk, which is easier to do in the open
markets with REITs than by owning specific properties directly.
Moving away from REITs as an investment vehicle, real estate itself is an attractive
sector and deserves and a seat at the asset allocation table for several reasons.
A key feature of real estate is the replacement cost. Replacement cost is a measure
of much would it cost to recreate the structure. If the economy is undergoing
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inflation, then the raw materials and wages to bulldoze and rebuild will increase
proportionally to the inflation rate.
Additionally, real estate produces income in the form of rent. Rents increase with
inflation. Whether it is rent on an apartment, storage locker, or a data tower, it does
not matter. All of these payments are going to increase proportionally to the
inflation rate.
The inflation protection is a critical reason that real estate performed well in the
1970s while US stocks performed poorly.
Some will say that stocks alone protect against an inflationary environment. This
argument makes intuitive sense. After all, the earnings of companies should
increase with the inflation rate.
When interest rates are increasing, the earnings multiples that investors are willing
to pay for stocks will decrease.
This increase in earnings yield is what occurred in the 1970s. The Shiller
price/earnings ratio for the stock market declined from 21 in 1969 to a Shiller P/E of
9 by 1980. If you express the P/E ratio a little differently — take one and divide it by
the P/E — you get an earnings yield, which is more helpful to compare to interest
rates on government bonds. The earnings yield on the stock market increased from
4.76% in 1969 to 11.1% in 1980. As investors migrated to high yields offered on
treasury bonds, investors pushed down the prices of stocks, which increased their
yield.
Treasury bonds are known as “risk free” investments. If I can buy a 10-year treasury
bond that pays a guaranteed interest rate of 10%, then why would I bother buying a
stock market that only has an earnings yield (earnings/price) of 3%? This happens
throughout the entire stock market in an environment like the 1970’s, when interest
rates on government bonds are increasing.
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I think that the stock market today is uniquely unprepared for inflation. In the
1970s, higher interest rates caused stocks to go down. However, in the 1970s, more
companies had hard assets that also increased with the inflation rate. Today, more
companies have intangible assets. The lack of hard assets in our economy means
that they are in an even worse position if inflation ever returns.
Another reason that I like real estate is because it doesn’t participate in bubbles as
often as the stock market.
Real estate is less sensitive to the bubbles that usually plague the rest of the stock
market. Of course, real estate is by no means immune to bubbles, as we saw in
Japan in the 1980s or the United States in the red-bull-and-vodka soaked bubble of
the mid-2000s.
Real estate participates less in stock bubbles because there is far less speculation
around the potential growth in real estate earnings.
For a growth stock, there is a wide range of outcomes. The growth company can
take over the world, or they can burn out and go to zero. A growth stock can be the
next Google.
The wide range of potential consequences is why investors are willing to pay wildly
changing multiples for stocks. The speculation around them constantly gyrates
between euphoria and fear.
The rapid changes in sentiment lead to a feeling of euphoria and despair around the
prospects of companies. Sentiment shift caused the US stock market to go from a
euphoric P/E of 45 in 1999 to 13 in 2009.
With real estate, there is less speculation on how much income the property will
generate. The value of a real estate company boils down to real estate values and
how much income the properties will generate. This is far less exciting than
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identifying the next Amazon. This means that there will be far less participation in
bubbles.
There is variability in the income of real estate, but it is easier to predict how much
rent a building will generate in 10 years than it is to predict how much Google will
earn in 10 years.
The lack of speculation is why REITs rose steadily through the early 2000s stock
market collapse. In fact, from 2000 through 2002, REITs increased by 47% while the
US stock market decline by over 40%.
Real estate is not immune to speculation and bubbles, but these events are rarer
than they are for stocks. Stocks enter bubbles all of the time. Real estate bubbles are
unique events. The 2006–2010 decline in real estate prices was the first significant
decline in the value of real estate in 80 years.
One of the worst declines for REITs was the global financial crisis from 2007–2009.
During this period, this asset class experienced a decline of nearly 70%.
The nearly 70% decline makes it clear that real estate is economically sensitive. It is
one of the “offensive” asset classes in my portfolio that needs balance with
“defensive” asset classes, which I hold as long term treasuries and gold.
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A prudent investor needs to be aware that there will be times when the economy
will not be growing. History is replete with examples of economic problems.
Because the market behaves like an insane person, the market typically overreacts
to these economic problems.
It’s easy to look at a long-term chart of an “offense” asset (one that generates returns
during periods of prosperity), and see the declines as blips on a long-term trend
upward.
From 1972 to 2020, the market grew wealth at a 10% rate. The market turned $10,000
into $931,000. Most people look at that long term track record and want to go all-in
on an “offense” asset that generates high returns. Living through those intense
drawdowns is another matter entirely.
The growth in wealth via the stock market does not happen in a straight line.
Numerous market crashes happen frequently, in which stocks were sold off in
horrific ways.
Buy-and-hold purists would say that someone should hold through those declines
and ignore the price action.
As someone who has lived through three market crashes, I can tell you that this is
impossible. You are going to watch the market decline, and you are going to worry
about it.
For this reason, I hold an asset in my portfolio that performs very well during
market crashes. The asset that performs best during a market crash is long term
treasuries. Whenever stocks do poorly, long term bonds tend to do well.
Long term treasuries are nearly always up during bad years for stocks.
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Long term treasuries are bonds issued by the federal government with extended
maturities. The longest maturity that the federal government has is the 30-year
treasury bond.
Interest Rates — The Federal Reserve typically cuts interest rates during a market
crash. The Fed cuts rates in an attempt to boost economic growth. Bonds benefit
from lower interest rates.
