The Reason to Quit PP
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- mathjak107
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
i would disagree with that . rebalancing is very time sensitive . since trends tend to run for years rebalancing actually cuts short the winners prematurely to sit idle in the losers sometime for years . since markets are up 2/3's of the time and only down 1/3 historically rebalancing has not helped as much as hurt .
i have some interesting data on what rebalancing did during the 4 worst time frames we had for retirees . you would think with markets so bad tht rebalancing would have helped the averages but it actually brought the returns down .
i have some interesting data on what rebalancing did during the 4 worst time frames we had for retirees . you would think with markets so bad tht rebalancing would have helped the averages but it actually brought the returns down .
Last edited by mathjak107 on Thu Oct 01, 2015 1:17 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Cortopassi
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
Bang Head Here -------------------->>((o))
Why are you here MJ?
You dislike having 25% gold. And now you disagree that rebalancing is useful. I suppose next it is better to use a moving average vs. rebalancing bands to better capture the trend.
Sure, that works, and will be more work most likely than simple annual rebalance or by bands.
Do I want to be 100% lazy about my investments? Not 100%, but I also don't want to be whipsawed in and out of things with a moving average.
Let's see the data.
Why are you here MJ?
You dislike having 25% gold. And now you disagree that rebalancing is useful. I suppose next it is better to use a moving average vs. rebalancing bands to better capture the trend.
Sure, that works, and will be more work most likely than simple annual rebalance or by bands.
Do I want to be 100% lazy about my investments? Not 100%, but I also don't want to be whipsawed in and out of things with a moving average.
Let's see the data.
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
On an emotional level, mathjak likes assets he identifies as "winners" more than the ones he identifies as "losers" owing to his exceptional ambition, prosperity mindset, and not-so-prosperous upbringing. There are always excuses and reasons why you should stick with "winner" assets even through tough times, while those same tough times are used as evidence for why you should ditch "loser" assets. Having identified gold as a loser, mathjak is simply never going to like it very much as an asset. You would have better luck convincing him to ditch his $10,000 Nikon because an iPhone camera is good enough
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
Cortopassi wrote: Bang Head Here -------------------->>((o))
Why are you here MJ?
You dislike having 25% gold. And now you disagree that rebalancing is useful. I suppose next it is better to use a moving average vs. rebalancing bands to better capture the trend.
Sure, that works, and will be more work most likely than simple annual rebalance or by bands.
Do I want to be 100% lazy about my investments? Not 100%, but I also don't want to be whipsawed in and out of things with a moving average.
Let's see the data.
why ? believe it or not being here makes me think and analyze and research and learn . you guys are pretty smart and you raise points that some i agree with and some i don't and i find the debates quite interesting . especially because overall the discussions are civil , constructive and educational .
kissing each others ass does not teach us a thing . but the education comes when you duke things out with facts on both sides . i find tyler great , i love his points when they make me take a step back and really analyze what is going on . i may not agree for logical reasons but his points are still valid .
i am strictly facts , data and study's . i take little for face value just because someone says so , thinks so or does so .
i research the other side by sleeping with the enemy , then i see what makes sense to me .
more and more research is proving what we were led to believe was only true to a point , but when you look under the hood at the hard cold numbers you see a whole different story beyond that point .
Last edited by mathjak107 on Thu Oct 01, 2015 1:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
good summary .Pointedstick wrote: On an emotional level, mathjak likes assets he identifies as "winners" more than the ones he identifies as "losers" owing to his exceptional ambition, prosperity mindset, and not-so-prosperous upbringing. There are always excuses and reasons why you should stick with "winner" assets even through tough times, while those same tough times are used as evidence for why you should ditch "loser" assets. Having identified gold as a loser, mathjak is simply never going to like it very much as an asset. You would have better luck convincing him to ditch his $10,000 Nikon because an iPhone camera is good enough
i agree , i just do not see in the long term scheme of things at this point a need for gold or as much gold . i much rather try to put that money to better use making it more productive . i know my comfort limits and i try to stay within them leaving lots of slack in the plan . i always have an end game view . not a year or 5 years or even 10 years . so far gold has not demonstrated through anything we have been through that at the end of the game it was worth tying up money in it . by an end game view i mean at the and of a 30-35 year accumulation stage or a 30-35 year retirement time frame .
if things change then i can see adding more gold then 5 or 10% but certainly not the last few years nor now .
