Colm Fagan
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My ARF is invested on the assumption that we could be around for 30 years...…...That's plenty time for the probabilities to work in my favour.
What I AM saying is that equities are expected (in the mathematical sense) to deliver a far superior return to bonds and cash. .......My ARF is invested on the assumption that we could be around for 30 years from my "retirement" nine years ago. That's plenty time for the probabilities to work in my favour.
I can't understand why people keep grasping at straws to defend investment strategies that are patently wrong. Some of them should know better.There's a good chance that there were lads in Japan who had similar beliefs 30 years ago - no more fancy cameras for dem fellas.
I can't understand why people keep grasping at straws to defend investment strategies that are patently wrong.
Before the crash, the Imperial Palace in Tokyo was supposedly worth more than the entire state of California. Nippon Telephone & Telegraph was floated at a P/E of 250 in 1987, and the price kept going up until the crash started on the first day of trading in 1990. It's a utility. They normally trade on P/E multiples of less than 10, less than 20 in the raciest of markets.
As an aside, a Japanese saver who invested in the Japanese stock market at the height of the boom, even at those crazy prices, would probably be better off now than if they left their savings in cash.
I don't want to sound harsh, but one anonymous poster is much the same as another. As an aside, why do people feel the need to write under the cloak of anonymity?What specific investment strategy are you accusing me of defending?
You also asked:people can be and have been mushed by the sequence of returns. Excessively high or low allocation to return seeking (as opposed to defensive) assets should be a minority sport. I don't mind those in this minority enjoying their fetish so long as they acknowledge that their extreme position is not appropriate for the majority
Of course. My initial post under this thread was to praise Steven Barrett's (thank you Steven for using your real name) comment:Additionally, please answer another specific question.....do you accept my belief that people have different levels of scope to take investment risk?
Don't use growth projections to fit the income you want. Adjust your income to the volatility you can handle and afford.
Short of an outright default, you can't really have a collapse in bonds.
Interest rates are currently at zero (more or less). That makes the maths simple. My guess at a reasonable "worst case" scenario is for interest rates to increase to (say) 3%, with an average bond duration of 7 years. Suppose you hold a 3% coupon bond. Its value at 0% interest is 7*3+100 = 121. Its value at 3% interest is 100, so the fall in market value of the bond element of the portfolio in that "worst case" scenario is 17.3%. (1-100/121).
However, the increased yields will quickly overwhelm and supersede the capital losses within a bond fund.
What impact will a sharp uptick in the cost of debt have on equities (bearing in mind that corporates now carry a lot more debt than was the case 10 years ago)?
And what impact will a sharp increase in the cost of debt have on property prices?
I don't have the figures to hand, but your 50% ignores dividends. With dividends, the conclusion is different. Also, I was using "cash" as a short-hand for money on deposit in Japan, earning negative interest.Not true.
The Nikkei 225 is worth a little over 50% of its peak in yen terms.
I don't have the figures to hand, but your 50% ignores dividends. With dividends, the conclusion is different. Also, I was using "cash" as a short-hand for money on deposit in Japan, earning negative interest.
As it happens, though, you have defended the strategy I'm unhappy with, of excessive belief in so-called "defensive" assets:
I don't have the figures to hand, but your 50% ignores dividends. With dividends, the conclusion is different.
Also, I was using "cash" as a short-hand for money on deposit in Japan, earning negative interest.
In any event, I have already argued that Japan was a one-off, and shouldn't be used as an example of what might happen in the long-term with a pure equity-based strategy.
in exactly the same was as we recognise a massive bubble in bond prices today.
5. Finally, the correlation between different asset classes is important. When stocks suffer a drawdown, there is often a "flight to safety" causing bond prices to rise.
cremeegg with 7 year duration a "crash" in bond prices is not going to happen but it is not terribly important if it does. In 7 years time the 30% of you current holdings which are in 7 year bonds will be worth what they are today, as they have a "guaranteed" yield of c. 0%. So it is dead money rather than money waiting to fall off a cliff. So what purpose does dead money serve? None as far as I can see. Cash might be viewed as dead money but it is ready to pounce into life on an uptick in interest rates. 7 year bonds are zombies for the next 7 years.@cremeegg
3. The effective duration of the aggregate Eurozone bond market is a little over 7 years so it's fair to assume your bond fund has a broadly similar term exposure.
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