Category: Personal Finance

The Rules, Part LV

The Rules, Part LV

Financial intermediation reduces volatility.? In bull markets, demand for financial intermediaries drops.

Ordinary people do well if they have a budget and stay within it.? They do even better if they save and invest, but really, they don’t know what to do.? Market returns are like magic to them.? They don’t know why they occur, positively or negatively.? Life would be best for them if a mutual financial company gave them smooth returns 0n a regular basis, and absorbed all of the market volatility over a market cycle.? That would be hard for the mutual financial company to do, because they don’t know what the ultimate returns will be, so how would they know what smooth returns to credit?

There is a reason why banks, mutual funds, money market funds, life insurers, and defined benefit pension plans exist.? People need vehicles in which to park excess cash that are more predictable than direct investing.? Set an average person free to make his own investment decisions with individual bonds an stocks, and he will make incredibly aggressive or scared moves.? Fear and greed will seize him, making him sell low, and buy high.

That’s why entities that reduce volatility, whether absolutely or relatively, whether short-run or long-run, exist.? But there is seasonality to this: average people seek intermediaries during and after bear markets, when they have been burnt.? After losses, they seek guarantees.? That is often the wrong time to seek guarantees, because often the market turns when average people are running.

During bull markets, the opposite happens.? When easy money is being made by amateurs, the temptation comes to imitate.

  • If my stupid brother-in-law can make money flipping houses, so can I.
  • If my stupid cousins can make money buying dot-com stocks, so can I.
  • If my stupid neighbor can make money buying gold, so can I.

First lesson: don’t be envious.? Aside from being a sin, it almost always induces bad investment and consumption decisions.

Second lesson: build up your investment expertise, piece-by-piece.? Don’t follow the crowd.? Develop the mindset of? a businessman who calmly analyzes opportunity, asks what could go wrong, and estimates likely returns dispassionately.? Pretend you are a Vulcan; if they actually existed, they would be some of the best investors, and not the Ferengi.

Third lesson: an experienced advisor can be of value even if he does not beat the market, by avoiding selling out at the bottom, and avoiding taking more risk near the top.

Fourth lesson: remember that market returns tend to be lumpy.? The economy may be volatile, but markets are more volatile, and not in phase with the economy, because markets anticipate.

Fifth lesson: if you can do it in a disciplined way, invest more during bad times, after momentum has slowed, and things cease getting worse.? Also, if you can do it in a disciplined way, invest less during good times, after momentum has slowed, and things cease getting better.

The main idea here is to be forward looking, and avoid the frenzies that take place near turning points.

 

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

China

 

  • Chinese Cities Hooked on Land Revenue Fuel Housing Costs http://t.co/8SXwubzUjk Ppl invest in what they think they ctrl; no alternatives $$ Sep 28, 2013
  • Amway Bankrolls Harvard Course?For Chinese Cadres http://t.co/XVk5MXV2eh May not b pyramid, but successful sellers mostly recruit sellers $$ Sep 26, 2013
  • Chanos Undeterred by China Growth as O?Neill Bullish http://t.co/xwvC9mOFHa China will become the biggest windshield bugsplat ever seen $$ Sep 25, 2013
  • Party Will Pay the Price for China?s Rebalancing http://t.co/inQ5BHYMdn The Day has arrived: Michael Pettis is on Bloomberg. Go Michael! $$ Sep 25, 2013
  • China?s Generation Winnebago Avoids Traffic in RVs http://t.co/Q8z41qGv1j New Chinese status symbol: RVs. Rest while your driver works $$ Sep 24, 2013
  • China + Gold = 9 Million iPhones Sold http://t.co/DfIAopLDLV Gold may do nothing, but it is beautiful, & beauty drives much marketing $$ Sep 24, 2013
  • Michael Pettis, in his current newsletter, reminds us that loan growth outstrips ability to repay in China, recent “growth” is a fake-out $$ Sep 24, 2013

 

Companies & Industries

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  • Meet Hummingbird: Google Just Revamped Search To Answer Your Long Questions Better http://t.co/mtAf5pxGIA Improved Search Engine $$ $GOOG Sep 28, 2013
  • JC Penney Is on the Brink http://t.co/UtMX5sa3ZT Now $JCP has liquidity, @ a cost, but can they transform their business model? $$ #unlikely Sep 28, 2013
  • Penney’s Share Offering Prices at a Discount http://t.co/CWVp8dOKln $JCP Danger Will Robinson! Stock price does not hold secondary level $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • Kat Cole, Former Hooters Waitress, Runs Cinnabon’s $1B Empire http://t.co/sOe9WKUB1v Ppl go gaga 4 Classic Roll. 60% more cals vs Big Mac $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • Oaktree group to sell US foreclosed homes http://t.co/dUuGn768TI Too many investors chasing residential RE vs owner occupiers $$ #badsign Sep 24, 2013
  • Meet Prem Watsa: The Man Riding to BlackBerry?s Rescue http://t.co/flg4xn1MkX A case of regret, throwing good $$ after bad $BBRY Sep 24, 2013
  • Banks Prove Safer Than Industrials in Bond Rally http://t.co/B2t3pbaNGd I would b willing 2 overweight industrials now; they r safer $$ Sep 24, 2013
  • Do Amazon’s Lockers Help Retailers? Depends on What They Sell http://t.co/Pbd2cPK6zl Works if $AMZN doesn’t sell what u sell, &vice-versa $$ Sep 23, 2013
  • FireEye Takes Off as Shares Rise 80% in IPO Debut http://t.co/fnY1YkvvD1 Score processes on weirdness, share info globally 2 stop malware $$ Sep 23, 2013

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Rest of the World

 

