Welcome KshartleKshartle wrote:Hey Thanks Marc. I always read your posts as well. Even if I disagree with you or anyone I appreciate independant thought and analysis based on logic and reason rather than accepting the collective "wisdom".Marc De Mesel wrote:Kshartle wrote: If you run it from Jan 1st 1981 through today without rebalancing it's CAGR of 8.16
With rebalance it's 35/15 it's 8.05
That's 32 years and not re-balancing returned higher.
There's no such thing as volatility capture. Rebalancing can hurt returns just as easily as improve them.
It does reduce volatility though. There's a logical reason for that, not for any volatility capture.
You can always data mine any set of returns and find a superior rule that would have worked for that set of data.
Rebalancing or not has the same chance of working going forward. Imagine stocks or gold tripling while everything else stays put. Not rebalancing will return a lot more. It will subject you to risk beyond what you might be able to bear though.......
OMG I was not aware of this after studying PP for years.
What a great post. I love your critical independent thinking.
Thanks for sharing!![]()

A lot is changing in my investments. I've read many of your posts yesterday and I think you make a convincing case to drop the bonds and cash and just have stocks (global) and gold.
I am struggling already some time to hold my long term bonds since all indicators are flashing extremely overvalued. The cash, short term bonds, do bring volatility down but due to a lower and lower interest rate you are losing more and more purchasing power with it. And they are still just gov bonds that can default. The risk/reward sucks big time.
With just global stocks and gold, on first impression you would have done beter in most scenarios, in Iceland and recently Cyprus, you would have been untouched thanks to your stocks being global and the gold would have made you considerably richer in Iceland. Japan's deflationary collapse of the 90's would be hard since both stocks and gold went down but since your stocks are global, and those went up, you would also have preserved your purchasing power.
I like very much your approach to inflation. Instead of arguing how much prices are going up just go back to basics. Inflation = amount of money being printed. If you keep it simple like this it is clear that bonds and cash are a no-go as they are the one paying the bill.
Ofcourse such portfolio will be more volatile, so larger losses from time to time, but if I get overall larger profits that is fine for me. I am starting to prefer safety via favorable risk/reward over safety via lower volatility.
What global stocks do you prefer? Do you prefer certain funds for this?