It sounds counter-intuitive that lower interest rates would be good for bonds, but it’s
true. Bonds go up when interest rates go down. The payment on a bond (called a
coupon) is usually for a fixed dollar amount. For the interest rate to decline on the
bond, the price of the bond itself needs to go down.
For instance, if I had a $1,000 bond that paid $100 per year, it would be a 10%
interest rate. If the $100 payment doesn’t change, then the bond’s price needs to be
adjusted if interest rates go down. If I wanted the bond to yield 8% on the $100
coupon payment, the bond would need to increase to $1,250.
Longer-term bonds are going to have the most extreme move in price when interest
rates decline. As a result, they are going to have the most drastic change in price.
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When the Fed is cutting interest rates, long-term bonds will experience the most
extreme move to the upside.
Flock to safety — When the world is melting down, investors worldwide want to hold
safe assets. They don’t want to hold risky assets like stocks, which can go down a lot
during a market crash. They want to keep something safe and secure.
For the last century, there has not been an asset that is more secure than a US
treasury bond. The US government is unlikely to ever default on its obligations. The
US government could always print money to pay treasury bonds, meaning that the
risk of default is practically zero. The US government can also can tax the biggest
economy on Earth. For this reason, it is unlikely that they will ever default. This is
an attractive characteristic and makes them an appealing asset when the world is
going to hell.
As investors pile into treasuries during a panic, the price of treasuries increases.
During the worst crash of all time from 1929 to 1932, long term treasuries delivered
outstanding results.
1929 — Up 7.95%
1930 — Up 2.52%
1932 — Up 8.92%
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Treasuries usually begin to increase before the crash. When the economy first
shows signs of slowing down, the Fed typically begins cutting interest rates early. In
2007, long term treasuries went up 9%. In 2019, before the recession of 2020, they
went up 14%.
Indeed, treasuries are an excellent asset to own in the event of a market meltdown.
Additionally, unlike selling short (betting that stocks will go down) or buying
insurance products (like hedging strategies), long-term treasuries should increase in
the long run. Selling short and hedging often lead to long-term losses, even though
they will go up during crashes. Treasuries won’t increase as much as the “offense”
asset classes in a portfolio, but they will at least generate some interest income and
pay back principal. That can’t be said for other “insurance” strategies.
Imagine having car insurance that pays you interest every month instead of costing
premiums. That’s essentially what long-term treasuries accomplish in a portfolio.
Of course, while long term treasuries have a track record of performing well during
market declines, there are risks in owning them.
There are four potential risks to owning treasuries. The largest risks are inflation
and higher interest rates. Persistently low interest rates are another outcome that
can harm the long term returns of treasuries. Earlier, I mentioned that default is
unlikely for long term treasuries. While it is unlikely, it’s not impossible.
Inflation — I mentioned earlier that the Federal Government could print money to
make sure that treasuries don’t default. If they can’t pay their obligations, they can
always print dollars to pay back treasury holders.
While printing money can eliminate default risk, printing money is not a free lunch
and carries risks of its own.
Printing money can create inflation. If inflation increases, then the purchasing
power of the bonds will decrease. If you’re paid back $100 on a bond and it doesn’t
default, just because default didn’t happen does mean that the investor didn’t lose
money. Inflation can cause losses.
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If $100 could pay a grocery bill when you bought the bond and now it can’t buy two
items off the value menu at McDonalds — it gives a bond investor little consolation
that the bond didn’t default. The bond may not have defaulted, but the purchasing
power of the interest and principal payment has significantly been reduced.
Interest rates — Bonds go up when interest rates go down. The inverse is also true. If
interest rates increase, then the value of those bonds will go down.
If interest rates are increasing because the economy is doing well, then that can be
good for a balanced portfolio. A balanced portfolio will own riskier assets like small
cap value stocks and REITs that should do well in this environment, because
earnings are likely increasing and the economy is in a boom. The “offense” assets in
a portfolio ought to make up for any decrease in long term bond prices.
Unfortunately, prosperity isn’t the only reason that interest rates can go up.
Sometimes, the Fed may be increasing interest rates to deal with inflation. This was
the case in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Long term bonds went down by 20%
during this period. Unfortunately, stocks weren’t doing well either.
It is also possible that interest rates could increase if the bond market is worried
about the federal government’s ability to repay the bonds. If government deficits
increased to unsustainable levels, this could theoretically happen even though it is
unlikely.
Low Rates — As I write this, the 30-year Treasury bond yields only 1.3%. These are
historically very low and guarantee low returns going forward. Rates could increase,
but this would cause the treasury bond to decrease in price.
Interestingly, as rates go lower, the price movements become more pronounced. For
instance, a move in rates from 1.5% to .5% will see a more significant increase than
a move from 6% to 5%. This phenomenon is known as convexity. Convexity means
that despite the low rates, treasuries will still offer protection when rates are
declining during market downturns.
For this reason, long term treasuries are still appealing despite the guaranteed low
future returns. They should continue to perform well during a market downturn.
The low rates may even pronounce these benefits. They aren’t in the portfolio for a
high return: they are in the portfolio as insurance against a market decline.
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Default — It is unlikely that the Federal government defaults, but it isn’t outside the
realm of possibility. The US government had a near-default event in 2011 when a
showdown over the federal government between President Barack Obama and the
Republicans in Congress threatened the government’s ability to issue debt. The
confrontation went down to the wire, and the US government almost defaulted. It
came even closer than the headlines suggested, as documented in Bob Woodward’s
book, The Price of Politics.