  • Irish Billionaire Has ?Boatload? of Customers for Spanish http://t.co/GhyDzrhkhk Get your own Spanish Villa while supplies last! $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • Debt Disaster Seen Unless VAT Rises to 20% by 2020 http://t.co/fXyeptRNJZ Japan is a bug in search of a windshield; 20% would kill econ $$ Sep 26, 2013
  • Merkel?s Cold Embrace Leaves SPD Wary of Coalition Talks http://t.co/6pCmU9KgCf If SPD doesn’t compromise, cud a minority government form $$ Sep 24, 2013
  • Believing Data Not Required W/GDP Warrants http://t.co/36SKEKLcha Do u think Argentina is fudging GDP #s up? Buy Argentine GDP Warrants $$ Sep 23, 2013
  • For Migrants, New Land of Opportunity Is Mexico http://t.co/jy3XaZeRCA Immigrants r moving to Mexico as the economy deregulates a little $$ Sep 23, 2013
  • Czechs Yearning for Growth Set to Abandon Merkel Path http://t.co/sU8mxocTL7 No natural political coalition 4 austerity, even when right $$ Sep 23, 2013
  • Greece Plans Foreclosures to Meet Bailout Demands http://t.co/W7Ryxvv6J6 Inability 2 foreclose gums up Greece’s financial system $$ Sep 23, 2013

 

Central Banking

 

  • Richard Koo says ‘vicious cycle’ taking hold as Fed faces ‘QE trap’ http://t.co/se3uPY5eP1 Similar to my arguments in Easy in, Hard out $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • Constitutional Money by Richard Timberlake http://t.co/iipZBfnFqm “Treaties may become inapplicable because of changes in circumstances” $$ Sep 25, 2013
  • US Fed Shouldn’t Give Forward Guidance, Former Bank of Israel Head Fischer Says http://t.co/ZzbTLqTEU9 Correct. Fischer 4 Fed Chair $$ Sep 24, 2013
  • Why we listen to former FOMC members who r partisans of the Fed, rather than skeptics of central banking, like James Grant, amazes me $$ Sep 24, 2013
  • Yellen Would Bring Tougher Tone to Fed http://t.co/xoNY2kKWqa Academic economists, like Yellen, do not understand how the economy works $$ Sep 24, 2013

 

Housing/Mortgages

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  • Mortgage Bonds Without Government Backing Face Tough Time http://t.co/MrtGxmynes Tough 2 mkt private label RMBS, not enough excess spread $$ Sep 28, 2013
  • Subprime bond bounces back, leaving behind a subprime borrower http://t.co/x7KRB8Rp9n Long article about a deadbeat & his subprime loan $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • There have been a scad of articles like this, but the guy did not do “due diligence” on the loan, and did not have to buy the house $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • Home gold rush is over http://t.co/AASXbe14zc Too many investors vs owner occupiers creates an imbalance as smarter players start 2 sell $$ Sep 26, 2013
  • FHA, Facing Losses, Likely to Tap Treasury http://t.co/Hdpqqdplri Shortfall for Fiscal Year Could b at Least $1B, Early Projection Shows $$ Sep 26, 2013

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Financial Sector

 

  • BATS Prepares to Take On Big Bell Ringers http://t.co/x8PjU05xE9 NYSE + Arca > BATS + Direct Edge > NASDAQ $$ Graph: http://t.co/rDV3hY7uzf Sep 28, 2013
  • Shine a Light on Repo http://t.co/KrF4MtaA7Y Did u know that repos r 96 years old? Learn about obscure corner of the fixed income market $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • The bank that rejects the most mortgages http://t.co/JxD3xhvlY4 $JPM highest rejection rate, $STI lowest, $WFC biggest lender, avg 20.6% $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • Covenant-Lite Loans Need Uniform Definition http://t.co/RbEywreAEC It would help, but there is always nonstandard data in securitizations $$ Sep 26, 2013
  • Wells Fargo: New CLO Regulations May Lead to Issuance Slump http://t.co/FcK5NLQvba Forcing securitizers 2 take first losses ruins profits $$ Sep 24, 2013
  • The VC Secret: 3 Out of 4 Start-Ups Fail http://t.co/jjFrQc9JNP Ratio sounds high, but when VC-backed firm wins, it pays 4a lot of losers $$ Sep 24, 2013
  • That’s the way 2 manage pension assets if u r big enough. In-source, build up expertise, & keep adding smart people 2 addl asset classes $$ Sep 23, 2013
  • In-Sourced, Fully Funded, Public, and American http://t.co/ISUDgDvGhC! South Dakota Retirement System manages 65%-70% of assets in-house $$ Sep 23, 2013
  • America’s latest financial crisis? It’s incredibly personal. http://t.co/yHLcIm7xuR People do NOT understand how to save or handle cash $$ Sep 23, 2013
  • Value Investor Charles de Vaulx On China, Gold, Apple And Berkshire Hathaway http://t.co/4LgwGyzI7g Longish good interview. $$ $STUDY $BRK.B Sep 23, 2013
  • Fidelity sued by employees over its own 401(k) plan http://t.co/yo5h32QQD6 Biting hand that feeds them, they object 2 high fees 4 funds $$ Sep 23, 2013
  • Inside Nasdaq’s succession planning process http://t.co/6uOUsgrpuQ $NDAQ trades at a discount 2 peers; it needs a merger or better mgmt $$ Sep 22, 2013

 

Other

 

