
c'mon
Moderator: Global Moderator
For a long time I never watched my portfolio. I didn't even bother to open my 401k statements and this went on for years. Maybe kind of like not wanting to know whether you have cancer or not, or thinking a watched pot never boils. Not sure which. I figured I really didn't have much control over it any way so what was the point?Kshartle wrote:Many do but don't admit it.annieB wrote: "I like to watch"
neither in google finance you watch your PP during the year?ns2 wrote:For a long time I never watched my portfolio. I didn't even bother to open my 401k statements and this went on for years. Maybe kind of like not wanting to know whether you have cancer or not, or thinking a watched pot never boils. Not sure which. I figured I really didn't have much control over it any way so what was the point?Kshartle wrote:Many do but don't admit it.annieB wrote: "I like to watch"
It all changed when I started the PP a few years ago. Now I am more tempted than I ever was before, I guess because it was a major act of taking charge of my portfolio and now I want to see how it is playing out. Also, has a lot to do with nearing retirement and asset preservation becoming much more important after the 2008 meltdown.
But I'm trying to go back to the way it was before. Haven't looked closely since the end of August and don't plan to again until late January when my planned yearly re-balancing check is scheduled to take place.
Seems like just yesterday people were saying they didn't see stocks going anywhere for a long time.portart wrote: I don't see PP going anywhere for a long time. Gold is getting sold on every run up, stocks aren't pulling it up much and when QE stops, it could take a major gold hit.
Wait... is this a time of prosperity?buddtholomew wrote: Why do we continue to ignore the fact that 25% allocated to equities is insufficient to buoy the portfolio in times of prosperity? The answer is not to hold a speculative VP heavy in equities.
Nice job ignoring the question. A 30% YTD increase in equities is insufficient to offset declines in the other assets. That is a fact even if you believe the economy isn't improving.flyingpylon wrote:Wait... is this a time of prosperity?buddtholomew wrote: Why do we continue to ignore the fact that 25% allocated to equities is insufficient to buoy the portfolio in times of prosperity? The answer is not to hold a speculative VP heavy in equities.
I don't understand why you don't just liquidate your PP and move into a 60/40 portfolio or something. You will never be able to participate much in a stock rally with only 25% of your portfolio in stocks. If tracking equities better is a high priority for you, the PP is probably never going to cut it. If anything it's sort of an anti-prosperity portfolio.buddtholomew wrote: Nice job ignoring the question. A 30% YTD increase in equities is insufficient to offset declines in the other assets. That is a fact even if you believe the economy isn't improving.
It is for me. 50% of (vp+pp) is stocks. The rest of the vp is corp bonds & munis, mostly.buddtholomew wrote: Why do we continue to ignore the fact that 25% allocated to equities is insufficient to buoy the portfolio in times of prosperity? The answer is not to hold a speculative VP heavy in equities.
Just let us know when you have found a low-volatility portfolio that participates fully in an equity run-up. I'm sure many people would be interested in that.buddtholomew wrote: Why cant the PP stand alone without a VP?
edsanville wrote: The HBPP has apparently yielded -4.01% over the past 12 months. Unless a big rally comes up in the next 1.5 months, 2013 is going to be a down year for the HBPP. It will be the 3rd or 4th down year since 1973, depending on how you measure it.
It sucks that my first full year invested in the HBPP was a down year. It makes me feel like I have supernaturally terrible luck.
But, on the other hand: it's the 2nd or 3rd worst year since 1974 for the HBPP... and it was only down 4.01%! That's pretty impressive, when you think about it.
Hopefully 2014 will be better.
In a thread asking what it would take to make one abandon the pp, I think MT said it would have to go down 3 years in a row. Down how much, I don't know. I think I will adopt the same policy, although I certainly don't expect it to happen anytime soon.edsanville wrote: ...
It sucks that my first full year invested in the HBPP was a down year. It makes me feel like I have supernaturally terrible luck.
But, on the other hand: it's the 2nd or 3rd worst year since 1974 for the HBPP... and it was only down 4.01%! That's pretty impressive, when you think about it.
Hopefully 2014 will be better.
I sincerely doubt that gold and bonds will soar in response to falling equity prices. I suspect gold declines and investors shun long-term treasuries as the current mindset is for yields to rise. This portfolio has seen its best days...dualstow wrote:In a thread asking what it would take to make one abandon the pp, I think MT said it would have to go down 3 years in a row. Down how much, I don't know. I think I will adopt the same policy, although I certainly don't expect it to happen anytime soon.edsanville wrote: ...
It sucks that my first full year invested in the HBPP was a down year. It makes me feel like I have supernaturally terrible luck.
But, on the other hand: it's the 2nd or 3rd worst year since 1974 for the HBPP... and it was only down 4.01%! That's pretty impressive, when you think about it.
Hopefully 2014 will be better.
Sure, stocks are flying high right now, but it will be nice to have bonds and gold when stocks inevitably plummet.
The question is, will my bonds and/or gold soar, or just come back up to breakeven?![]()
If you truly believe that, isn't getting out now the best course of action? Since you hate this portfolio and feel pessimistic about its future, why continue to torture yourself?buddtholomew wrote: This portfolio has seen its best days...
My sentiments exactly. In my own time, thank you.Pointedstick wrote:If you truly believe that, isn't getting out now the best course of action? Since you hate this portfolio and feel pessimistic about its future, why continue to torture yourself?buddtholomew wrote: This portfolio has seen its best days...
Where's the money going, then? It just about has to be in gold, bonds, stocks, or cash.buddtholomew wrote:I sincerely doubt that gold and bonds will soar in response to falling equity prices. I suspect gold declines and investors shun long-term treasuries as the current mindset is for yields to rise. This portfolio has seen its best days...