20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

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stone
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by stone »

Clive regarding high beta stock holdings, are you familiar with BRSC? From what I can see, the discount increases when the market falls and vice versa. Surely that must add to potential rebalancing gains? I've got my stocks as equal parts BRSC, CTY and TEMIT.
Silver on the face of it does not seem like "high beta gold" to me. The lows of silver seem to mirror the lows of stocks whilst the highs of silver seem to mirror the highs of gold. So it doesn't help if, as with the UK PP at the end of 2008, you want to use gold to rebalance into stocks.
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by stone »

Clive, within the context of a PP, I think the discount/premium does have a very strong tendency to swing things in the way you want. Discounts increase at the stock lows and tighten/change to premiums at the highs. I've been really puzzled why that hasn't led to closed-end funds being a part of the standard PP prescription ???
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by MachineGhost »

Trading, not investing.
stone wrote: Isn't it true that the Ranaissance Technologies Medallion Fund has had a 30% CAGR for decades? I think Ranaissance Technologies talk about each fund strategy having a certain maximum fund size. So the Medallion Fund has long been closed to new entrants (it is just for employees) and although the holders are employees they charge themselves massive (>30%) "management fees" so as to avoid outgrowing the strategy.
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stone
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by stone »

Machine Ghost, I'm not sure what you're getting at.
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by Storm »

stone wrote: Machine Ghost, I'm not sure what you're getting at.
He's just pointing out that it's not some buy and hold passive fund, it's an actively traded fund, more comparable to a hedge fund than a Vanguard type fund.
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by Wonk »

It's been exactly 2 years to the day on this experiment.  Here are the updated numbers:

1xPP: 26.47% (0 rebalance)

2xPP: 62.80% (2 rebalance)

Maybe we can have another 2008 liquidity crisis sometime soon so we can see what happens to these funds.  I've also been tracking an ultimate buy and hold (4-fund) PP, a small cap PP, a 2x small cap PP, a 30-30-30-10(cash) PP, and a 3xPP I added to the mix starting in October '11 out of curiosity.  The main observation is the 1x vs 2x PP.  Will report back in January 2013.
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by beafet »

beafet wrote: How about:

BGU 33%
TMF 33%
UGLD 33%

???
Checked it today (a little over 2 months from when I started the simulated portfolio at SmartMoney.com), it is currently at 17.60% It fluctuates a percent or two or three most days, but like the standard PP, seems to average an upward trend. Fun to watch anyway.
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by modeljc »

Wonk,

What re balance bands would you use for 3XPP, 33% each just for fun.  Is it 46/20?  Anybody out there willing to risk real money? 
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by clacy »

I might be tempted to look at a 2x HBPP after a 10-15% draw down in the standard version.
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by modeljc »

The follwoing link warns of Leverage Trap for 2X and 3X products .  Several other sites also say that the volativity is what kills the returns over longer periods.  http://kidgas.hubpages.com/hub/BewareLe ... oxicAssets
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by Wonk »

modeljc wrote: Wonk,

What re balance bands would you use for 3XPP, 33% each just for fun.  Is it 46/20?  Anybody out there willing to risk real money? 
The 3xPP would be 25%x4, so the same 15/35 rebalancing bands would apply.  For a 33x3PP(no cash) I don't know...

As for the decay issue in leveraged funds, it may exist.  I haven't seen it over 25 months of tracking the leveraged PP, but it may exist.  As of today the numbers were approx 28% 1xPP and 68% 2xPP.
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by modeljc »

