Welcome to the forum. Whether you actually are "that" Emelianenko or you honor him with your nickname you'll have many chances to witness the strength and robustness of HBPP.Emelianenko wrote:As a new PPer, I feel the exact same way. I decided to take the plunge last year and so far its been one of the few truly good decisions I've made!buddtholomew wrote:
Nevertheless, I am extremely pleased with the portfolio's performance since crafting the original thread and continue to learn how it responds to an ever-changing economic climate.
I'm Done!
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Re: I'm Done!
"Let every man divide his money into three parts, and invest a third in land, a third in business, and a third let him keep in reserve."
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Re: I'm Done!
I'm sick of all these monotonous up days. So boring.
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Re: I'm Done!
LOLdragoncar wrote: I'm sick of all these monotonous up days. So boring.
Re: I'm Done!
Wow, I'm actually on vacation and spent the day at SeaWorld with the family, then came back to my hotel room and calculated that my PP gained $4,226.98 today... For anyone that actually dropped the PP earlier in the year, I'm sorry to say, you lost...
"I came here for financial advice, but I've ended up with a bunch of shave soaps and apparently am about to start eating sardines. Not that I'm complaining, of course." -ZedThou
Re: I'm Done!
Whoa! This PP thing can go DOWN ? :o S
Last edited by hpowders on Thu Nov 01, 2012 4:25 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: I'm Done!
Will you be singing the same tune when its down $4,226.98 in a day?Storm wrote: Wow, I'm actually on vacation and spent the day at SeaWorld with the family, then came back to my hotel room and calculated that my PP gained $4,226.98 today... For anyone that actually dropped the PP earlier in the year, I'm sorry to say, you lost...
"All generous minds have a horror of what are commonly called 'Facts'. They are the brute beasts of the intellectual domain." -- Thomas Hobbes
Disclaimer: I am not a broker, dealer, investment advisor, physician, theologian or prophet. I should not be considered as legally permitted to render such advice!
Disclaimer: I am not a broker, dealer, investment advisor, physician, theologian or prophet. I should not be considered as legally permitted to render such advice!
Re: I'm Done!
Gold looks down over 1% today. Long govt. bonds look down today too. Today will be a test of resolve for some.
I expect to move from 1 star adjunct lecturer to 4 star assistant professor on this forum very soon. Already a 3 star adjunct assistant professor.
Re: I'm Done!
Ouch. My whole portfolio is down 0.50% I'll stop looking today.
I will stop looking at the markets.
I will stop looking at the markets.
Copy and paste has really ruined school punishments.
I will stop looking at the markets.
I will stop looking at the markets.
Copy and paste has really ruined school punishments.
Last edited by Khisanth on Fri Nov 02, 2012 9:15 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: I'm Done!
Down 0.5% in one day isn't really that bad, honestly. A stock-heavy portfolio can easily decline 2% on a totally average day. A non-average day can have you down much, much more. I just try to look at the little dips like these as good buying opportunities for any cash that I was already planning to invest anyway.
Human behavior is economic behavior. The particulars may vary, but competition for limited resources remains a constant.
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Re: I'm Done!
Once you are satisfied that the strategy is a good fit for you over the longer term, I would ignore these daily movements.
Watching the intraday movements will just suck up your time and energy.
If you don't monitor the value of your house on a daily basis, why monitor your investments that way? They are both long term commitments.
Watching the intraday movements will just suck up your time and energy.
If you don't monitor the value of your house on a daily basis, why monitor your investments that way? They are both long term commitments.
Q: “Do you have funny shaped balloons?”
A: “Not unless round is funny.”
A: “Not unless round is funny.”
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Re: I'm Done!
I monitor the performance of the PP on a daily basis because I am not convinced that it will continue to perform as it has historically. Yesterday and today's performance solidifies my decision to diversify across several investment strategies. The equity markets were up 130+ points on 11/1 and as of this writing, flat on 11/2. The PP was slightly lower on 11/1 (tracking error is difficult psychologically) and substantially lower on 11/2 (GLD down 2%). Over the month of October and YTD, the PP portion of my investments has been a drag on overall portfolio performance.MediumTex wrote: Once you are satisfied that the strategy is a good fit for you over the longer term, I would ignore these daily movements.
Watching the intraday movements will just suck up your time and energy.
If you don't monitor the value of your house on a daily basis, why monitor your investments that way? They are both long term commitments.
I have additional funds to invest at this time and have decided not to increase my PP holdings.
Last edited by buddtholomew on Fri Nov 02, 2012 11:45 am, edited 1 time in total.
"The first principle is that you must not fool yourself and you are the easiest person to fool" --Feynman.
