retiring fully next Thursday.Tyler wrote: @Mathjak -- I actually prefer your pro-PP comments from the two weeks when you tried it out. You were quite insightful.
mathjak107 wrote: the problem looking with the PP is the cycles are very very long for assets like gold to have their day in the sun and things can look no so hot for quite a while. that was why i abandoned it back in the 1980's. in hind site it did well over such a long period.
did you know if you bought the PP BACK IN THE 1980'S on the worst possible day when gold peaked around 800 that just by rebalancing over those decades that before gold fell from the almost 2k high your return would have beaten the s&p return if you bought that too on the same day. i believe the gold averaged 9.80% vs the s&p 500 9.6%mathjak107 wrote:the portfolio didn't do much because it didn't loose much. traditional portfolios needed those gains to get back to where they were . the PP wasn't down .buddtholomew wrote: I am at a loss for words...this portfolio is very disappointing and it has trailed my 60/40 allocation substantially since 2009. No matter what anyone says, if gold sucks the PP sucks.
in fact looking at the last 15 years the return is about the same as a 100% equity investment in the s& p 500The shift in tone since then is striking. But the basic facts about the portfolios or the markets didn't change in the last month. The same qualities that made the PP appealing enough for you to invest millions and eloquently defend it just a few weeks ago still exist. The only thing that changed seems to be that you got cold feet and had a change of heart. Perhaps you realized that the PP outlook does not match your own, or even that it may not meet your personal needs. Frankly I think it's admirable to acknowledge when you made a decision against your nature. It would have been much less expensive to sleep on it before allowing the "lack of investor discipline" to take over and switching millions in the first place, but it happens to the best of us.mathjak107 wrote: (The PP) counts heavily on trends . gold has been a loser , bonds a loser and stocks treading water,. the other conservative model i used was up 1.10% this year and was a heavy bet on good times and low rates,
i swapped it this week for the permanent portfolio and put over 7 figures in. i think it is a safer bet since once we get something negative happening the pp can make some money
Where I think the discussion has gotten a little off course since then is the degree you have gone to justify your perfectly reasonable decision by going scorched earth on the PP in dozens of posts per day. I get the feeling you're trying to convince yourself you did the right thing more than you are trying to truly discuss the relative merits here to the same degree you did when you first joined. And that's a shame -- you have a lot to contribute.
In any case, please realize nobody here is attacking you for changing your mind and you do not need to justify or defend your decision. Just do it and be happy!
Aren't you retiring tomorrow?![]()
what changed is after I tried it again is the more I watched what was going on in it and how the pieces were interacting the more I realized I BELIEVED
it was a mistake and I think the investment climate for it was not the same as I thought .
yeah it was a snap decision based on a few days but I still believe the time for the pp is not now . it may not be in the future anymore either if things changed that much.
but time will tell. I think a slow continual trend of rising rates will just hurt the bonds and gold way to much and not worth the risk when I feel like that.
if I don't believe in what I am doing 100% I won't chance it.
in the mean time I am glad I am not down the 25k the pp would have fallen for me since then whether in the short term or not .