Last edited by mathjak107 on Thu Oct 01, 2015 1:55 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Pointedstick
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
I'm glad my synopsis makes sense to you. I hope you can understand how your background shapes your perception of risk and desire for growth. You see gold as a boat anchor impeding that goal, but someone with a different background might see it as a diversifier that can decrease short-to-medium-term downside volatility. That's not one of your goals, but it's not an illegitimate perspective. It's not that gold is useless, it's that it's not as useful for achieving your goals as other assets. But your goals are your goals. They're not necessarily the same as anyone else's.
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
I'm not here to kiss anyone's ass. But we've got the picture loud and clear on your feelings towards gold. It's bad enough I have to see the price every day without hearing it from you too!
Let's move on to another subject -- why don't you start one and title it "Why rebalancing isn't all it's cracked up to be" or something like that.
I'll start out on rebalancing...
If you run 1975-now, with 35/15 bands, specifically looking at what rebalanced the portfolio (there were 13 rebalances):
**1 time stocks to 15%
**1 time bonds to 15%
**1 time bonds to 35%
**2 times stocks to 35%
**3 times gold to 15%
**5 times gold to 35%
(If someone wants to double check this for me, it is sometimes hard to tell what asset caused a rebalance)
If the PP is looking to capture volatility of the assets, it seems to be doing it very well with gold, which rebalanced the portfolio more often positively, and negatively, than any other asset.
The last rebalance happened on 7/20/2015, and rebalanced significantly out of bonds and S&P into cash and gold. Pretty darn good timing.
Let's move on to another subject -- why don't you start one and title it "Why rebalancing isn't all it's cracked up to be" or something like that.
I'll start out on rebalancing...
If you run 1975-now, with 35/15 bands, specifically looking at what rebalanced the portfolio (there were 13 rebalances):
**1 time stocks to 15%
**1 time bonds to 15%
**1 time bonds to 35%
**2 times stocks to 35%
**3 times gold to 15%
**5 times gold to 35%
(If someone wants to double check this for me, it is sometimes hard to tell what asset caused a rebalance)
If the PP is looking to capture volatility of the assets, it seems to be doing it very well with gold, which rebalanced the portfolio more often positively, and negatively, than any other asset.
The last rebalance happened on 7/20/2015, and rebalanced significantly out of bonds and S&P into cash and gold. Pretty darn good timing.
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
i would think most rebalancing would take money away from stocks and bonds and send it to gold . i can only imagine how much all that gold money would have grown in stocks and bonds by today .
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
Well, no one is investing just for retirement. You want your money to be there when you need it, not only when you retire. When the stock market tanks there's a good chance your career takes a hit too. Do you want your investments to be highly correlated to your career prospects? I don't. And so far, for me at least, the correlation has been close to 1.mathjak107 wrote: not really , iwe can pick out all kinds of spurts for gold the last 40 years but at the end of the day a typical 30 year retirement time frame or 30-40 year accumulation stage has gold averaging out to just the rate of inflation pretty much . that to me makes it more a shorter term speculation than a womb to the tomb hold .
When I lose my job I dont want my investments to be down 30-50%. Gold and LT bonds reduce that chance considerably. And if all goes well and stocks outperform everything else the next couple of decades there's a good chance my average savingsrate will be pretty high, so there's less need for a high stock allocation.
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
Did you not see that in the past 40 years the asset most balanced out of for hitting 35% was gold? Are you choosing to ignore that?mathjak107 wrote: i would think most rebalancing would take money away from stocks and bonds and send it to gold . i can only imagine how much all that gold money would have grown in stocks and bonds by today .