Wonk,

I went to Yahoo Historical prices.  I looked at the period Oct. 17, 2011 to Feb. 15, 2012.  GLD was 162.62 and went to 168.11 for a 3.3% increase.  UGL was 92.24 and went to 95.81 for a 3.9% increase.  UGLD was 50.10 and went to 51.38 for a 2.6% increase.  The 3/ product UGLD should be up 9.9%.  I then went to ETF replay and they had GLD up 3.4% and UGL up 3.9%. 
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by Wonk »

modeljc wrote: Wonk,

I went to Yahoo Historical prices.  I looked at the period Oct. 17, 2011 to Feb. 15, 2012.  GLD was 162.62 and went to 168.11 for a 3.3% increase.  UGL was 92.24 and went to 95.81 for a 3.9% increase.  UGLD was 50.10 and went to 51.38 for a 2.6% increase.  The 3/ product UGLD should be up 9.9%.  I then went to ETF replay and they had GLD up 3.4% and UGL up 3.9%. 
Leverage funds are created to reflect 2x or 3x daily movements and not any other way.  On an expanded time horizon with little trending movement, it's easy to see tracking error in isolation.  The question for 2x or 3x PP is what happens to the overall portfolio collectively?  I started tracking a 3xPP beginning Oct 24, 2011 and compared it to the same starting date for a 1x and 2x.  The results as of today:

1x: 4.03
2x: 7.25
3x: 10.13

When the 1x portfolio is collectively trending up, the 2xPP experiences more than 2x performance over an extended timeline.  When the 1x portfolio trends sideways, you see the 2x and 3x fail to perform exactly 2x and 3x of the benchmark.  I guess you could label this decay, but it's really just the result of daily compounding.  We haven't seen these funds in a market panic or tight-money recession where the 1x does not perform well, so there's no way to tell how they'd perform.  I suspect if the 1x returns -4% as it did in 1981, the 2x would return something like -10% as the daily compounding would have the same effect(inversely) as what we've seen when it is trending up.
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by modeljc »

Wonk,

On a collective portfolio I got the same numbers that you did: 1X=4.03, 2X=7.3 & 3X=10.1. WOW!  I probably will never understand why this tracks.
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by 6 Iron »

This post and the one Clive made above it make sense to me. In a low interest rate environment, where is the downside?  Are there other factors in the decay besides borrowing costs for leverage?
Clive wrote: With cost of borrowing so low, a 3x PP might achieve 3 times 1x PP rewards.

Scaling for similar potential rewards to a 1x entails holding perhaps something like

8.3% BGU (3x stocks)
8.3% TMF (3x 30 year T)
8.3% UGLD (3x gold)
75% cash

If those that gain rise >3x and those that lose decline <3x !!!

You'll also hit more frequent rebalance points and potentially capture better 'cost-averaging' benefits. Yet you're holding 75% in cash (less overall risk) !!!
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by modeljc »

Clive, I think you may on your way to building a super brick Sh*t house in Arkansas.  I would love to have 75% in cash and only have 8.3% in BGU and 8.3% in TMF and 8.3 in UGLD if it would do one time PP.

I was going to post this on the thread that Medium Tex started by asking will there be another tight money recession.  Instead, what if you could be 75% safe and maybe you get something out of the BGU, TMF, & UDLD.  My post to Medium Tex is:

Maybe I can see the bottom of the market and cycle.  I can’t see tomorrow or next year.  The PP will do well and make money until the cycle ends.  I lived through the end of the 1980’s cycle.  I was 32 and had 100% allocation in gold.  I was lucky and did not know the risk I was taking.  I did not make any money, but I did keep what I started with. 

For fun, and if I can see the way this ends, let’s play a rise in interest rates.  Inflation last year was +3.6%.  If you add a return for the long Treasury bond you get maybe +2%.  I don’t know when or what will cause this rise.  Let’s play the TLT yields 5.5% to 6.0% and it sets off a decline in all assets.

At the end of the cycle you have $100,000 and you have done well in PP.