Re: I'm Done!
To each his own... But, why would you base your decisions on how the PP performs over blocks of hours rather than blocks of weeks or months??buddtholomew wrote:I monitor the performance of the PP on a daily basis because I am not convinced that it will continue to perform as it has historically. Yesterday and today's performance solidifies my decision to diversify across several investment strategies. The equity markets were up 130+ points on 11/1 and as of this writing, flat on 11/2. The PP was slightly lower on 11/1 (tracking error is difficult psychologically) and substantially lower on 11/2 (GLD down 2%). Over the month of October and YTD, the PP portion of my investments has been a drag on overall portfolio performance.
I have additional funds to invest at this time and have decided not to increase my PP holdings.
That would be like making all your health decisions by just reading your pulse.
Last edited by Gumby on Fri Nov 02, 2012 12:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Nothing I say should be construed as advice or expertise. I am only sharing opinions which may or may not be applicable in any given case.
Re: I'm Done!
I would say do what makes you comfortable. The PP clearly doesn't provide you with a durable sense of comfort.buddtholomew wrote:I monitor the performance of the PP on a daily basis because I am not convinced that it will continue to perform as it has historically. Yesterday and today's performance solidifies my decision to diversify across several investment strategies. The equity markets were up 130+ points on 11/1 and as of this writing, flat on 11/2. The PP was slightly lower on 11/1 (tracking error is difficult psychologically) and substantially lower on 11/2 (GLD down 2%). Over the month of October and YTD, the PP portion of my investments has been a drag on overall portfolio performance.MediumTex wrote: Once you are satisfied that the strategy is a good fit for you over the longer term, I would ignore these daily movements.
Watching the intraday movements will just suck up your time and energy.
If you don't monitor the value of your house on a daily basis, why monitor your investments that way? They are both long term commitments.
I have additional funds to invest at this time and have decided not to increase my PP holdings.
For me, the PP is a low risk strategy that does make me comfortable (7% returns YTD are quite acceptable to me). While I appreciate everyone's temptation to look in on the PP regularly, I honestly would probably almost never look in on it myself if it weren't for the discussions here about performance during different intervals. I just don't feel that pulled to look in on it. I used to be, but I'm not anymore. It's like the trees in my yard--I appreciate them and I enjoy them, but I have no temptation to dig them up to see how their roots are doing.
Q: “Do you have funny shaped balloons?”
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Re: I'm Done!
I have been invested in the PP for some time now and my decision to diversify across investment strategies is nothing new. I am merely highlighting specific examples that support this decision.Gumby wrote:To each his own... But, why would you base your decisions on how the PP performs over blocks of hours rather than blocks of weeks??buddtholomew wrote:I monitor the performance of the PP on a daily basis because I am not convinced that it will continue to perform as it has historically. Yesterday and today's performance solidifies my decision to diversify across several investment strategies. The equity markets were up 130+ points on 11/1 and as of this writing, flat on 11/2. The PP was slightly lower on 11/1 (tracking error is difficult psychologically) and substantially lower on 11/2 (GLD down 2%). Over the month of October and YTD, the PP portion of my investments has been a drag on overall portfolio performance.
I have additional funds to invest at this time and have decided not to increase my PP holdings.
That would be like making all your health decisions by just reading your pulse.
"The first principle is that you must not fool yourself and you are the easiest person to fool" --Feynman.
Re: I'm Done!
Are you not satisfied with the returns it has provided during the period you have been using it?buddtholomew wrote:I have been invested in the PP for some time now and my decision to diversify across investment strategies is nothing new. I am merely highlighting specific examples that support this decision.Gumby wrote:To each his own... But, why would you base your decisions on how the PP performs over blocks of hours rather than blocks of weeks??buddtholomew wrote:I monitor the performance of the PP on a daily basis because I am not convinced that it will continue to perform as it has historically. Yesterday and today's performance solidifies my decision to diversify across several investment strategies. The equity markets were up 130+ points on 11/1 and as of this writing, flat on 11/2. The PP was slightly lower on 11/1 (tracking error is difficult psychologically) and substantially lower on 11/2 (GLD down 2%). Over the month of October and YTD, the PP portion of my investments has been a drag on overall portfolio performance.
I have additional funds to invest at this time and have decided not to increase my PP holdings.
That would be like making all your health decisions by just reading your pulse.
Q: “Do you have funny shaped balloons?”
A: “Not unless round is funny.”
A: “Not unless round is funny.”
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Re: I'm Done!