  • Billionaires Battle as Bezos-Musk Companies Vie for Launch Pad http://t.co/jEOhw4xXac Fight over a launchpad @ Kennedy Space Center $$ Sep 28, 2013
  • Supersonic Drones Can Outmaneuver Humans. So Why Do We Still Need Pilots? http://t.co/J5N9FhDVbH Pilots fly better in complex situations $$ Sep 28, 2013
  • Postal rate hike proposal faces Senate scrutiny http://t.co/aq7gKcDnm1 First Class would go to 49 cents, as internet slowly eats USPS $$ Sep 26, 2013
  • This Year’s SAT Scores Are Out, and They’re Grim http://t.co/04jtzUJMtL <50% of 2013 graduating seniors got “college-ready” SAT scores $$ Sep 26, 2013
  • Little GAAP Could Drive Accounting Simplification http://t.co/Ti24zRMFY2 If the acctg is 2 complex, biz is probably 2 complex as well $$ Sep 26, 2013
  • Work is not waiting for a job. If you don’t have a job, start your own business. http://t.co/pkUXupCOJg Sep 25, 2013
  • Investors Are Buying High, Yet Again http://t.co/PaTcowZvk8 Opportunities are fewer now, listen to Buffett & Klarman & trim back risk $$ Sep 25, 2013
  • Tweet tips: Most effective calls to action on Twitter http://t.co/PrcHMiNDMc! U could also ask them to favorite your tweet $$ $TWTR Sep 24, 2013
  • Death Dinners at Baby Boomers? Tables Take on Dying Taboo http://t.co/68nxd534eB Good 2 talk about death, but r u ready 4 the afterlife? $$ Sep 24, 2013
  • Here Are The Best Fundamental Investors To Follow On StockTwits http://t.co/a72aV98KUo A good list of resources & teachers; I’m listed #5 $$ Sep 23, 2013
  • A Backdoor Roth IRA for a High-Income Couple http://t.co/79fYNIF5d6 Invest in regular IRA, convert 2 Roth, repeat process annually $$ Sep 23, 2013

 

PPACA / Obamacare

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  • Will Obamacare hurt job creation and marriage? http://t.co/n7h7BEkrXK Belief in Obamacare is akin 2 belief in magic; resources r free $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • Prices Set for New Health-Care Exchanges http://t.co/J4VFjvF5HR Younger Buyers May Face Higher Insurance Premiums $$ Obamacare #FTL Sep 26, 2013
  • Best of the Web Today: The Young and the Clueless http://t.co/3GbWYOqipM ObamaCare may work, provided no one responds to its incentives. $$ Sep 26, 2013
  • Young Invincibles Caught in Crossfire Over Obamacare Cost http://t.co/hgyCGtZMaj Note how Obama packs the gallery w/young people $$ Sep 24, 2013

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Municipal Debt / Detroit

 

  • Stockton to Unveil Plan Including Cuts for Creditors http://t.co/zBj3ngCXMz Trying to preserve pensions may draw lawsuit from bondholders $$ Sep 28, 2013
  • Detroit spent billions extra from pensions http://t.co/UBdb3GaqtI That’s what u get 4 having 1-party rule, w/no 1 to look over shoulder $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • Orr proposes freeze for Detroit pension funds http://t.co/sSFtqADV23 Unions don’t get that they destroyed the finances of Detroit $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • Judge Rules Retiree Health Protected Like Pension http://t.co/xg7bcR28oM! Loopy ruling sets Los Angeles on a course 2 bankruptcy $$ Sep 25, 2013
  • Hands off DIA, pensions, Detroiters say in poll http://t.co/dHmp2qjc5n! Detroit is an example of a complex system self-destructing $$ #dying Sep 23, 2013

 

Energy

 

  • Pipeline Billionaire Ready for Next Round of Deal Making http://t.co/KhTwsdBDRs $ETP CEO thinks there is room to consolidate pipelines $$ Sep 28, 2013
  • Six Myths About Renewable Energy http://t.co/G0dB1SJ2aU Balanced article. 3 myths pro, 3 myths con. It will b a minority of total energy $$ Sep 23, 2013

 

The Economic views of Ray Dalio

 

  • One more note, this slideshow put together from BI moves a lot faster than Dalio’s video or the… http://t.co/ytGIHQEaxP Sep 24, 2013
  • And for those that want to read Ray Dalio’s economic template book, it is free here: http://bwater… http://t.co/f1AVlDufxo Sep 24, 2013

 

US Politics & Policy

 

  • Texas Counties Lead in Job Growth, Lag in Wage Gains http://t.co/XdyNF4ZEJt No surprise, but biz leaves CA & there is high unemployment 2 $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • CHRISTIE KEEPS PENSION PROBE RECORDS FROM PUBLIC VIEW AS GOVERNOR EYES 2ND TERM http://t.co/NmnbLRxRwd! Running mate has pension scandal $$ Sep 24, 2013
  • Open-Government Laws Fuel Hedge-Fund Profits http://t.co/P5vZBpkiDq Hedge funds file FOIA requests 2get FDA reports on drugs, etc. $$ Sep 23, 2013
  • At 77 He Prepares Burgers Earning in Week His Former Hourly Wage http://t.co/jQJaWTiQd3 Example of “failed 2 save” Don’t let it happen 2u $$ Sep 23, 2013
  • Self-Driving Vehicles Progress Faster Than Rules of Road http://t.co/1lFAmdlJKz Regulations, laws, insurance all need 2b revised 4 this $$ Sep 23, 2013
  • The Hidden Classified Briefing Most of Congress Missed http://t.co/eSBnz0uPxd How intelligence gets disseminated w/o getting disseminated $$ Sep 23, 2013
  • How the NFL Fleeces Taxpayers http://t.co/OeG5kRTM2O Longish article on how they get free stadiums, pay no federal or state taxes, etc. $$ Sep 23, 2013
  • Facebook ?Likes? Are Now Legally Protected Speech http://t.co/Oi7XQkYVlB Political speech is protected by the 1st Amendment even “like” $$ Sep 22, 2013

 