The government had no solvency issues in 2011, but politics almost caused a
default.
A default could theoretically happen again. It is unlikely but possible. Based on the
dysfunction in American politics, it can happen again. We currently have two
political parties that aren’t focused on improving the country. We have two political
parties that are solely focused on ruining each other and dividing the American
people. Why wouldn’t they allow the economy to collapse if they thought the other
side would take on the blame? I think both the Democrats and the Republicans are
capable of this.
We were lucky in 2011 because the politicians eventually blinked and avoided the
crash. What if they didn’t?
Unfortunately, the reality of finance is that there isn’t an asset without any risks. As
safe as long term treasuries are, they aren’t truly free of risk. The goal of my
portfolio is to own assets that balance out these risks. Treasury bonds aren’t truly
risk free, even though they are in my portfolio to contain losses during catastrophes
based on their historical track record.
For this reason, we need an asset that counter-balances the risks of owning
treasuries but also acts as a defense during severe drawdowns in “offense” assets
like small value, international small caps, and real estate. The asset that fulfills this
role is gold.
Gold
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While long term treasuries perform well during recessions, they are not without
risks.
The critical risks against long term treasuries are inflation and higher interest rates.
Inflation is a constant feature of economic life. The US federal reserve tries to target
a 2% rate of inflation. This reality often angers those who hate central banks. After
all, a 2% rate of inflation means that 1 dollar becomes worth 55 cents at the end of
30 years.
Many curse our government for allowing inflation to take hold. Reasonable people
can debate the issue. I tend to think a little inflation isn’t a bad thing, but many
violently disagree with me.
With that said, even if you hate the government for allowing inflation, it is a fact of
economic life that you are probably not going change. If the government tells you
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outright that they want 2% inflation: it’s probably a good idea to believe them. They
have the power to generate that inflation rate even though you don’t like it.
2% inflation means that the principal on a 30-year treasury bond is likely to decline
in purchasing power. If inflation is more than 2%, then the results will be more
severe.
High inflation is typically associated with high-interest rates, something else that
hurts treasuries. In an attempt to contain inflation, the federal reserve is likely to
raise interest rates to control it. For long term bonds, this adds insult to injury.
Interest rates and bond prices are inversely related. When interest rates go up, bond
prices go down.
This nightmare scenario is what happened to long term bonds in the 1970's. While
long-term bonds performed well during the crash of 1973 and 1974 and offered
protection, they delivered negative returns over the decade when accounted for
inflation.
The bad times occurred during a lost decade for US stocks. As treasuries declined
due to inflation and rising interest rates, US stocks suffered because valuations fell
due to as a direct result of the higher interest rates.
Higher interest rates and inflation are a particular risk right now, in 2020. Inflation
has been low for several decades. Interest rates are now at their lowest levels ever.
Even a modest uptick in inflation and interest rates will be very bad for long term
treasuries.
Is there an asset that can counterbalance this risk? Is there an asset that holds up
during stock declines, but also performs well during periods of inflation?
Gold had its best performance during the last time high inflation and interest rates
were a problem: the 1970's.
The 1970’s were a lousy period for most asset classes, but gold performed
spectacularly.
Gold rose from $35 in 1969 to $589 in 1980. The gold bull market was due to several
factors, such as Richard Nixon’s ending of the gold standard, which allowed gold
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Gold doesn’t only do well during periods of inflation. Gold prices tend to rise during
periods of growing fear, as investors flock to “hard assets.” The flock to hard assets is
what occurred during the Great Depression. As people gathered gold, the price rose,
rising from $20.63 in 1929 to $26.33 in 1933, a 27% increase during a period when
stocks were down 80%.
The early 1930’s gold bull market was problematic for the United States, because the
dollar was convertible to gold, and the US central bank was unable to generate rising
prices. Because the central bank couldn’t increase the money supply, we effectively
had a restrictive monetary policy during a severe recession. Imagine how bad 2008
would be if the Fed restricted the money supply instead of increasing it. That’s what
happened in the early 1930’s. A restrictive monetary policy turned what would have
been a severe recession into the Great Depression.
To fight this restrictive monetary policy, FDR ended the convertibility of dollars to
gold and initiated price controls around the price of gold. This is part of what led to
the economic recovery in 1933.
In terms of the portfolio, gold should do well in both periods of extreme fear and
high inflation, serving as a nice asset to balance against the risk of “offense” assets
and long-term treasuries.
The fact that gold does well during periods of inflation and fear means that it is an
excellent diversifier against both stocks and bonds.
On its own, gold is an absolutely terrible investment. It has massive volatility. It also
endures extremely long drawdowns. Gold entered a drawdown in 1980 and didn’t
fully recover until 2007, for instance. Because it doesn’t generate any earnings or
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interest, it has little promise to ever outperform US stocks. Since 1972, gold has
returned 7.8%, while stocks have returned 10.25%.
However, despite the under-performance of gold, it can work well in a portfolio with
other assets. This is demonstrated by the 50/50 stocks & gold portfolio.
The interaction between stocks and gold in the 50/50 portfolio creates a result that is
greater than the sum of the parts.
One would assume — for instance — that the return would simply be an average of
the return for the two asset classes. Gold has a CAGR of 7.8% since 1972. Stocks have
a CAGR of 10.25%. Averaged together — it is 9.025%.
However, in a portfolio, the actual result is 10.29%. It’s greater than the expected
average of 9.025%. It’s greater than the return of either asset. The result is greater than
the sum of the parts.
Why does this happen? It occurs because gold historically performs well when
stocks are doing poorly. They are two asset classes that interact very well with each
other.
