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Present Permanent Portfolio Performance…

May 7th, 2010 at 9:55 am » Comments Off

So, how has the Harry Browne Permanent Portfolio done so far in 2010?

Thru yesterday’s market turmoil, the components have done the following:

VTI +2.8% (Stocks)

TLT +9.2% (Bonds)

SHY +1.3% (Cash)

GLD +10.4% (Gold)

And the total portfolio, assuming 25% in each at the start of 2010 is…

+5.9%

How’s that compare with YOUR portfolio?



Permanent Portfolio Discussion Forum

April 30th, 2010 at 10:07 am » Comments Off

If you have any questions about Harry Browne’s Permanent Portfolio, head over to the Permanent Portfolio Discussion Forum that CraigR just started over at CrawlingRoad.com. Experts there have studied it from all angles and can help you get it implemented yourself.

And here’s the book you need to read:



iPad Cat Teaches Investing

April 24th, 2010 at 3:02 pm » Comments Off

The latest video from MadMoneyMachine studios:



IFA Radio Interviews John Bogle

April 9th, 2010 at 7:08 am » Comments Off

I put the video together for this audio interview with Vanguard Group founder John Bogle. I hope you like it.



Permanent Portfolio to Perfect Portfolio?

March 31st, 2010 at 9:18 am » Comments Off

Harry Browne’s Permanent Portfolio is so simple. Split your investments into equal parts stocks, bonds, cash, and gold. Is it too simple? Can it be improved yet remain simple? I used Simba’s spreadsheet (from Bogleheads.org) to back-test some alternatives from 1972 through 2009.

First, the original portfolio:

Stocks: VTSMX (Total US Stock Market)
Bonds: VUSTX (Long-term Bond)
Cash: VMPXX (Money Market)
Gold (Kitco 1972-2004, GLD 2004-2009)

yielded the following return vs. risk:

P1 (HBPP):

Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR): 9.1%
Standard Deviation (Risk): 8.02%
Sharpe Ratio: 0.46

Next, substitute 2-Year Short Term Treasuries (VFISX) instead of Money Market:

P2 (P1 with 2-yr T-Bills):

CAGR: 9.5%
Standard Deviation (Risk): 8.17%
Sharpe Ratio: 0.50

Alternatively, how about for the “Prosperity” component, i.e., Stocks, we substitute  half US Small-Cap Value and half Emerging Markets for the US Total Stock Market:

P3 (P1 with 12.5% VISVX and 12.5% VEIEX):

CAGR: 10.8%
Standard Deviation (Risk): 8.57%
Sharpe Ratio: 0.64

And finally, combine P2 and P3 to have 2-yr T-Bills, US Small Cap Value, and Emerging Market:

P4 (P2 with 12.5% VISVX and 12.5% VEIEX):

CAGR: 11.3%
Standard Deviation (Risk): 8.65%
Sharpe Ratio: 0.68

And just for comparison I ran “Solver” on Simba’s spreadsheet to find the least risky portfolio that yielded 11.3% of that time span. It came up with the following mix:

VISVX (US Small Cap Value): 13.43%
VEIEX (Emerging Market): 14.30%
PCRIX (Commodities): 5.19%
VFITX (5-Yr T-Bills): 49.31%
VFISX (2-Yr T-Bills): 7.88%
Gold: 9.88%

Which resulted in:

P5 (Solver optimized portfolio):

CAGR: 11.3%
Standard Deviation (Risk): 7.25%
Sharpe Ratio: 0.80

And here is a chart with them all plotted, CAGR vs. Standard Deviaion (Risk):

image

I’ve played with lots of combinations of back-tested portfolios through many different time periods and one thing is common: substituting VISVX and VEIEX for VTSMX resulted in higher returns and a higher Sharpe Ratio. And short term T-Bills for cash also added nicely.

Note that I only show the Solver optimized portfolio (P5) for reference. I believe it strays too far from the Permanent Portfolio strategy to be safe going forward.

I talked about P4 on MMM-175: The Perfect Portfolio. While I am not yet invested in it, it is the one I am targeting. I do not expect a CAGR of 11.3% for the next 37 years, but if I can get 6% I will be very happy.



New Video: Super Nova to Black Hole

March 24th, 2010 at 7:52 am » Comments Off

It is truly surprising, amazing, astonishing to find out how poorly active managers do when compared to indexes. Watch this video:



New Video: Sweet Surrender

March 10th, 2010 at 10:47 pm » Comments Off

Have a look at this video. It points out the importance of long-term data, the irrelevance of even reliable advice, the emphasis of trading by the financial media, and the wisdom of Nobel prize winners regarding investments.