Wrong

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  • Over the Top: Jordan R. VanOort Earns Prestigious CFA Designation http://t.co/jRMcdyRq1R CFA designation is good, but prestigious? $$ Sep 28, 2013
  • & really, when there are over 100,000 of us, does receiving your CFA Charter really rate a press release? Tougher to become an Actuary $$ Sep 28, 2013
  • Wrong:Pimco shook hands with Fed – & made a killing http://t.co/gBlELQ6U7p 2 notes: agency MBS r easy 2 understand, & TBA mkt not obscure $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • Point: Fed could have easily done this internally. What! They can’t find any among their 1000s of Ph.D. economists to get simple mkts? $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • It is probable that enough data on what the Fed would do escaped over the transom 2 give PIMCO & the other firms insider info. $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • Wrong: New idiots, same as the? actually these idiots might be worse http://t.co/Xa5jGmbQII US economy grew faster under balanced budgets $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • Wrong: Reduce working week to 30 hours, say economists http://t.co/HiI7Zmhimo More work means more production means more GDP, Consumption $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • Loony: Detroit Union Seeks 2 Revive `13th’ Pension Check Policy http://t.co/Lf5YMVBKxW Practice that continues 4 28Y is a tacit agreement $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • Wishful thinking: Let ObamaCare Collapse http://t.co/n3yNizNAfP Until the US itself fails, no entitlement has ever been eliminated $$ Sep 26, 2013
  • Wrong:Shinzo Abe: Unleashing the Power of ‘Womenomics’ http://t.co/R00AN5pUEH This comes from nation w/a shrinking population. Ridiculous $$ Sep 26, 2013
  • Wrong: How Sensitive Is Public Pension Funding to Investment Returns? http://t.co/hSeoOLsvrc! Should use mkt-based assmptns not historic $$ Sep 25, 2013
  • Wrong: US city, county public pension levels sank in 2012 http://t.co/o2JUwsi5JF! 2 optimistic, b/c risk assets bottomed in late 2002 $$ Sep 25, 2013
  • Wrong: Don?t Be Alarmed by Obamacare?s Failures http://t.co/fS63xQpaaP PPACA doesn’t make actuarial sense, young people won’t participate $$ Sep 24, 2013
  • Wrong: Yellen Isn?t a ?Knee-Jerk Dove,? Kroszner Says http://t.co/0aeTM6BIiB Favoring negative interest rates == ?Knee-Jerk Dove? $$ Sep 24, 2013

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Replies, Retweets & Comments

 

  • Thanks @TightTalk @BabyFreshNuggz @X9T_Trading for being top new followers in my community this week (insight via http://t.co/sern3wLA13) Sep 27, 2013
  • “Here is part of my solution: accounting for repos should be bifurcated, so that is not treated ?” ? David_Merkel http://t.co/caWGlbe3eL $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • Loonies, Detroit is dead MT @ToddSullivan: RT @AmyResnick: just wow. Detroit Union Seeks to Revive `13th’ #Pension http://t.co/u3XJAER0bi $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • Believe MT @ReformedBroker: You’re not gonna believe this – but Detroit’s pension doled billions left and right http://t.co/9i5MinpGAX $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • RT @ezraklein: Perhaps if President Obama makes the House GOP 300 sandwiches, they’ll agree to lift the debt ceiling. Sep 27, 2013
  • #FollowFriday Thanks @ReformedBroker @pelias01 @researchpuzzler for being top influencers in my community this week 🙂 Sep 27, 2013
  • ‘ @allstarcharts @jfahmy The 1st discipline of investing/trading is humility; even if you know more, the timing/environment can be tough $$ Sep 27, 2013
  • Commented on StockTwits: I think Watsa can be trusted. Aside from financials in the old days that were dodgy, I th… http://t.co/dJ8g2rVKmK Sep 27, 2013
  • Thanks @abnormalreturns @dpinsen for being top engaged members in my community this week (insight via http://t.co/sern3wLA13) Sep 26, 2013
  • “I never directly pay for research… most of it is freely available on the web. What is not, I?” ? David_Merkel http://t.co/EAk37XXNdJ $$ Sep 26, 2013
  • “This is already known by those that study the statistics. Look at year over year figures, you ?” ? David_Merkel http://t.co/5J46Rm19vo $$ Sep 26, 2013
  • I just left a comment in “We’ve got bubbles, we’ve got troubles – MarketWatch” http://t.co/P11awJw1KQ Sep 26, 2013
  • ‘ @Reddy Cummings is my gerrymandered rep. He is by far one of the most intellectually underpowered members of the House, & that says a lot Sep 25, 2013
  • @moorehn @ReformedBroker @SimoneFoxman @SallyPancakes @kensweet @jennablan They r favorites of mine. $$ Sep 25, 2013
  • Entitlements will have to be reduced; it is only a question of how and when. Druckenmiller’s presentation:… http://t.co/BsA9S78RTI Sep 24, 2013
  • Thanks @MarshaCollier @EdmundSLee @rwohlner for being top new followers in my community this week (insight via http://t.co/sern3wLA13) Sep 24, 2013
  • Thanks @researchpuzzler @pelias01 for being top engaged members in my community this week (insight via http://t.co/sern3wLA13) Sep 23, 2013

 

Classic: Take the Easy Road With Bonds

Classic: Take the Easy Road With Bonds

I really enjoyed answering the “Ask Our Pros” questions at RealMoney.? I answered the following on May 11th, 2005, and would add in Jeff Gundlach and Ed Meigs as active managers:

Ask Our Pros is a service we provide to RealMoney subscribers that enables them to get answers to their investment questions from our contributors. To ask a question, you must be a RealMoney subscriber.? Please click here for information about a free trial.

Reader:

Can someone explain bonds, tax-free vs. taxable? What are some of the strategies that you use to purchase bonds, and what percentage of your portfolio typically should be in bond funds?

— A.A.

