https://web.archive.org/web/20160324133 ... portfolio/
But before this time I was largely an index investor and had been for years. I see the Permanent Portfolio as an indexing approach, with a couple mods to handle some of the weaknesses of stocks/bond indexing a little better.
However before the indexing conversion happened I was led down the primrose path by market timing, stock analysis voodoo, etc. My final straw that led me to indexing was following the Foolish Four strategy in the late-1990s that led to significant losses in the early 2000s. I should also mention the losses were so bad and lagged the markets so much that even the Motley Fool abandoned the strategy.
I was even, for a time in the mid-1990s, in a fund that used high speed computerized trading. Because, being a computer guy, computers must obviously know best on how to do stock trading, right? ::) These and other mistakes cost me a lot of money in missed opportunity by not just buying simple stock index funds and being done with it.Our thinking and our expectations for this strategy (and all Dow-based strategies) have changed. Please note that the returns quoted below are based on calendar-year portfolios for the period 1974-1999. Additional research has shown that investors cannot expect such high returns from these strategies in the future.
Well it's been an interesting road and while indexing stocks and bonds was good, I think the Permanent Portfolio gives it an extra edge of performance and safety I enjoy. I think I've reached the end of my road in searching.
So what is your story on your biggest investment flops? Don't be shy, if you have a good story we may drop it in the book so others can learn from it.