Oh, and don’t miss THE END-ing!



Harry Browne Investment Show Archives

March 8th, 2010 at 9:06 am » Comments Off

I have had a number of emails from people trying to get into the Harry Browne investment radio show archives. The links at the original site appear to be down, but fortunately Craig at CrawlingRoad blog has a mirror that you can use. I’ve recently listened to all 44 investment shows and am now going through his political shows starting back from 2002. (I have my own personal mirror of those.)



The Value of the Right Advisor

February 13th, 2010 at 2:47 pm » Comments Off

The voice sounds familiar…



It’s iPad!

January 27th, 2010 at 4:42 pm » Comments Off

Just a quick post to review the predictions I made and how well they turned out.

  • Name: iPad (Ding!)
  • Size: 9.7″ (Ding! I said 10″)
  • Form Factor: Basically a large iPod Touch (Ding!)
  • Home Button? (Ding!)
  • Aluminum back? (Ding!)
  • Buttons and holes: headphone (Ding), microphone (Ding), volume (Ding), mute (Ding), sleep (Ding)
  • USB port? (Bzzzt!) Only has Apple dock. But that serves to connect to your computer. And it does have adapters for cameras.
  • Orientation: (Ding! Both portrait and landscape)
  • WiFi (Ding)
  • Internet connectivity: (Ding? 3G is optional. Nice surprise that it is easy to get 250MB/mo for $14.95)
  • Won’t have a phone (Ding!)
  • Software: (“It will be like an iPhone with some iWork apps available for download” DING! DING!) It actually runs iPhone apps like I expected.
  • Books: (“They will probably start selling books through iTunes.” DING! DING!)
  • GPS and big maps (DING!)
  • Cameras: (BZZZZZT!) Not three, not two, not even one camera. Maybe version 2?
  • Cost? I said $899 dropping to $699. I assumed it would have a 3G card installed. Their price for 3G? $629 to $829. Plus you want to buy the keyboard, case, and adapters. So I give myself a DING! for the price as well.

So I think I got most everything right. Big misses on cameras and USB port. Bottom line is that the iPad is pretty much exactly what I pictured it to be in my mind. I will own one (or more).



Time To Talk Tablet: iTablet, iSlate, iBook, iPad

January 12th, 2010 at 10:57 pm » Comments Off

Take your pick of names but we are all awaiting the next holy product to be announced from Apple. After “The Jesus Phone” which had people literally weeping in their seats upon its unveiling, the Apple Table is set to be the next  revolutionary gadget that we didn’t realize we couldn’t live without. Apple iPad?

I have a small window of time before the official announcement is made before which I can make my own predictions, wish lists, and observations about the new miracle device. Apple is expected to announce it on January 27th at a media event. I guess there is not enough time for them to get all my wish list items incorporated into the thing, but at least they will have my wish list for their 2nd generation of it by 2011.

First, my preferred name for the thing is the Apple iPad. I like the way it rhymes with iPod and it is alliterative with iPhone as well. iSlate is my 2nd choice just because it sounds cool. iBook would be my 3rd choice as it would fit into the MacBook line nicely, but iBook places too much emphasis on this thing being just an eReader and not enough on the other things I want it to do. Read on. iTablet? Sounds like something Dell would call it.

Form factor. The iPad will have the 10” screen everyone is expecting and will basically be a “Honey I Blew Up the iPhone” looking thing. A home button at the bottom and that’s all you see physically. Aluminum back, buttons and holes along the edges. Nice places to put your fingers as you hold it in portrait or landscape orientation.

Buttons and holes will include those found on the iPhone: Headphone/microphone jack, volume buttons, mute switch, sleep button. But it will also include USB. The BIG question is will it include a power hole or a iPod dock hole? You see, it makes a difference in deciding if the iPad will SYNC with a computer or will BE a computer. Will your iTunes library still be on your MacBook and you have to sync it with the iPad, or will the iPad have enough storage to hold all your music by itself? My guess: it will BE a computer and can run iTunes on its own. It could still share music with your MacBook with that family sharing  route and it could share photos and files and so forth. So my money is on it having a nice magnetic power adapter with all kinds of neat accessories we can buy like a car charger and external battery. PLEASE let me use the same magnetic adapter as my MacBook. My guess: they won’t! (They make TONS of money on those things!) And make some kind of adapter that lets me plug it into all my various iPod connectors in the car and external speakers.

