"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!
The mysterious peaktotrough.com calculator...........
For the period 01-01-2010 to 03-05-2015, I allocate 100% to S&P500 and use "None" for rebalancing (the other options are the defaults). The output gives some returns under "Tbill" as well as under "S&P500" and adds them together to get the total return. The first entry in the "Tbill" column is 0, so the nonzero growth in that column is from 0 initial investment! There are other instances of the same sort of behavior. What am I missing here? Can I rely on the output from the calculator?
When I try a 33/33/33/1 portfolio from 1-1-1975 to today with 35/15 bands, the S&P 500 and T Bond components match each year for 40 years. I tried several times. This problem may exist with the 4x25 but I need to wrap up for the morning
Long time reader, first time poster. Too many people to thank for informative posts over the years, just hoping I can start to contribute a bit to pay back my debt to you all.
There is a section towards the back which reminded me of this fantastic thread where they say the global equity and debt market caps are respectively 48 and 41 trillion dollars. If you include gold as 9 trillion dollars worth, and then M3 of 18 trillion then you get the following ratios:
Equities: 41%
Bonds: 35%
Gold: 8%
Cash: 16%
Your mileage may vary but I thought this might be of interest.
although i am not keen on gold at all i think it is a well balanced retirement portfolio , in my opinion i wouldn't go longer than intermediate term on the bonds though .
Last edited by mathjak107 on Fri Jul 31, 2015 8:18 am, edited 1 time in total.
Nice, a K�kkenbacher! I'll implement it after next stock market crash, and only if mortgage vs house value vs net worth is still in order. Until then - Desert portfolio!
Nice article. Thanks! It's always nice to see people talking about the variety of simple asset allocations available and sharing Harry Browne's ideas.
Now if we can just get these financial guys to stop using single arbitrary start dates to draw definitive conclusions about portfolios. I think a major draw of the PP is not the returns alone but how incredibly consistent it was no matter what timefreame you sample. They start to get there with the Sortino talk, but IMHO it goes deeper than that. The PP is simply an extremely dependable portfolio.
Thought I would post this. Conceptually one could implement the PP classically or with risk parity weighting. In the latter, cash is more something you dial in later to tame whatever mix you may be doing. (from 1978 using Portfolioviz)
CAGR Stdev Best Yr Worst Yr Max. DD SRatio
9.31% 9.36% 47.49% -12.38% -20.76% 0.53 (SBG eq wt - 33.33%)
9.48% 8.75% 36.51% -9.53% -16.75% 0.58 (32S/43B/25G)
Applying what I know about statistical analysis to this question...I think you'd have run a permutation test, also known as a bootstrap. I would do this: Take each year's gain and average it with the year before and year after (since a given year's performance is not independent of adjacent years). Randomly shuffle each year since 1972 (or 1974 if you're afraid of the artificial gold spikes in 1972-73), then string together the first 15 years that come up to produce your outcome statistics. Do this several hundred times, or as long as it takes to get a stable distribution. Hope one of you has some time to do this ? (Sadly I don't.)
Going further than that, I'd label each year according to the economic condition represented i.e. prosperity, deflation, inflation, recession. Make sure each of these is represented in the random sample according to historical distributions.
You'd then have to run this for each combination of asset %'s to determine the optimal set. I believe this is what HB did at some point, which is how he arrived at the 25x4 percentages. I'm not sure if he balanced the economic conditions though, so he may have overweighted inflation & recession. That's why the Golden Butterfly is an interesting variation, to me: it recognizes that prosperity has dominated long enough that is not an unreasonable expectation that it will continue to do so going forward.
For me I’ve long thought the actual secret sauce of the PP is the premise that we can not predict...ergo a lot of fancy statistical analysis flies in the face of the premise. We do have history and there we have to make an assumption that future will resemble past.
Good moment for full disclosure...to really properly have done the analysis for risk parity I would have ran the to date st dev each year and tweaked port%s slightly.
25% each is near zero predictive...but back to history, asset to Econ condition was based on historicals.
My backtest assumed the same assets PP came up with and that long term volatility was a tad more “neutral” given some assets have more jet fuel than others.
Nice article. Thanks! It's always nice to see people talking about the variety of simple asset allocations available and sharing Harry Browne's ideas.
Now if we can just get these financial guys to stop using single arbitrary start dates to draw definitive conclusions about portfolios. I think a major draw of the PP is not the returns alone but how incredibly consistent it was no matter what timefreame you sample. They start to get there with the Sortino talk, but IMHO it goes deeper than that. The PP is simply an extremely dependable portfolio.
Tyler,
I know you are a person of great humility so it's not easy for you to praise yourself.
But am I correct to assume that all the work you have done at your web site subsequent to the start of this Topic now supersedes just about all the information in the prior posts here?
In other words, you've come up with better, more refined models which use better information?
That'd be my best guess!
But I'm also almost certain you'll downplay what you've accomplished.
Vinny
Above provided by: Vinny, who always says: "I only regret that I have but one lap to give to my cats." AND "I'm a more-is-more person."
vnatale wrote: ↑Mon Jan 27, 2020 12:10 pm
But am I correct to assume that all the work you have done at your web site subsequent to the start of this Topic now supersedes just about all the information in the prior posts here?
In other words, you've come up with better, more refined models which use better information?
That'd be my best guess!
There are lots of smart people on this forum, and I wouldn't claim that anything on PC automatically supercedes the opinions of anyone other than myself. But I've spent countless hours over the years improving the quality of my data and tools, and my analysis skills have definitely gotten more sophisticated over time. One of the perks of constantly reminding yourself to stay humble is that you never get so over-confident that you shut yourself off to new information. So I continue to learn new things over time and am happy to share.