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
A new trend that no one pays attention to and signs on the horizon that everyone can see aren't the same thing in my book. Besides, I thought you didn't believe in trend following?mathjak107 wrote: actually you do want to buy once the trend is happening . buy high and sell higher has made far and away more money then trying to fight the trend , catch a falling a knife and buy low and sell high which rarely ends up working out well .
trying to fight the fed also is a no no .
there is no basis for sinking so much money money in to an asset so long before it is time . if there is basis for a trend they run years . if it is a flash in the pan then be happy you missed it .
unless you think financial Armageddon is right around the corner youare hurting your self more trying to insure against something that may never happen just as it has not happened the last century .
all this insurance is causing the pp today to get stuck in the mud . you see it happen now every big equity rally .
market up 200 plus points and pp down . usual culprit -gold
No argument with the rest, but you're thinking too short-term. The PP is a long-term wealth preservation vehicle. A couple of poor years due to the hedges is part of the price to pay for it being so robust. It just means the market is confused with no sense of direction.
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
Tradition. What else can they easily hold that's a real asset? Not that they're great investors or anything; they have the worst track record of all investors as they're all CCCLs (Crony Country Club Lemmings). I have to make a possible exception for China though as their central bank is allegedly staffed by traders with real world experience, not ivory tower academics.Jack Jones wrote: Ah yeah, I've been meaning to ask MachineGhost this as well.
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- mathjak107
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
well the long term numbers say just about any other portfolio did a lot more over the long term . be it that 30-35 year accumulation phase or that 30-35 year retirement phase .
what you bought is some less volatility ,what you gave up was quite a bit of dough .
the trade off is yours to decide
what you bought is some less volatility ,what you gave up was quite a bit of dough .
the trade off is yours to decide
Last edited by mathjak107 on Thu Oct 01, 2015 4:32 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- MachineGhost
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
Gold would have no use in Armageddeon. For that you need to look towards your Earthquake Survival Kit or similar. You do have one, don't you?Cortopassi wrote: I think you answer the question correctly here. We aren't just hedging for Armageddon, we also hold gold against reckless government policies, be it fiscal, monetary, wars, etc.
"All generous minds have a horror of what are commonly called 'Facts'. They are the brute beasts of the intellectual domain." -- Thomas Hobbes
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
Gold has acted as a hedge about half the time; typically when T-Bonds don't do the job. It's the backup to the backup.mathjak107 wrote: well for 40 years it has been a crappy hedge . a t-bill performed as a hedge better then gold .because if gold tracks inflation which it did then any fund fees or storage and insurance fees would have had the gold lagging inflation . so as a hedge it either had nothing to hedge against over the long term since it returned about 4 .50% cagr , and as an inflation hedge a rolled over t-bill did better
"All generous minds have a horror of what are commonly called 'Facts'. They are the brute beasts of the intellectual domain." -- Thomas Hobbes
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
I'd say he suffers from an extreme case of recency bias and a complete ignorance of historical conditions. The PP is well suited for the oncoming Sovereign Debt crisis. Are we going to argue after that is over that a 100% gold/100% cash portfolio was better than the PP in hindsight?Pointedstick wrote: On an emotional level, mathjak likes assets he identifies as "winners" more than the ones he identifies as "losers" owing to his exceptional ambition, prosperity mindset, and not-so-prosperous upbringing. There are always excuses and reasons why you should stick with "winner" assets even through tough times, while those same tough times are used as evidence for why you should ditch "loser" assets. Having identified gold as a loser, mathjak is simply never going to like it very much as an asset. You would have better luck convincing him to ditch his $10,000 Nikon because an iPhone camera is good enough
I guess it all comes down to how much faith we have in bureaucrats, politicians and government not to fuck up our financial system. Today's denizens are not even remotely the same as yesteryear's. The PP is rather libertarian in that respect.
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
well i am sure if and when it happens , let us know how it worked out for you .
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
I don't either. But when gold does bottom, I will load up. Will you?mathjak107 wrote: i agree , i just do not see in the long term scheme of things at this point a need for gold or as much gold . i much rather try to put that money to better use making it more productive . i know my comfort limits and i try to stay within them leaving lots of slack in the plan . i always have an end game view . not a year or 5 years or even 10 years . so far gold has not demonstrated through anything we have been through that at the end of the game it was worth tying up money in it . by an end game view i mean at the and of a 30-35 year accumulation stage or a 30-35 year retirement time frame .