Gold will do poorly during periods of declining inflation and prosperity, like the
time from 1980 to 1999. The ’80s and ’90s were a period when gold fell from $589 to
$290. The ’80s and ’90s were a period when stocks did very well. Meanwhile, gold did
well when stocks did poorly in the 1970’s and 2000’s. It’s almost a perfectly
uncorrelated asset to stocks. When gold and stocks are mixed together in a portfolio,
they help balance against each other.
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Gold is almost entirely uncorrelated to the stock market. This lack of correlation
with stocks and bonds is why gold is such an excellent diversifier in a portfolio.
Gold will go down when stocks are doing well. Gold doesn’t go up significantly
during an actual crash (long term bonds will do that), but it tends to remain stable.
Meanwhile, gold will do well when treasury bonds do poorly. Treasury bonds will go
down in an inflationary environment of rising interest rates. Long term treasuries
delivered an inflation adjusted return of -3.25% from 1970 to 1980. Gold, meanwhile,
delivered an inflation adjusted return of 19.5%.
When gold is doing poorly in a portfolio, the stocks ought to pick up the slack and do
well. Gold also balances the risks of long term treasuries by performing well in an
inflationary environment like the 1970’s.
Gold also offers psychological satisfaction for risk-averse people like me.
I am comforted by the fact that gold has survived as a store of value throughout the
history of human civilization. There have been many global empires throughout
history: Egyptians, the Roman Empire, the British Empire, or the US. Through all of
it, gold has retained value. Gold was valuable during the days of the Egyptian Empire
and it’s valuable today.
Gold also serves as a store of value when nations collapse. Russian bonds went to
zero during the 1917 Communist revolution. The Russian stock market represented
a total loss. However, a Russian investor who owned gold still held something that
was valuable.
When inflation ravaged 1920s Germany, their currency became worthless. German
investors in traditional stocks and bonds were decimated. For a German investor
who owned some gold, they weren’t wiped out. Gold retained its purchasing power.
They may not have earned an extraordinary return. They experienced catastrophic
losses in their stock and bond portfolios, but they at least preserved a segment of
their net worth in gold.
It is currently hard to imagine the United States falling apart and a new global power
emerging, but the probability is not zero. If the United States were to fall apart as the
preeminent global power and the US dollar were worthless, gold would still be
worth something.
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My portfolio has 60% in “offense” assets that perform well during periods of
prosperity. History tells us that prosperity is more likely than decline. With that
said, I want protection. The gold that I own gives me comfort. If this long stretch of
prosperity were to end, I own something which will still have value.
Critics of gold will say that it isn’t going to earn as high a rate of return as my stocks.
I agree.
The thing is: gold isn’t in my portfolio for a high rate of return. I own gold because
of its diversification benefits and safety. It’s an insurance policy against things going
catastrophically wrong.
I expect that gold will mostly keep track of inflation over the long run. I also expect
that it will maintain an uncorrelated relationship with stocks and bonds. Gold will
do well when stocks and bonds are doing poorly. Over the long term, gold will
mainly keep pace with the inflation rate. This relationship isn’t guaranteed, but
history suggests it will continue.
Performance
What happens when you put all of these assets into a portfolio? US small value,
international small, real estate, long term treasuries, and gold. Equally weighted,
20% in each asset class, re-balanced every year. Do they interact with each other in a
desirable way?
I’ve explained my theories for how all of these asset classes should interact with
each other. Do my opinions make any sense in the real world?
Does the portfolio produce a satisfactory rate of return? Does it reduce volatility and
lessen painful drawdowns?
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It’s time to look at the historical data to see if these asset classes work together well.
Each asset class is weighted by 20 % in the portfolio. We will then assume that we re-
balance the asset classes annually. At the end of every year, we’ll sell what has gone
up, and we’ll buy what has gone down, and get the portfolio back to the 20% equal
weights.
Since 1970, this portfolio has generated an average 7.7% rate of return after
inflation. This is almost as high as the US stock market, which has delivered an
average real return of 8%.
This result is accomplished with much less severe drawdowns and less volatility
than the US stock market. The worst year for this portfolio was 2008, in which it lost
19%. That year, the stock market declined by 37%. Before 2008, the worst year for
the portfolio was a loss of only 11%. The stock market declined by 30% during the
1987 stock market crash, almost 50% in 1973–74, and nearly 50% in the early 2000’s
— declines which the weird portfolio barely participated in.
It’s also worth noting that the 60/40 portfolio benefited tremendously from a 40-year
bull market in bonds, which took interest rates from 20% to almost 0% from 1980
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through 2020. That can’t happen again. The fact that interest rates won’t decline like
that again means that 60/40’s performance is a feat that won’t happen again.
My portfolio performs well in flat markets like the 2000s, while the 60/40 portfolio
does not. From 2000 through 2009, my portfolio returned 10.6%, while the 60/40
portfolio only returned 3%.
The weird portfolio achieves my goal of avoiding lost decades like the 1970’s and
2000's.
Additionally, the weird portfolio can deliver a consistent return in all economic
environments, while the 60/40 portfolio has benefited from the unique environment
of 40 years of declining interest rates.
The portfolio was quite resilient during the 1970s, which was a lousy time for stocks
and bonds.
From 1970 through 1979, this portfolio returned 15.3% compared to 7.1% for 60/40.
The differences are starker when you factor inflation into the returns. My portfolio
returned 7.4% after inflation, while the 60/40 recorded an annual loss of .23%.
1973–74 was the worst bear market to occur after the Depression and before the
financial crisis. How did the two approaches handle that debacle?