I'm curious to know why you think the PP will underperform and what you think will beat it, especially because I remember reading that your goals are fairly short-term and your appetite for volatility is very low. It's awfully hard to find a high-performance, low-volatility portfolio that's not the PP, which is what you seem to be looking for.buddtholomew wrote: I monitor the performance of the PP on a daily basis because I am not convinced that it will continue to perform as it has historically.
Interesting; my PP was down 0.33% in October compared to the broad market declining about 2%. If your PP was a drag on your overall portfolio in October, I'd be curious to know what you're invested in that fell less than the PP.buddtholomew wrote: Over the month of October and YTD, the PP portion of my investments has been a drag on overall portfolio performance.
I think you need to figure out what you want: low volatility, or high returns. Every day the PP declines, you seem to have a minor heart attack, yet you're also worried that it doesn't have enough upside. Anything that beats the PP is likely to be hugely more volatile. There ain't no free lunch in investing.
Human behavior is economic behavior. The particulars may vary, but competition for limited resources remains a constant.
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Re: I'm Done!
Yes, I am satisfied with the returns over the period I have been invested. What disturbs me the most is when an asset tumbles 2.25% in a single day. No other asset in my portfolio fluctuates with the same vigor as either GLD or TLT do.MediumTex wrote:Are you not satisfied with the returns it has provided during the period you have been using it?buddtholomew wrote:I have been invested in the PP for some time now and my decision to diversify across investment strategies is nothing new. I am merely highlighting specific examples that support this decision.Gumby wrote: To each his own... But, why would you base your decisions on how the PP performs over blocks of hours rather than blocks of weeks??
That would be like making all your health decisions by just reading your pulse.
"The first principle is that you must not fool yourself and you are the easiest person to fool" --Feynman.
Re: I'm Done!
Admittedly, today is not a good day for the PP. But I'm only down 0.5% since investing in it a little over a week ago. No big deal today. Just a short term reaction to the job report being better than expected and perhaps the realization, "Hey, this Obama guy just may win after all!!!" :o
My plan is to hold it for 3 years, re-balancing as necessary, and then withdraw a pittance as the Feds insist.
What's in YOUR safe??
My plan is to hold it for 3 years, re-balancing as necessary, and then withdraw a pittance as the Feds insist.
What's in YOUR safe??
Last edited by hpowders on Fri Nov 02, 2012 12:46 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I expect to move from 1 star adjunct lecturer to 4 star assistant professor on this forum very soon. Already a 3 star adjunct assistant professor.
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Re: I'm Done!
I'm not motivated to find an investement strategy that will outperform the PP over time. I do however dislike underperforming the equity markets when they enjoy an up day like yesterday and a flat day like today (I guess I am not a contrarian by nature).Pointedstick wrote:I'm curious to know why you think the PP will underperform and what you think will beat it, especially because I remember reading that your goals are fairly short-term and your appetite for volatility is very low. It's awfully hard to find a high-performance, low-volatility portfolio that's not the PP, which is what you seem to be looking for.buddtholomew wrote: I monitor the performance of the PP on a daily basis because I am not convinced that it will continue to perform as it has historically.
Interesting; my PP was down 0.33% in October compared to the broad market declining about 2%. If your PP was a drag on your overall portfolio in October, I'd be curious to know what you're invested in that fell less than the PP.buddtholomew wrote: Over the month of October and YTD, the PP portion of my investments has been a drag on overall portfolio performance.
I think you need to figure out what you want: low volatility, or high returns. Every day the PP declines, you seem to have a minor heart attack, yet you're also worried that it doesn't have enough upside. Anything that beats the PP is likely to be hugely more volatile. There ain't no free lunch in investing.
"The first principle is that you must not fool yourself and you are the easiest person to fool" --Feynman.
Re: I'm Done!
You have to ask yourself what your goal is. Once you identify what your goal is, you put that goal in the denominator when calculating your performance.buddtholomew wrote:I'm not motivated to find an investement strategy that will outperform the PP over time. I do however dislike underperforming the equity markets when they enjoy an up day like yesterday and a flat day like today (I guess I am not a contrarian by nature).Pointedstick wrote:I'm curious to know why you think the PP will underperform and what you think will beat it, especially because I remember reading that your goals are fairly short-term and your appetite for volatility is very low. It's awfully hard to find a high-performance, low-volatility portfolio that's not the PP, which is what you seem to be looking for.buddtholomew wrote: I monitor the performance of the PP on a daily basis because I am not convinced that it will continue to perform as it has historically.
Interesting; my PP was down 0.33% in October compared to the broad market declining about 2%. If your PP was a drag on your overall portfolio in October, I'd be curious to know what you're invested in that fell less than the PP.buddtholomew wrote: Over the month of October and YTD, the PP portion of my investments has been a drag on overall portfolio performance.