The USB adapter will allow commonly needed connections like cameras, flips, and, wait for it… iPhones! And yes, i want to be able to charge my iPhone from the battery of my iPad. You won’t need USB for the external keyboard and mouse because those will connect via BlueTooth. And while you are typing and mousing on your iPad, you will need it to somehow stand up, won’t you? So I’m wondering if this thing will have some sort of picture-frame-like stand on its back that lets you sit it on a desk or table either in portrait or landscape orientation.

I keep harping on orientation. For me this is key to the iPad: being able to read books and long pdfs on it in portrait mode. Already it is more useful than a MacBook for that reason alone. I find reading books in landscape to be too small a window into the text. I don’t know how many others are like me, but the first thing I do on a new computer is move all of those dock or taskbar things from the bottom of the screen over to the left side. That gives me a little more reading room on my MacBook. And I try to trim menu bars and status bars away as well. With the iPad in portrait mode I will be in reading heaven even on a smaller 10” screen.

How will this thing get on the Internet is a key question. Of course it will have Wi-Fi. But will it be on the 3G and EDGE networks as well? Will I have to buy more service from ATT Wireless? Will it tether through my iPhone? Will the iPad BE a phone? My hopes are that it will BE a phone that uses the same phone number as my iPhone, that I can talk on either one, that I can switch between one and the other during a call, that I can surf the net on the iPad while talking on the iPhone, that it can let me make and receive calls with my BlueTooth headset, and that it can act perfectly well as a desktop speakerphone. Not too much to ask, right? If iPhone was the “Jesus Phone” then what would this iPad be, the “GOD” phone?

But my guess of what will actually happen is more limited. I think for this first release it will have Wi-Fi and 3G and EDGE DATA networking only. You will have to add some sort of appendage to your ATT Wireless iPhone plan to get remote internet on the thing. No calls, talking is for iPhones and that is the way we say it will be, says Apple. Maybe in a later release they can figure out if it makes sense to add a phone or not. Perhaps too many people will end up using the data plan to make Skype calls and they will come around.

What about software? Is the iPad a small MacBook or a big iPhone? Wow, this is a tougher one to call. I can make a good case for both. You want to be able to run iWork on the thing, right? But yet Apple wants you to buy 10 billion apps for the thing too. So like a flash it hits me: it runs MacOS but with an iPhone mode so you can do BOTH. But the iPhone OS is all about limiting what you can do. Will Apple want to limit what you can do in the iPad? If so, it will be more like an iPhone with some iWork apps available for download. Actually in that case they will probably throw in some iWork apps for free but you gotta buy all the other cool stuff.

How will you use this thing if you already have a MacBook and an iPhone like I do? You will have your iPhone in your pocket, your MacBook on your desk, and your iPad in your hands. On the couch, in a seat, or in bed. This is the “media comes to me” device. Read a book? Sure, the iPhone already has the Kindle app from Amazon so you can buy thousands of books for $9.99 and start reading. Knowing Apple, they will probably start selling books through the iTunes store. Don’t wanna miss a market, right? But I better be able to get pdfs onto this thing easily and freely or it goes in the trash.

You will also of course watch movies, listen to music, surf the net, and make blog postings. Standard fare. It is the book reading thing that makes the iPad so special. And of course it will be the first successful touch screen computer from Apple. The iPhone set the stage, but now we will have pinch and zoom super-sized. We’ll be using our arms more to see those details from the satellite view. Ah yes, GPS. Big maps finally. Would this thing be appropriate on the dashboard? Not unless it has a camera that can show what is in FRONT of the car! And speaking of cameras, it needs at least two: One on back like normal on the iPhone for taking vids of others and one on front for taking vid of you. Maybe one on the side just to be sly. And I’d really love it if the one on the front is actually UNDER the center of the screen, invisible to us but fully able to see us nonetheless. That way on video calls people will be looking AT YOU instead of somewhere off into space.

Finally, the dreaded question: How much will they want for this thing? Remember when the Jesus Phone first came out how much they charged? Same deal here, waayy more than what we want to pay. They will really put it to those early-adopter guys, hahaha! I expect that early price to be $899. Gasp! With netbooks retailing for $399! Yep, but it will drop after a few months to $699 and everybody will be like, “Whew, now I can afford one at last.”

So prepare for the iPad invasion. Prepare for the weeping, shaking bodies to behold not the iTablet being brought down from the mountain but the iPad being unveiled on Steve’s stage. I can’t wait.