David Merkel:

Here is my simple advice for retail bond buyers:

Bonds are promises, from various entities, to pay back the money that you lent, plus interest. Most bonds are taxable. A few, like U.S. Treasury bonds, are exempt from state taxes, while many of the bonds of municipalities are exempt from federal taxes, state taxes (usually if the municipality is in your state) and city taxes (usually if it’s the city you live in).

With respect to taxability, what is best to buy depends on your marginal tax bracket. The higher your tax bracket, in general, the more municipal bonds can help. Beyond that, it is worthwhile to compare the after-tax yields on taxable and nontaxable bonds with equivalent risk. (As always, please be sure to check with a qualified tax professional for advice on your specific information.)

Now for the controversial bits. In general, I don’t recommend that individuals buy individual bonds, unless you are buying Treasury bonds and are following a simple strategy like a ladder.

A ladder is a set of bonds that mature sequentially. Say the ladder is five years long; each fifth of the bond money would be invested one, two, three, four and five years out. Each year, you would take the money from the maturing bond and buy a new bond five years out. Many bond managers pooh-pooh ladders because they think they can beat the performance of a ladder. But a ladder is the most robust bond strategy out there, period. I believe it gives the best return for the risk, particularly given the possibility of shifts in inflation, yield-curve twists, etc. But a bond manager can’t get paid for running a ladder.

There are other reasons for avoiding individual bonds: Bond dealers often rip off retail investors. I have stories, but they’ll have to wait for another day. Liquidity for retail investors is generally poor. Most of the bonds pitched to retail investors will be new issues, which aren’t necessarily the best bonds to buy; they just happen to be the bonds most available at a given moment. This is particularly true of municipal bonds. If you don’t believe me, read Joe Mysak’s column on Bloomberg for a while. The municipal market is a place you don’t want to go without an adviser.

Another reason you don’t want to buy bonds, single-issuer bond trusts or preferred stocks on your own is that many of them have funny features that make the yield look really good, but the bonds can be called away in low interest rate environments, leaving you to reinvest in that low interest rate environment. One dirty secret of bonds is that the excess yield inherent in callable bonds and residential mortgage-backed securities on average does not compensate for the call risk. Only a few experts win that game, and you likely are not one of them.

Finally, my word on bond funds: There are very few managers worth paying up for. Maybe Dan Fuss at Loomis Sayles, Bill Gross at Pimco and a few other, more obscure managers that I am less certain are worth paying up for. The only guarantee in bond funds is that low expenses win in the long run, so I’d go to Vanguard. Performance advantages are fleeting, and tend to revert to the mean, but expense advantages are permanent. Vanguard’s bond funds usually are in the top half each year; repeating that for 10 years makes them top decile.

So don’t take the hard road. I’d go to Vanguard and use their Total Bond Market index fund. Utterly unsexy, but a winner. The only place where Vanguard lacks is international bond funds; it has none. For that, if I want diversity, I go to T. Rowe Price, or buy a closed-end fund that doesn’t hedge currencies at a discount.

How much to invest in bonds? Consult your financial planner. This factor varies so much, it’s all over the map. The right proportion of bond investment depends on market conditions, investment horizon, your personal life factors, wealth level, risk aversion, etc. My experience is that most people are unbalanced in their asset mixes — too much is in stocks or too much is in bonds. The best default mix might be Ben Graham’s 50/50, or the pension mix of 60% stocks, 40% bonds. These are both very robust strategies, but again, what is best for you depends on your personal situation.

I have to say, from the business side of the desk, I really loved managing a multibillion-dollar bond portfolio. I really did well at it, but the best part about it was interacting with my brokers, who all were stupendous to work with. I find that running equities is antiseptic, particularly as an analyst who has an exceptionally competent trader to execute his decisions. Running bonds is colorful because of the human interaction and all of the games that can arise from that. I learned how to haggle in the bond market, and for a nerd like me, becoming good at that was a surprise. Would I want to manage bonds again? Yes. It was fun.

It’s Not What You Earn, It’s What You Keep

It’s Not What You Earn, It’s What You Keep

I like questions from readers, if they are general enough for a blog post.? Here’s one for tonight:

Mr. Merkel,

Following reading your blog here:

http://alephblog.com/2013/01/30/how-to-become-super-rich/

It occurs to me that attaining money in the first place is only half the battle.? A well known fellow among engineers; Nicolai Tesla was great at this.? He made many millions in his life.? He also constantly reinvested most of his income into new inventions and new ideas.? When he died, he was pretty much destitute.

Starting a gas station requires about $300,000 ($150-200k to buy the store/land, 40k to furnish the store, 40k to buy the gas) in startup capital.? In technology, and in software; you can start making money with a good idea and next to no start-up capital… assuming you don’t get crushed by a larger company in the process.

How do the super rich store their massive income?? How do they invest it?? Buying up ever more companies and taking their profits off the top?? What is a minimum threshold amount of money that you need to start to do this?? Can you recommend any good books?

There are several classes of assets that the wealthy like to preserve their wealth.? Here are some examples:

  • Real Estate
  • Municipal Bonds
  • Businesses in necessary industries that throw off a lot of cash flow.
  • Businesses in which they have significant inside knowledge, and can continue to benefit from the knowledge.
  • Occasional equity investments in private ventures that seem promising.

After a certain amount of wealth is acquired, intelligent wealthy people tend to turn to things that have predictable cash flows, rather than take a large amount of business risk.? They’ve made their fortune.? Now it is time to conserve it, and receive what some consider to be rents — passive income that comes with little volatility.

Even Goldman Sachs did this with excess profits, buying safe securities, and throwing them into the BONY box. [BONY == Bank of New York, now BNY Mellon]

In essence, the wealth is converted to ownership in what is likely to be a growing income stream.? What is not used is reinvested.? That is how wealth is preserved during the life of the wealthy.

