rocketdog wrote:
As for increasing my PP over time, I view the PP as a relatively conservative approach, a "safe haven" of sorts. So as I accumulate more and more retirement assets, I want to protect them as I get closer to retirement. I don't want to be like the boomers who were heavily in equities and on the verge of retirement when the recession hit.
Here's an analogy: imagine you're at a casino playing blackjack. You know you're going to win some hands and lose some hands. Each time you win, you put half your winnings in your pocket and put the other half back into your pool of gambling money. Even if your pool eventually runs dry, you'll still have the money in your pocket. In this analogy, your pocket is the PP and your pool is the VP.
Good analogy. I agree that you need to keep something in reserve. Always. But the amount I need to keep in reserve is 100% when I'm first getting started in life. I sure didn't put my first $1000 or even my first $5000 into the stock market! But it is 100% only when first getting started.
As I accumulate assets the percentage needed in safe reserve declines and hopefully never again need be 100% of my assets. I keep "enough" in reserve, and as long as I have "enough" in reserve, the rest of my assets can be used for other things. Like visiting a casino. Except if I take chances like that with my retirement, I'm going to be taking the house side, not the players...
For my analogy, imagine you own the casino and people keep paying to come and play. As long as people keep paying to play, why do you care if the appraiser comes in and says your business is worth 2x what it was worth last year because tourism is up, or it is only worth 1/2 because convention bookings are down? People keep paying to play, so why would you want to sell it off when you can just keep taking the income it generates just as you've been doing for years and years?
Real life, instead of owning a casino I own about 50 businesses that all pay me part of their income. If I've owned these businesses on average more than 10 years and they have been paying me what I need to retire then I'm comfortable. I don't care if the appraiser says they gained 100% or lost 50% as long as they keep paying me as they have historically paid me (even thru 2008, 2001, the 1970s and in some cases the 1930's. Now if someone were to cut my take or not increase it the way I expect, we'll have words. But other than that I let the managers run the businesses and I spend the money.
(OK, confession, I only own a minute fraction of each business, but never the less I am listed as an owner of each of those businesses.)