As the resident ingrate at times, I was happy to do it for you!barrett wrote: Me too! I just didn't want to sound like an ingrate.

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As the resident ingrate at times, I was happy to do it for you!barrett wrote: Me too! I just didn't want to sound like an ingrate.
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PP CPI
2005 10,000 190.7
2006 10,719 198.3
2007 11,914 202.416
2008 13,472 211.08
2009 13,815 211.143
2010 14,639 216.687
2011 16,553 220.223
2012 18,386 226.665
2013 19,533 230.28
2014 19,000 233.916
2015 20,854 233.707
+1!Mark Leavy wrote:
This is really good work. Thank you for sharing it. Pretty humbling.
Tyler wrote:
I ditched the bands in favor of annual rebalancing, but gained the ability to compare many portfolios apples-to-apples in the process. It seems like a reasonable tradeoff. The data may look a little different from previous charts as a result of different color scale, new source data, better inflation calculations, and the aforementioned rebalancing changes. But in general, I consider this improved.
Back to the OP, the worst total real return for the PP over any annual 3-year period is zero. The most recent 3-year period is just below average but nothing that unusual.
BTW, note that the worst total 3-year return for a 60-40 Boglehead portfolio over the same timeframe is a 31% loss. How would that make you feel?
I don't think the law of averages necessarily applies to the CPI because the formula may have been changed in a way that intentionally depresses the number. I have not verified this, but I have read that the formula changes included under-weighting and/or removing gas and food from the equation, and overweighting clothing and electronics. Gas and food are a substantial portion of many family budgets. Electronics and clothing are probably not nearly as big of a part of a typical family budget.Pointedstick wrote:That article seems misleading to me. Gold rising in price is no more inflation than stocks or bonds rising in price would be. Gold is an investment product, not a consumer product. Same with the commodities he describes. What do I care that the price of cocoa has gone up if the price of chocolate hasn't? The point about gas price inflation seems archaic today, as it's now fallen to below the level indicated in the article. And I don't understand how he can claim that taxes have gone up 9% a year for four years. Did I miss something? I certainly haven't seen my tax rates go up 35% in the past 4 years.jason wrote: If anyone is not familiar with this, there was an article in Time Magazine about it in 2013, which I highly recommend:
http://business.time.com/2013/03/12/if- ... p-so-much/
His point about wage stagnation reducing potential purchasing power and keeping price inflation low seems like a correct one, but that's a point orthogonal to inflation. It seems to contradict his point: if wage stagnation is keeping inflation low, how can he argue that inflation is actually higher than reported?
The nature of averages ensures that some costs are going up faster than the rate of inflation, and some are going up slower, or even falling. It may well be that inkjet printer ink (a real racket; buy a laser printer!) is rising faster than CPI, but simultaneously, gas prices may be plummeting.
Why are you using a 2-year T-Note and not a 1-year or less T-Bill? That bugs me. The duration is high enough to make a different in tight money scenarios.Tyler wrote: As you wish.![]()
YES. I was thinking exactly the same thing. Further note, I've seen lots of articles recommending 5 years of living expenses to be held in cash in retirement. Thus, if someone has a standard Boglehead portfolio at 25x expenses in retirement, their cash allocation is functionally similar to PP's. So great to have it baked right into the plan.Mark Leavy wrote: If your investments are 20 to 25 times your living expenses (4%SWR) then having 25% of them in cash gives you 4 or 5 years of cash. What a system.
Just because it reflects my personal PP and the data Craig uses here: https://web.archive.org/web/20160324133 ... l-returns/MachineGhost wrote: Why are you using a 2-year T-Note and not a 1-year or less T-Bill? That bugs me. The duration is high enough to make a different in tight money scenarios.
Good question. I mentioned earlier I changed the inflation calculation. My old method subtracted CAGR CPI-U from CAGR investments, which always bothered me precisely because of the potential variance drag. The new one as of the last few charts calculates the real return every year along the way before doing anything else, so it should be a lot more accurate.sophie wrote: Can I ask, how are you calculating the comparison to real returns? Are you computing annual CAGR and then subtracting the CPI? I wonder if that is actually not taking "variance drag" into account, which would favor the PP even more.
I really like the "Desert Portfolio." I do wonder about it not having a cash component though one could argue that with 60% ten-year notes it should spit out a lot of income each year. But that makes it potentially less tax efficient too. Might have to start another thread.Kevin K. wrote: The next step I'm trying to do on my own - without a fraction of your Excel skills! - is comparing these results to other kinds of "low fat tail" portfolios that I think are more useful alternative choices for the kind of defensively-minded investor who'd be drawn to an allocation like the PP. Desert's 60:30:10 (10 Year Treasury:S&P 500:Gold) fares very well in such a comparison, for example, while avoiding the big allocations to gold and long Treasuries that keep many from investing in - or staying with - the PP. I can't imagine anyone looking at the PP even considering an allocation that has more than 50% in equities.
[img width=350]http://i57.tinypic.com/6tg2vr.jpg[/img]Kevin K. wrote: The next step I'm trying to do on my own - without a fraction of your Excel skills! - is comparing these results to other kinds of "low fat tail" portfolios that I think are more useful alternative choices for the kind of defensively-minded investor who'd be drawn to an allocation like the PP.
Try backtesting Desert vs. a PP/Desert Hybrid... instead of 60% 10-year Treas, 30% ST Treas and 30% LT Treas. I think you'll like that combination, too.barrett wrote: I really like the "Desert Portfolio." I do wonder about it not having a cash component though one could argue that with 60% ten-year notes it should spit out a lot of income each year. But that makes it potentially less tax efficient too. Might have to start another thread.
What his long-term track record for this "market timing"?Kevin K. wrote: Rick Ferri has an interesting recent blog post on this relative to international equities:
http://www.rickferri.com/blog/investmen ... ri+Blog%29
Hmm... International portfolios are currently out of my wheelhouse. But I'll keep the request in mind if I expand data sets.Kike Moreno wrote: Really nice graphs Tyler, thanks a lot!
Since you ask for ideas/requests, we would like to see similar plots for the Euro PP described here: http://www.carterapermanente.es/evoluci ... ermanente/
Its composition is:
25% MSCI EMU
25% Germany Gov 30y
25% gold
25% Germany Gov 1y
The timeframe will only be 16 years but it should be enough to see how it looks...