As for books, you can look at “The Millionaire Next Door,” and its series. Also, Rich Like Them.

But remember, not all rich try to preserve their wealth.? Some lose it through over-consumption, and others through bad investments.? The investments that I list above require a degree of humility, and thus, only wise rich people will follow such a strategy.

Best of the Aleph Blog, Part 22

Best of the Aleph Blog, Part 22

These articles appeared between May 2012 and July 2012:

On Distribution Formulas

Most formulas for distributing income from an endowment or a a savings/investment fund are too liberal.? If you want the purchasing power to last, distribute less.

Correlating Risky Assets

How do correlations come into existence with risky assets.? This piece explains.

Simple Stock Valuation

An exploration of Eddy Elfenbein’s simple stock valuation model.

Don?t Become the Market

When any firm becomes the dominant provider of a good or service, it should ask whether it has mispriced.? A veiled critique of JPM’s whale trade in the credit markets.

In Defense of Nothing

Manufacturing is overrated.? We’ve got enough things, now we need services to make our lives richer.

Little Things are Important

When leverage is high, little things failing can lead to large and bad results.

High Profits

Labor is not scarce, so profit margins are high.? Will that last forever?? No, but it might be a while.

23,401 Auctions

391 Auctions

A pair of pieces suggesting that the markets could be better off if we held auctions once a second, or once a minute.

The Rules, Part XXXII

Dynamic hedging only has the potential of working on deep markets.

Arbitrage pricing can reveal proper prices in smaller less liquid markets if there are larger, more liquid markets to compare against.? The process cannot work in reverse, except by accident

The Rules, Part XXXIII

When politicians don?t have answers, they blame speculators, financiers (Wall Street), or foreigners.? They do anything to take the spotlight off their culpability or ineptitude.

Aim for the Middle

Very basic advice that tells you that the best returns come from taking moderate risk.

Works if Small, Fails if Large

Another bogus theory of asset allocation that works today, because markets favor it, and not enough people are using it.

Strong Hands

On the value of long-term investors holding stocks that you hold.

Logical Links

If there are a lot of links in a chain of reasoning, it is likely to be wrong.

Modified Glass-Steagall

I suggest a number of reforms that would be more effective than reinstating Glass-Steagall.

Don?t Blame Money Market Funds

On the hypocrisy of the SEC and the banking regulators

Do Insurance Stocks Do Better than Average Over the Long-Run?

The answer is probably, but not certainly.? Really, it is a mess.

On Life Insurance and Life Reinsurance

Explains why I like the life reinsurance oligopoly

On Bond Ladders

The most robust strategy for interest rates; always second-best, and never the worst.

On Internal Indexes, like LIBOR

An Analysis of Three-Month LIBOR 2005-2008

On Floating Rates

In most scandals, not enough attention is paid to those who should have been questioning the situation and did not.? There were parties angling for higher LIBOR and lower LIBOR.? Anytime you borrow or lend using an index, you assent to the method of the index.? What, you didn’t analyze it?

The Failure of Government-Provided Prosperity

The government has almost no control over prosperity, and yet it tries to take credit for it, and ends up ruining prosperity through deficits and loose monetary policy.

Grow Embedded Value

The main idea in investing is finding investments that will compound your money at an above average rate, with a margin of safety.

The Education of a Mortgage Bond Manager, Part I

The Education of a Mortgage Bond Manager, Part II

The beginning of my eight-part series on mortgage bonds.? I did it well for three years.

Packages! Packages!

A tale of my younger investing days, when I would mail companies for data.

Missing Earnings Estimates

Why occasional earnings misses are desirable.

Forget Your Cost Basis

All good investment decision-making is forward looking.? Whether you are buying or selling, it doesn?t matter where prices have been in the past.

Concentrated Interest

This piece generated a lot of heat, but I still stand behind it.? The concentrated interest of a profit motive is a good thing, and all of the government services do not affect what you have done at all.? The entrepreneur is a hero, whether in business, government, or elsewhere.

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Rest of the World

 