1. Play that America is in a deep recession and the earning on the S&P 500 are at $55 and you apply a 7 P.E.  You get about 400 on the S&P 500 or a loss of maybe  68%.
2. Play that the long bond should be golden in this period, but rates are up.  You may have a loss of 50%. 
3. Should this happen first for whatever reason, it would likely drive us in to a deep recession much like what Volker did. 
4. Gold is your call.  Let’s say you lost 50% from where it was trading.  It was at $750 or so in 2008. 
5. Let’s play your cash is saving you and you still have 100% or $25,000.
Summary:
Stocks are worth $8,000
Long bonds are worth $12,500
Gold is worth $12,500
Cash is worth $25,000
Total=  $58,000
Loss of 42% and I declare you a BIG winner.

Why:

You have made money all the way to the end.  May be a long period before this plays out.

You have not lost any money until the end.

You have a big come back position.
You did not panic and sell at the bottom.

You know what you believe in: PP and rebalance.

You will not say you had the wrong Investments and start a new approach.

What if I can’t see right and PP lost less than 42%
If I can follow this script I will go to the beach and sit back for maybe 17 years or so and wait to rebalance PP.
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by MediumTex »

That scenario above has some pretty wild projections in it.

It's very hard for me to imagine the stock market losing 68% and bonds also losing 50% of their value.  It's just hard to imagine money exiting the stock market and bond market at such a high rate.  Where would that money be going?

If fear was that high I'm not sure why gold would be losing 50% of its value.

I think that a more realistic tight money recession scenario is the one that actually occurred in the early 1980s where stocks did okay, cash did really well and bonds and gold did very poorly.
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by moda0306 »

MT,

Stocks lost -3.7% in 1981, while LT bonds netted out to 1.9% gain.

A tight money recession would more likely, IMO, be hard on stocks, as LT bonds act on investors' expectations of future rates, and don't necessarily move up as high as ST rates... hence the "inverted yield curve means a recession's coming" trend.
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by MachineGhost »

6 Iron wrote: This post and the one Clive made above it make sense to me. In a low interest rate environment, where is the downside?  Are there other factors in the decay besides borrowing costs for leverage?
Don't underestimate the power of tracking error to ruin you.  Check out this chart:

Image

Green is spot.  Magenta 2x.  Turquoise 3x.

Unfortunately, the charting period is only limited to 3 months, but longer term the effects of decay and tracking error is absolutely devestating.

MG
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by MediumTex »

I really don't understand why the decay illustrated above isn't showing up in the results of this portfolio.

The first time Wonk posted this idea I thought to myself "yeah, except the decay is going to kill you."
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by clacy »

MediumTex wrote: I really don't understand why the decay illustrated above isn't showing up in the results of this portfolio.

The first time Wonk posted this idea I thought to myself "yeah, except the decay is going to kill you."
MG's chart is for natty which will have contango effecting the ETF's which primarily rely on futures.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Conta ... dation.png
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by MediumTex »

Great stuff Clive.  Thanks for posting.
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by Lone Wolf »

moda0306 wrote: Stocks lost -3.7% in 1981, while LT bonds netted out to 1.9% gain.
Wow, how'd that happen?  30-year rates were up something like 200 basis points in 1981.  I'd have thought that would bring on a large enough capital loss to surely keep LT's negative in '81.
Clive wrote: Yet another factor to consider is that whilst you could shoot for the sky (20% annualised as this thread title suggests), its better IMO to instead only consider using leveraged funds to replicate a 1x PP.
Brilliant analysis as usual, Clive.  Great stuff.
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by moda0306 »

LW,

I'm using Craig's charts on PP returns, which arguably have softened losses during the 70's when the fund he uses as a measure isn't long-dated enough or something...

So I could be wrong on that.
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Re: 20% annual returns over 40 years...interested?

Post by modeljc »

Lone Wolf,

Wow, how'd that happen?  30-year rates were up something like 200 basis points in 1981.  I'd have thought that would bring on a large enough capital loss to surely keep LT's negative in '81.

I don't remember the exact details but my boss retired with 100% of his money in tax free Munis.  After Volker raised rates he had 33% of his capital left to live out his life. 
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