Thrugelmir;241324 wrote:Jimmy Page;241234 wrote:Thrugelmir;241219 wrote:Jimmy Page;241217 wrote:Thrugelmir;241215 wrote:Keith Cobby;241188 wrote:Harry Trout;241173 wrote:Keith Cobby;241151 wrote: .
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CPI from 2006 - 54%. BNKR dividends up 148%.
If it were that easy
why isn't your investment strategy mainstream then?
Is there one true mainstream strategy? A consensus amongst the experts?
"As the inventor of the MPT, the Nobel-prize-winning economist Harry Markowitz, himself acknowledged,
it was not designed for running an individual's portfolio, but an open-ended, undated, mutual fund with
daily cashflows, seeking to grow in value. Indeed, he rejected the MPT for his own pension"
Checking some other expert's personal pension funds in a 1997 piece,
when bonds offered a return-
WF Sharpe - Started 75/25, stocks/ bonds but 'now considerably different due to no rebalancing'.
RJ Shiller - Has other assets but has been exiting the stock market. Has some inflation linked bonds - the 'riskless asset' of the theory.
NG Mankiw - Move assets when one asset outperforms another. Real estate, like foreign equities, offer substantial diversification. The new inflation linked bonds earn 3.5% over inflation which, looking back over a century or more, looks attractive for an investment with minimum risk.
HM Markowitz - initially 50/50, but then 'I split my money between asset classes, like efficient portfolios. But.. I know I should overweight small-caps and perhaps EM...and then get a comfortable balance stocks/ bonds' (Phew!)
RH Thaler - From day 1, 100% stocks. 'When the Dow reaches 8000 it is tempting to sell but I'm not smart enough to market time'.
LB Siegel - Nearly 100% stocks, but not bullish right now (1997), so if needed for all income, would probably allocate 50% equities (rather than normal 60%), the rest to long term treasury bonds.
Consensus?
Then there's this take.
https://static1.squaresp...ail+online+08072019.pdf
(credit strangways).
By the way, don't confuse 'natural yield' with 'equities'. The 90% bit (currently 85%) is there to generate yield, I couldn't care less where it comes from, within reasonable bounds of security, performance and future proofing.
I have always had a guilty corner with a small percentage of NCYF. If yield picked up I'd happily buy more bonds further down the risk register. It's the yield that would drive it though, not some need to dampen day to day volatility of the bottom line. (Don't also confuse volatility with risk...)