The weird portfolio reduced drawdowns during the last 50 years. How did it perform
during the worst drawdown of all — the early 1930s?
Most of these asset classes did not exist during the Depression, but return data is
available for small-cap value, gold, and long term treasuries.
Assuming that the portfolio owned 60% small value, 20% gold, and 20% long term
treasuries, then it would have lost roughly half of its value from 1929 to 1932,
compared to an 80% loss for a stock-only investor. It would have also fully recovered
by 1935. By the end of the 1930s, this portfolio would have been up 20%. In contrast,
a stock-only investor was still at a loss by the end of the 1930s.
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The weird portfolio’s performance during horrible moments like the 1930s, 1973–74
crash, and 2008 is due to the fact that 40% is in defensive assets like gold and long
term treasuries. The fact that the portfolio still delivers stock-like returns with such
a large allocation to low-return defensive assets is extraordinary.
The fact that 40% of the weird portfolio is in defensive assets like gold and long-term
treasuries helps the portfolio stay resilient and perform well through significant
bear markets, like 1973–74, 2000–03, and 2007–09. All of these were periods where
the stock market declined by nearly 50%. This portfolio made money in the 1973–74
drawdown and 2000–03 situations. In 2008, it lost only 18%, while the stock market
was down 37%.
When stocks decline, the defensive assets usually deliver gains. This gives the
investor dry powder to pile into “offense” assets when they have performed poorly.
Since 1970, the longest time the weird portfolio took to recover from a drawdown
was three years. In contrast, the US stock market’s most prolonged period to recover
from a drawdown is 13 years. The weird portfolio is resilient. Diversification helps
avoid lost decades.
I think the best measurement of a portfolio is its perpetual withdrawal rate. The
perpetual withdrawal rate is the amount of money that can be withdrawn from a
portfolio every year and maintain the principal balance while accounting for
inflation.
Due to its versatility, this portfolio has a high perpetual withdrawal rate of 5.4%. The
US stock market has a perpetual withdrawal rate of 3.5%. This high perpetual
withdrawal rate is due to the positive attributes of the portfolio — a high rate of
return, shallow and short drawdowns, and consistent returns over the decades.
This result is achieved with less risk than the overall stock market. Instead of having
all of its bets on one potential outcome (US prosperity), this is a diversified approach
prepared for multiple economic outcomes.
This portfolio has elements that will perform well in all economic environments.
Gold and real estate should do well during periods of inflation. Long term treasuries
will probably suffer in this environment.
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Long term treasuries should perform well during periods of deflation and financial
disaster, like 2008 or the early 1930s. The “offense” aspects of the portfolio will
probably suffer drawdowns during these events.
Gold and long term treasuries should hold up well during bear markets, while the
offensive segements of the portfolio will likely decline.
Small value, small international, and REITs should perform well during prosperity.
Long term treasuries and gold will likely do poorly.
Small international and gold should perform well during periods of dollar
weakness. The US segments of the portfolio will likely suffer in this environment.
Small US value and REITs should perform well during periods of dollar strength,
while the international investments and gold will suffer.
Meanwhile, the portfolio protects from political upheaval in the United States. If the
US were to turn its back on the economic policies that made the country great, the
portfolio has assets held in other countries. Losses will likely occur, bu they won’t be
fatal.
In the worst-case scenario — a total global economic collapse — the portfolio owns
gold, which has retained its value throughout human civilization. Gold will at least
retain 20% of a investor’s wealth during that kind of horror show. A total impairment
of capital will be avoided.
Indeed, the portfolio not only reduces risk on a spreadsheet, but it also reduces risk
from a practical and logical perspective.
This portfolio is also available to average investors like me. Every asset class in this
portfolio can be purchased cheaply by anyone with a brokerage account. You don’t
need the ability to access private information.
The portfolio doesn’t use exclusive assets that are only available to rich people like
hedge funds, private equity, or venture capital.
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All of these asset classes are available to everyone and can be accessed cheaply
without paying a lot in fees.
In short, this a portfolio that helps me sleep at night while still growing over time. I
don’t have to worry about the future or predict what’s going to happen.
At the same time, I can look to the future with confidence that elements of my
portfolio will do well no matter what history throws at it. Meanwhile, I can have the
confidence that if human civilization continues to advance and grow, then my
wealth should grow with it.
Implementation
I believe I have a group of asset classes that will deliver a consistent rate of return
over the very long run. I have confidence that the asset classes in this portfolio will
balance each other and provide a satisfactory performance over the long term. It
should protect against depressions, recessions, inflation, and deflation. It diversifies
globally to protect against a political disruption within the United States.
I have back tested and battle tested this portfolio through a variety of historical
events and know it achieves the desired result. Drawdowns are reduced, bubbles are
avoided, and a satisfactory rate of return is achieved.
Most importantly, the portfolio doesn’t require that I pick winning stocks or
accurately predict economic events. It is diversified among a broad range of
outcomes and is ready for most of what I can imagine the world will throw at it.
Now, how do I invest in this portfolio from a practical perspective? What are the
actual nuts and bolts actions I need to invest in this approach?
There are two main ways for the average investor to access broad-based diversified
asset classes: passive and actively managed funds.
Both vehicles allow for an investor to place a small amount of money in a larger pool
of assets.
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In the case of a small-cap value fund, a “passive” fund will buy the entire US small-
cap value universe. It will rank stocks by various metrics — such as price to book or
price to earnings — and purchase the cheapest segments of the market. It won’t
predict which cheap stocks will outperform; it will merely provide access to that
asset class.