  • Aflac Wins Wider Access to Japan Post?s Insurance Sales Network http://t.co/IDyLX4dR7c Looks like a win 4 all sides. FD: + $AFL $$ Jul 26, 2013
  • Echoes of the Asian Crisis http://t.co/ZzDbO9TtFV India, Turkey, Brazil, South Africa? all r running substantial current-account deficits $$ Jul 26, 2013
  • Measuring Mario Draghi’s Promises 1 Year On http://t.co/HTs9YDuBXp Mario gambled & won so far. Have the banks used this calm time well? $$ Jul 26, 2013
  • China risks deflation trap as true GDP crumbles http://t.co/5UnQRRi340 Whole economic sectors that recently drove growth have stalled $$ Jul 26, 2013
  • Boring But Important: ECB Relaxes Collateral Rules http://t.co/K4wOPXivpW ECB is wiling 2take less creditworthy collateral, aiding growth $$ Jul 26, 2013
  • Egypt?s Vanishing Currency Black Markets http://t.co/t8FNvy09Ow The military has brought temporary calm, but can they run the economy? $$ Jul 26, 2013
  • Ma Says Taiwan People Override Missiles in Meeting Xi http://t.co/ziCaK6rCFN Taiwan & China might get along, were it not for old grudges $$ Jul 26, 2013
  • Japan Prices Rise Most Since ?08 in Boost for Abe: Economy http://t.co/1Fyej1sMMp May seem 2b a boost, but wait till interest rates rise $$ Jul 26, 2013
  • Moody?s Sees Local Default as $21 Billion Matures http://t.co/63ThxfEOT1 How China deals w/defaults will have a long term market impact $$ Jul 26, 2013
  • An American General Warns the Israeli Right?http://t.co/st9ByUkiyz Arabs either get their own state, or they get Israeli political rights $$ Jul 25, 2013
  • No Menstrual Hygiene For Indian Women Holds Economy Back http://t.co/ToN7a7iYts Be grateful that you don’t live in India if u r a woman $$ Jul 25, 2013
  • Egypt General Stokes Protest http://t.co/DFcjL1Rc9L U.S. Suspends Planned F-16 Delivery as Military Chief Calls for Anti-Morsi Rallies $$ Jul 25, 2013
  • Pope Calls for More Just Society http://t.co/JLrQ4GWtPb Airy-fairy, what do you mean by just? Eliminating crony capitalists & socialists $$ Jul 25, 2013
  • China Coal-Fired Economy Dying of Thirst as Mines Lack Water http://t.co/kvQnHgtqfE China can command projects 2b done; can’t make water $$ Jul 24, 2013
  • Troubled Currencies http://t.co/2jGEw6om6f Iran, North Korea, Argentina, Venezuela, Egypt & Syria. Dig the stats: http://t.co/GR9V3YsvNc $$ Jul 24, 2013
  • Mandela?s Wealth-Sharing Dream Fades in South Africa http://t.co/nRroLnSyoI Black elite replaced a White elite, little change 4 most $$ Jul 23, 2013
  • Record Downgrades Foreshadow First Onshore Default http://t.co/cF5fse1yI3 Reaction 2a default in China will b interesting $$ #willtheyletit Jul 21, 2013
  • China Communist Party Fate Seen Resting on Farmer Rights http://t.co/GWstYr2R10 Will Communist Party grow up & recognize property rights? $$ Jul 21, 2013
  • ‘Desperate’ Cuba voyage is latest scrape for North Korean fleet http://t.co/ET7Y0n1DdE Interesting story on how bad NK merchant marine is $$ Jul 20, 2013
  • Hitting China?s Wall http://t.co/BIU1vF563V Late to the party, Krugman realizes that China’s economy has to rebalance 2 more consumption $$ Jul 20, 2013

 

Detroit

 

  • Detroit?s Bankruptcy: What You Need to Know http://t.co/8Y3SFcRIFA Nice summary of how most of the major parties r affected & process $$ Jul 26, 2013
  • How Detroit Drowned in a Sea of Troubles http://t.co/l2aMlTRApk Most disasters result from a series of small bad decisions $$ #detroit #FTL Jul 26, 2013
  • Now That Detroit?s Gone Bust, Is Your City Next? http://t.co/3C9sPJNqAw?s-gone-bust-your-city-next Consider San Diego, doesn’t fit model $$ Jul 23, 2013
  • How Detroit Affects Muni-Bond Investors http://t.co/FhAnmighaI If Detroit forces losses onto bondholders, other municipalities will mimic $$ Jul 21, 2013
  • Detroit Bankruptcy Judge Rhodes Is Ponzi-Law Scholar http://t.co/VgdMDjfTAD Sound like a bright, no-nonsense guy; rules over big problem $$ Jul 21, 2013
  • Detroit Bankruptcy Likely to Spark a Pension Brawl http://t.co/pJybP68iHo How much will benefits b cut4active, deferred & retired workers $$ Jul 21, 2013
  • Pension Payouts May Turn on Whether State or Federal Law Prevails http://t.co/fnTcOfO0i3 If State Law, then defined benefits r protected $$ Jul 21, 2013
  • Moody’s: Detroit bankruptcy filing credit negative http://t.co/2BTQBZ71FI Will b interesting 2c which classes of bonds recover $$ well Jul 20, 2013

 

Obamacare / PPACA

 

  • Bobby Jindal and Scott Walker: Unworkable ObamaCare http://t.co/8IDiKwfzye Opaque rules, big delays & rising costs: The chaos is mounting $$ Jul 26, 2013
  • Will Obamacare Kickstart Health-Care Revolution? http://t.co/E3rffobd6G More likely to boost overall spending until we scrap & start over $$ Jul 25, 2013
  • Obama’s New York Model http://t.co/qn9dtCQ7Km How NY state destroyed its insurance market using ObamaCare rules. PPACA now deregulates $$ Jul 24, 2013
  • Union Fears ?Destructive Consequences? From Obamacare http://t.co/liizu2UBnf Overly complex laws often r attacked piece-by-piece $$ Jul 20, 2013

 

Pensions

 

  • US States And Local Pensions Deficits Still in the Red Zone? http://t.co/absZaz1TRM Big issue. Govts didn’t put in $$, stretched assumptions Jul 26, 2013
  • Corporate Pension Plans Start Return Toward Fully-Funded Status http://t.co/6ay0QU03ep Yields up, risk assets up, DB pension funding up $$ Jul 25, 2013
  • David Skeel: Facing Up to America’s Pension Woes http://t.co/jIVvhQqa7B If you have a public pension, your income will b cut, get ready $$ Jul 25, 2013

 

Energy

 

  • Crack spread 101 http://t.co/aBScYANDQk For a primer on how crude oil refiners make $$ , start here. FD: + $VLO $PSX $MPC Volatile beasts Jul 26, 2013
  • Pimco Prepares for Life After Bill Gross http://t.co/PzFgWZZxRK The key mind that built Pimco; how will it survive without him? $$ #notwell Jul 26, 2013
  • Is Your College Going Broke? http://t.co/D0xoknDZRd Forbes rates 925 schools on financial strength. Scores here 4 free; c who will live. $$ Jul 25, 2013
  • Global Oil Supply Shock? http://t.co/QO1jcw8hjk Special report on Crude covering the US, Canada, Russian Supply, & global demand factors $$ Jul 22, 2013

 

Monetary Policy

 