"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!
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- mathjak107
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
over those total long time frames gold averaged out to nothing more than inflation . it hedged nothing that other assets didn't do better .MachineGhost wrote:Gold has acted as a hedge about half the time; typically when T-Bonds don't do the job. It's the backup to the backup.mathjak107 wrote: well for 40 years it has been a crappy hedge . a t-bill performed as a hedge better then gold .because if gold tracks inflation which it did then any fund fees or storage and insurance fees would have had the gold lagging inflation . so as a hedge it either had nothing to hedge against over the long term since it returned about 4 .50% cagr , and as an inflation hedge a rolled over t-bill did better
Last edited by mathjak107 on Thu Oct 01, 2015 4:07 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
MachineGhost wrote:I don't either. But when gold does bottom, I will load up. Will you?mathjak107 wrote: i agree , i just do not see in the long term scheme of things at this point a need for gold or as much gold . i much rather try to put that money to better use making it more productive . i know my comfort limits and i try to stay within them leaving lots of slack in the plan . i always have an end game view . not a year or 5 years or even 10 years . so far gold has not demonstrated through anything we have been through that at the end of the game it was worth tying up money in it . by an end game view i mean at the and of a 30-35 year accumulation stage or a 30-35 year retirement time frame .
maybe , maybe not , depends on what the big picture shows , buying on price may not mean a thing if conditions never come around for it it . . i hate being the guy in the bahamas owning a winter coat collection because it was on sale .
Last edited by mathjak107 on Thu Oct 01, 2015 4:17 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- MachineGhost
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
Paper and electrons are only good for wiping your ass if the government or financial system collapses. Do you realize how lucky you are and have been being an American in the century that just passed? That's what I mean by you suffering from a severe recency bias. You simply lack historical context of how bad it was for others who did not have your luck. And you're making the most major assumption that the future will be exactly like the past when any reading of the tea leaves will show you that current conditions are far outside any historical norm.mathjak107 wrote: i would think most rebalancing would take money away from stocks and bonds and send it to gold . i can only imagine how much all that gold money would have grown in stocks and bonds by today .
I know Morgan said you can never go broke betting on America, but no empire lasts forever. And right now we're all at the tail end of its eclipse (we've got 17 years left). This isn't 1906 or 1987 anymore; its the end of the beginning.
Just trying to broaden your perspective, that's all.
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
That's just because gold was far more volatility than the others. The HBPP is not at risk parity.Cortopassi wrote: Did you not see that in the past 40 years the asset most balanced out of for hitting 35% was gold? Are you choosing to ignore that?
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- mathjak107
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
well then if you think a financial debacle is coming do what you got to do . but why stop with gold , why not go the route of the doomsday prepers since their vision in their head is as real to them as yours is to you .
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
Which is the point when those other assets F-A-I-L. Recency bias.mathjak107 wrote: over those total long time frames gold averaged out to nothing more than inflation . it hedged nothing that other assets didn't do better .
Last edited by MachineGhost on Thu Oct 01, 2015 4:46 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"All generous minds have a horror of what are commonly called 'Facts'. They are the brute beasts of the intellectual domain." -- Thomas Hobbes
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- MachineGhost
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Re: The Reason to Quit PP
Because I prefer to be grounded in reality? We're not going back to the Stone Age or barter. I don't see any threat on the horizon that would justify becoming one of those Prepper nuts. You probably should think hard about what threats I do see on the horizon, since they're not a figment of my imagination. WAKE UP. Retirement is the worst possible time to be caught unprepared.mathjak107 wrote: well then if you think a financial debacle is coming do what you got to do . but why stop with gold , why not go the route of the doomsday prepers since their vision in their head is as real to them as yours is to you .
Last edited by MachineGhost on Thu Oct 01, 2015 4:50 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"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!