An actively managed fund will attempt actually to pick which stocks are going to
outperform.
I don’t want an active management style because I don’t believe that most active
managers can genuinely choose the diamonds in the rough that will beat the
universe of small-cap value stocks. In other words, no one is picking stocks or bonds
within the fund. They are delivering the exact return of the asset class.
Many people stylize themselves “value investors.” I’m one of them. While all value
investors hope to be the next Warren Buffett, the truth is that few people can predict
which value stocks are going to outperform. While value stocks as a group
outperform the market, active value investors often under-perform the market. The
under-performance is because value investors eliminate the “duds” from the
universe, but sometimes the duds provide the best returns. They often
systematically avoid the best performers in their effort to reduce value traps.
Another reason I don’t want actively managed funds is that they tend to charge
higher fees than passively managed funds. Active funds have to pay people to
analyze company filings. They have to talk to management. They will have meetings
in fancy conference rooms. All of this action costs money, which trickle down to
investors in the form of fees. Fees eat into performance, and anything I can do to
minimize those fees is terrific.
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The next question is: what fund vehicle should I choose? There are two main options
for retail investors like me: ETFs and mutual funds.
Mutual funds are the traditional investment product for retail investors. They have
been around for decades. You send the fund your money; they invest in the assets.
Because you are investing in a large group, you are getting a high level of
diversification.
Similarly, when the investor withdrawals money, the fund needs to sell assets to give
the client their cash. They typically do this for the value at the end of the day. The
fund’s value is called “net asset value,” or NAV. When the mutual fund investor
withdrawals their money, they receive their payment at the NAV value.
I invest mainly in ETF’s. I do this because ETF’s have some critical advantages over
mutual funds.
With a mutual fund, the investment company is investing the investor’s money
directly. With an ETF, the fund trades in an open market on an exchange. The ETF
will raise cash in the market by selling shares, and the ETF then takes the proceeds
of that share issuance will be used to buy the assets. When a new investor wants to
invest in the fund, they have to purchase the shares from someone else.
This unique structure creates some very critical advantages over traditional mutual
funds.
Money isn’t constantly pouring in that needs to be invested. The ETF doesn’t
necessarily need to sell positions when investors redeem cash. When an investor
needs to liquidate their holdings, they can sell their shares to another investor.
Therefore, the ETF doesn’t have to go through the hassle of selling assets to meet
redemptions.
The ETF also doesn’t have to send individual statements to every investor in the
fund, detailing their position.
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Because the operational costs are lower, ETFs tend to have lower expense ratios
than traditional mutual funds.
An ETF investor only needs to pay taxes when they receive dividends from the fund
or sell their shares for a profit. In contrast, a mutual fund is continuously buying
and selling stocks, which has taxable implications that travel down to investors in
the mutual fund.
Perversely, a mutual fund investor can pay taxes on gains they weren’t even around
to experience. For example, if an investor buys a mutual fund at the peak of a stock
market bubble, they can pay taxes on gains they did not experience. The mutual
fund will have to pay taxes on the bubble-era gains, which they pass on to investors
in the fund. A brand-new investor might invest in a fund at this moment. The
investor wouldn’t have been around for those gains, but they now need to pay the
taxes on those gains. In a mutual fund, taxes are passed onto investors, regardless of
whether they were around for the good times.
The disadvantage of ETFs is that investors aren’t guaranteed to receive the net asset
value when they sell. Investors can only obtain what other investors are willing to
pay for their shares in the ETF when they attempt to sell.
An ETF investor fears that there is a significant difference between the NAV and
what they will receive when they sell their shares.
Substantial differences from NAV rarely happen because traders all over the world
actively trade ETF’s. They will sell ETF’s when they drift above their NAV and buy
when they are below it. These actions keep the ETF’s share price close to the NAV.
Another tool that ETF’s have to keep the price around the NAV is called
creation/redemption. The ETF has agreements in place with entities known as
authorized participants to exchange baskets of the ETF’s assets in exchange for
shares. Authorized participants can also sell the ETF baskets of assets. The ETF can
create new shares when the price is above NAV and destroy shares when the price is
too low below NAV. Creation/redemption helps keep share prices in line with NAV.
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Dislocations from the ETF price and the NAV are possible, but they’re rare, and there
are mechanisms to prevent it from happening.
I think that the lowers fees of ETFs, and their tax advantages overwhelm the
potential disadvantages — i.e., differences between the ETF price and NAV.
I also predominately buy ETF’s from one company, Vanguard. I choose to invest in
Vanguard ETFs because I trust the integrity of the company. Their ETF’s are also
heavily traded, which reduces the likelihood that they will diverge from NAV.
Vanguard also tends to have the lowest fees.
However, there is one asset class for which Vanguard does not offer an ETF. That
asset class is gold.
There are multiple gold ETF’s, but the one I choose to invest in is the Aberdeen
Standard Physical Gold ETF (SGOL). This fund has a low expense ratio of .17%.
SGOL holds gold in vaults in Switzerland and the United Kingdom. As a result, the
ETF shares equate to exposure in the actual physical gold held in those vaults.
As a result, SGOL closely mirrors the changes in the actual gold price for a low fee.
Some investors may not be comfortable owning gold via an ETF; they may want to
store physical gold bullion in a safe or in a safe deposit box at a bank. Physical
storage isn’t my preference for gold exposure, but it’s a perfectly valid way to do it.
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Investing in these ETFs is simple. These ETFs are available through any brokerage
account. I simply calculate the percentage of exposure I want in each asset class and
then invest that amount in each ETF.