I think you need to figure out what you want: low volatility, or high returns. Every day the PP declines, you seem to have a minor heart attack, yet you're also worried that it doesn't have enough upside. Anything that beats the PP is likely to be hugely more volatile. There ain't no free lunch in investing.
My goal is to be able to purchase more goods and services over time, so the CPI is a decent candidate for my denominator. For me, putting equities in my denominator is pointless because equities have nothing to do with my goals. If my goal end goal was to eventually purchase equities then that might make sense, but that isn't my goal.
What is your goal budd? That is a question you have to answer before crafting a portfolio.
everything comes from somewhere and everything goes somewhere
Re: I'm Done!
You understand, though, that this is what the PP is designed to do, right? Each asset is supposed to be volatile. If each asset wasn't so volatile, the whole portfolio wouldn't be so stable.buddtholomew wrote: Yes, I am satisfied with the returns over the period I have been invested. What disturbs me the most is when an asset tumbles 2.25% in a single day. No other asset in my portfolio fluctuates with the same vigor as either GLD or TLT do.
I think that this is where people often get into trouble with the PP--they will seek to reduce volatility in certain asset classes that they may not personally like that much, and the asset that they trim their exposure to always seems to be the asset that they need in the very next market shift. In recent years, it has repeatedly been LT treasuries that have surprised people with their performance.
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Re: I'm Done!
I understand that feeling, Budd. It sucks to watch stocks go up faster than your portfolio. But enjoying the full upside to the equity markets also means you have to suffer the full force of the down days as well. Gold is down 2.25% today so far, but that's not at all uncommon for the stock market to fall that much or more on a daily basis:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_l ... ge_changes
With the PP, gold is only 1/4 of your portfolio, so it being down 2.25% today means that even if everything else stayed still, you'd only be down 0.56%, which is really a very mild single-day movement. If your 100% stock portfolio (again, which is what you would need to never underperform the equity markets) declined 2.25% in a day, then your whole portfolio is down 2.25%.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_l ... ge_changes
With the PP, gold is only 1/4 of your portfolio, so it being down 2.25% today means that even if everything else stayed still, you'd only be down 0.56%, which is really a very mild single-day movement. If your 100% stock portfolio (again, which is what you would need to never underperform the equity markets) declined 2.25% in a day, then your whole portfolio is down 2.25%.
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Re: I'm Done!
Would you be satisfied outperforming the equity markets over the last 5, 10 and 15 years?buddtholomew wrote: I'm not motivated to find an investement strategy that will outperform the PP over time. I do however dislike underperforming the equity markets when they enjoy an up day like yesterday and a flat day like today (I guess I am not a contrarian by nature).
That's what the PP has done.
Q: “Do you have funny shaped balloons?”
A: “Not unless round is funny.”
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Re: I'm Done!
Nothing wrong with splitting your assets amongst different portfolios, one for each of your investing personalities, and I don't mean that to be insulting. I'm probably going to do the same myself. Maybe half and half with a PP and a combo of Vanguard funds like Wellington and Wellesley. They invest in large cap dividend paying stocks and high quality bonds (so I'd be tilted large cap value). I have no idea how that or any other portfolio will perform in the future. My guess is that it'll outperform a full-PP some years and underperform others, as would any other portfolio in existence.
On another note, days like today are mentally brutal and tend to frighten me. Not because the PP itself dropped, but because it becomes painfully obvious each asset class is propped up right now by the fed's QE. A relatively good jobs report increases the likelihood QE will end sooner rather than later, and gold's reaction looks like there's a deflationary fear. But then long bonds are also down. Who knows, just feels ugly.
On another note, days like today are mentally brutal and tend to frighten me. Not because the PP itself dropped, but because it becomes painfully obvious each asset class is propped up right now by the fed's QE. A relatively good jobs report increases the likelihood QE will end sooner rather than later, and gold's reaction looks like there's a deflationary fear. But then long bonds are also down. Who knows, just feels ugly.
Re: I'm Done!
If an asset "tumbles" 2.25% in a single day — and that asset comprises roughly 25% of your portfolio — then that asset alone cannot cause your portfolio to "tumble" more than 0.7% or so.buddtholomew wrote:What disturbs me the most is when an asset tumbles 2.25% in a single day.
Does a 0.7% decrease in your portfolio really make you uneasy?
(...Or is it that you just can't bear to watch the volatility of the individual assets?)
Nothing I say should be construed as advice or expertise. I am only sharing opinions which may or may not be applicable in any given case.