These ETF’s will fluctuate. For that reason, every year, I rebalance. I rebalance once
a year for tax reasons. If the capital gain occurs after one year of investment, then
taxes are paid at a lower rate. Taxes are higher on gains realized before one year. If
the holding period is over a year, then the tax rate is capped at 15%. If held for less
than a year, then it will be taxed at the personal income tax rate.
To meet the desired allocations in a portfolio, my ETF’s are held in the following
weights:
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Why does regular rebalancing increase the rate of return? The answer is simple: it
forces an investor to buy low and sell high.
During a rebalance, the investor sells the assets that have done well and buys the
asset class that did poorly.
For instance, in a time like 2008, the investor is selling winning treasury and gold
positions and then buying stocks. During a moment like 2000, the investor is selling
stocks and buying defensive assets like gold and treasuries. Every year, the investor
is making a contrarian bet. This regular rebalancing is what generates the returns
over time.
With that said, re-balancing may not be necessary when regularly saving money. If a
large amount of money is saved in a year, then an investor can simply purchase
more of the asset that is a lower percentage of the overall account. The new buys
can bring the portfolio back into balance.
Managing the account is easy to do. An investor simply needs to calculate the target
percentages of each ETF, buy, and sell accordingly. It shouldn’t take more than 15
minutes of work every year, and it is easy to implement if done annually. A busy
investor can leave their weird portfolio and only meddle once a year to bring it back
into balance.
As I’ve stated throughout this book, my approach isn’t for everyone. Some investors
would prefer owning mutual funds if they are worried about large divergences from
NAV. Other investors might also want to own a different suite of ETF’s instead of
Vanguard. That’s all perfectly fine.
This is the approach that I use for my own money. It makes a lot of sense, is very
balanced, and should accomplish my financial goals.
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Alternative Approaches
My approach to asset allocation isn’t the only approach. It is simply the approach
that works for me. I think it provides an appropriate risk/return and should provide
me with satisfactory performance over the long run. I believe that I will avoid lost
decades, bubbles, and significant drawdowns.
I think that the weird portfolio is well diversified in a way that will protect me from
different economic environments while still providing a satisfactory rate of return.
The asset classes are controversial. Small-cap value is controversial. Many believe
that small-cap value will no longer outperform the market in the future. Critics cite
several reasons for why it won’t beat the market, but a key argument is that they
think this segment of the market is more scrutinized than before. Mechanically
buying the cheapest small stocks may not offer the opportunity for out-performance
in the future that it did in the past.
Some investors may not see the point of owning long term treasuries. The 30-year
bond currently yields a measly 1.65%. Long term treasuries are not going to do as
well as it did in the past.
Gold is also controversial. Gold is an asset that doesn’t provide any interest and is
based entirely on what people are willing to pay for the commodity. Warren Buffett
says that gold has no intrinsic value.
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I’ve built a portfolio based on what makes sense to me. My beliefs, my risk
tolerance, and my desire to not participate in bubbles. You might not agree and you
may have different preferences as an investor.
You might not agree with my approach to investing, and that’s okay. My plan is not
for everyone.
With that said, I hope that my approach has given you something to think about
when looking at different investment approaches. I hope that it has given you a
framework for how some key asset classes interact with each other and can make
investing a less stressful and volatile process.
Asset allocation is a great concept and can help a person achieve their aims over
time. As with all things, you have to decide what works for you.
If you don’t like my investment approach, there are plenty of other unique strategies
that might work for you.
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Here are a few that you might want to investigate and learn more about:
If you’re going to keep it basic, this is the approach. 60% US Stocks, 40% US bonds.
Over time, this generated a 5.8% average rate of return after inflation with a 34%
max drawdown. Twelve years is the most extended period that the portfolio
remained in the red. It’s a decent approach.
Everyone hates on basic things, but let’s face it: like chocolate cake, Starbucks, the
Beatles, or pepperoni pizza — something becomes basic because there is something
inherently awesome about it. You can also implement this in a single Vanguard
mutual fund, set it up to reinvest dividends and interest, and forget about it. They
can do the rebalancing for you, and you don’t even have to look at it.
Vanguard has a variety of Lifestrategy balanced funds for a low fee that adopts this
approach. Each fund has a mix of stocks and bonds. The 60/40 fund is the
Lifestrategy moderate growth fund.
Ironically, many financial advisors put people in a 60/40 allocation and charge 1%
for this allocation. Vanguard will do it for you for .13%.
Of course, there are no guarantees that any other approach, including my own, will
do any better than 60/40, so it’s an approach that might work for you.
The All Seasons Portfolio is the portfolio created by Ray Dalio and promoted by Tony
Robbins in his book, Money: Master the Game. This has achieved a 5.3% average rate
of return, 16% maximum drawdown, and the longest that it was in the red was 10
years. The portfolio is 30% US stocks, 40% long term bonds, 15% intermediate
bonds, 7.5% commodities, and 7.5% gold.
This portfolio is for people who watched 2008 and said to themselves: never again.
This approach appeals to the risk-averse who never want to endure another episode
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like 2008 but still want to invest and grow their savings. Nearly 70% of this portfolio
is in defensive assets for the sole purpose of reducing drawdowns.
There are a lot of assumptions built into this approach. I think that much of the
return for the portfolio since 1981 is a vast, multi-decade reduction in interest rates.
The decline in interest rates buoyed the profits in long-term bonds, which have
delivered equity-like returns over the last 40 years with low volatility.
Interest rates won’t decline indefinitely. Interest rates typically rise during
inflationary periods like the 1960s and 1970s. When inflation comes back, a
fundamental assumption of the All-Weather allocation is that the gold and
commodities will deliver a high return rate when the long-term bond allocation
takes a beating. This is also an assumption of the weird portfolio, but there is no
guarantee that historical relationship will hold.
The three-fund portfolio is the approach embraced by Bogleheads with three simple
index funds. It’s 40% US stocks, 20% international stocks, and 40% bonds. It delivers
a 5.7% rate of return, with a 32% max drawdown, and a 10-year money-losing
period. It’s a sensible approach. You’re zeroing in on the three major asset classes
and getting the market return on all of them for a low fee.
4. 100% US Stocks.
Straightforward and simple, but not easy. 100% investment in US Stocks is the
approach embraced by the FIRE (financial independence, retire early) community.
This approach is close to Warren Buffet’s recommended asset allocation (90%
stocks, 10% bonds).
This approach will likely work in the long run, but it’s not easy emotionally. I don’t
think all of the people who embrace this approach are fully conscious of the risks
embedded in it. Since 1970, US stocks have earned a 7.6% real rate of return
(hooray!) but had a 49% max drawdown (ouch), and 13 years of money-losing
(double ouch). The max drawdown is from 2008.
The 13 year stretch of real losses begins in the 1970s, a decade of fantastic rock (Pink
Floyd, Zeppelin) and terrible investment returns, which set the stage for two
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As I’ve mentioned before, US stocks are currently (as of early 2020) costly. The high
valuations of US stocks suggest they will provide poor future returns. I think that
valuation will eventually hurt US stocks, but I may be wrong.
Harry Browne, a libertarian activist, and best selling author, created the portfolio. It
invests in four asset classes split equally: US stocks, gold, cash, and long term
treasuries. It’s one of the most risk averse portfolios ever created.
And that’s it! Four asset classes and a minimal allocation to stocks.
The large allocations to long term treasuries and cash are also a significant drag on
returns, especially at current interest rates.
As you can see, there are plenty of different asset allocation approaches, and mine
isn’t the one true faith. Investing is a personal process that ought to be tailored to
your own goals and tolerance for risk.
You have to do you. The weird portfolio might work for you. There might also be a
different approach that works for you. It all boils down to who you are. What is your
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risk tolerance? What are your beliefs? What are your goals? Everyone is different
and there isn’t one portfolio that solves everything.
With that said, I’ve spent a lot of time developing the weird portfolio as a vehicle for
my savings. I have written this book in the hope that it might help someone looking
for what I was looking for: a simple way to invest savings without paying an arm and
a leg in fees. A portfolio that protects from multiple economic outcomes. A portfolio
that avoids bubbles, lost decades. A portfolio with lower drawdowns and volatility
while still offering an adequate rate of return.
I hope you found this approach and my explanation of it useful, even though it
might not be for you. I wish you and your loved ones the best of luck in investing &
life.
These charts are courtesy of the excellent blog at Portfolio Charts. The author of this
website was gracious enough to allow me to use the return data from this site to
conduct the back-tests.
I think this gives a good sense of how this portfolio performs in different economic
environments while reducing volatility and drawdowns creating a consistent rate of
return.
Average Returns
This portfolio has generated a 7.7% average rate of return since 1970. This almost
matches the return of the US stock market, but the weird portfolio delivers this
return in a far safer and more consistent fashion. It is also a higher rate of return
than most available asset allocations.
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The worst drawdown for this portfolio was 19%. The longest drawdown for this
portfolio was a little over 3 years.
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This compares favorably to both the 60/40 portfolio and owning the total stock
market.
The traditional 60/40 portfolio suffered a 34% maximum drawdown that lasted for
over 12 years.
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100% US stocks suffered a 49% maximum drawdown that lasted over 13 years.
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Annual Returns
Below is the annual performance of the portfolio from different start dates. As you
can see, drawdowns do not last long and the portfolio usually rebounds to its long
term rate of return of around 7% after inflation relatively quickly.
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This holds up much better in contrast to the sea of pain in owning 100% US stocks.
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The 60/40 portfolio is also surprisingly painful in the 1970's, even though it has
worked well since 1980. During the 1970’s, inflation and rising interest rates ravaged
stocks & bonds. The excellent performance since 1980 is a result of a 40 year decline
in interest rates. This is not something that can occur from present interest rates.
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The perpetual withdrawal rate is the amount that can be withdrawn from the
portfolio every year without shrinking the principal balance when adjusted for
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inflation.
I think this is the most important metric for a portfolio. This simple metric is a clear
expression of both the raw returns of a portfolio weighted against the consistency of
returns and severity of drawdowns.
By this metric, the weird portfolio outperforms all other passive asset allocations.
Stress
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This portfolio also delivers its return with a low amount of stress, as measured by
the Ulcer index. Unlike standard deviation, which measures volatility up and down,
the Ulcer index focuses on downside volatility. In other words, an investor in this
portfolio can invest in their portfolio without chugging Pepto Bismol during a stock
market crash.
Disclaimer
The information on in this book is for information and discussion purposes only.
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It describes the author’s approach to investing, which may not be suitable for all
investors.
This book does not constitute a recommendation to purchase or sell any financial
instruments or other products. Investment decisions should not be made with this
book and it does not take into account the investment objectives or financial
situation of any particular person or institution.
Investors should choose financial products based on their own risk tolerance and
objectives. Investors should obtain advice based on their own individual
circumstances from their own tax, financial, legal and other advisers about the risks
and merits of any transaction before making an investment decision, and only make
such decisions on the basis of the investor’s own objectives, experience, and
resources.
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