  • Fed Chief Choice Shapes Up as Race Between Summers, Yellen http://t.co/zXurDGlmMY Sad that it comes to this, neither is competent $$ #FTL Jul 25, 2013
  • Bernanke Seen Slowing QE to $65 Billion in September http://t.co/roO9X8TQFb Y r we listening 2 economists? I don’t c QE tapering in 2013 $$ Jul 24, 2013
  • Fed Criticized on Oversight of Bank-Owned Commodity Units http://t.co/6S07xD8quN Fed has never used its role as lead bank regulator well $$ Jul 24, 2013
  • Biggest Banks Face Fed Restoring Barriers in Commodities http://t.co/daCEcXpwYM Asset allocations to commodities drove financialization $$ Jul 24, 2013
  • Gonzalo Lira: The Democrats Finally Embrace Money Printing http://t.co/hgnJcw3m6F Democrats realize the larger QE is, they can spend more $$ Jul 24, 2013
  • Right now, Larry Summers is the front-runner for Fed chair http://t.co/Gajh9jbKHR Reverse psychology 2 scare us 2 beg Obama pick Yellen $$ Jul 24, 2013
  • Why Fed Has Failed to Lower US Unemployment http://t.co/c7HxlBAoEP Main reason:monetary policy can’t solve unemployment, regulatory issue $$ Jul 22, 2013
  • Janet Yellen for Fed Chair http://t.co/zXW8cR9nKD @calculatedrisk makes a good case 4 Yellen; I would prefer someone more skeptical $$ Jul 20, 2013

 

Daily Journal

 

  • If $DJCO is managing >$100 million in stocks, then y aren’t they filing a 13F-HR w/the SEC as other managers do? http://t.co/nMRJMwC2TL $$ Jul 24, 2013
  • Munger Triples Publisher?s Value With Panic-Era Stock Bet http://t.co/AOAnQdJyun Cagey Munger times the bottom w/quality companies $$ $DJCO Jul 24, 2013

 

Financials

 

  • Easing of Mortgage Curb Weighed http://t.co/2dsxUG9cPy The Apostles of ez debt underwriting preach their gospel 2 regulators in DC $$ #FTL Jul 24, 2013
  • Americans Gambling on Rates With Most ARMs Since 2008 http://t.co/WUIyZLyRQt Proving again that u “Can’t teach a Sneech.” $$ #FTL Jul 24, 2013
  • Athene’s James Belardi, a Controversial Player, Gets Into the Annuities Game http://t.co/FFnKBzJPv3 Regulate him 2 the strictest degree $$ Jul 23, 2013
  • Nontraded REIT Pulls In Bundles Of Cash http://t.co/e51BfrLHhX Avoid any illiquid investment where the promoter knows far more than u $$ Jul 23, 2013
  • Housing Recovery Increasingly Prices Out First-Time Buyers http://t.co/LPInUpbjmJ A good thing; ppl need 2 save&make bigger downpayments $$ Jul 23, 2013
  • Commodities and banks, a recap http://t.co/SerwTZVNTj @izakaminska gives a primer on the financialization of commodities $$ Good read $STUDY Jul 23, 2013
  • Resigned to reform, Wall Street tries a different tack in DC http://t.co/sEANnYTqET Look at the insurance industry, it’s better regulated $$ Jul 23, 2013
  • Gorilla Flipping Homes as Rebound Revives Rapid Trades http://t.co/Z0V3aBPtlL Interesting niche: w/scale buys worst homes, rehabs/flips $$ Jul 22, 2013
  • Mortgage applications fall as refinancings dry up, big opportunities for REITs http://t.co/R5q7RXcJJT REITs can issue private mortgages $$ Jul 22, 2013
  • Prudential Hits Back on Risk Status http://t.co/I2B3ZawBJy $PRU right & FSOC wrong, problem isn’t size, asset quality, but liab liquidity $$ Jul 22, 2013
  • In other words, unless a life insurer is writing biz that is immediately or contingently terminable, they don’t go bad in a crisis $$ $PRU Jul 22, 2013

 

Politics & Policy

 

  • Letters About 401(k) Plan Costs Stir Tempest http://t.co/mFQnQ8k59A problem is that is hard 2 service small account & give them advice $$ Jul 25, 2013
  • Uncertainty and the Slow Labor Market Recovery http://t.co/IvXzr0Dt6l SF Fed estimates that policy uncertainty has held back employment $$ Jul 23, 2013
  • Feeling the heat on climate change http://t.co/MFMu4gUghd Climate is like markets; unpredictable, constantly varying, makes fools of us $$ Jul 23, 2013
  • Parents Shell Out Less Money for Their Kids’ College http://t.co/BD3WIz4bhp Fewer will attend college, instead they will enter trades $$ Jul 23, 2013
  • Reining in the audit industry’s reality distortion field http://t.co/8d6Uakd1p6 Acctg stds 2 flexible & auditors 2 chummy w/cos need chg $$ Jul 22, 2013
  • Tax break that corporate America wants kept secret http://t.co/0si0ts8gpG Not secret, corporations have negotiated taxes w/IRS 4a while $$ Jul 22, 2013
  • Warren?s Mistake About Wall Street Risk-Taking http://t.co/qY6jsau0Lg Crisis came b/c too many financed illiquid assets short-term $$ Jul 22, 2013

 

Market Impact

 

  • It’s Possible to Graduate Debt-Free. Here’s How: http://t.co/GsypSp77mo Scholarships, online courses, use your skills 2make $$ & summer job Jul 24, 2013
  • Three Big Money Mistakes You Could Be Making Right Now http://t.co/lysIFIkV6o Simplified: B careful what you spend; ez 2 waste $$ Jul 23, 2013
  • Gold futures hiccup indicates demand outpacing supply http://t.co/mF13t0jDaE Too much paper gold chasing too little gold; take delivery $$ Jul 23, 2013
  • Investors, Analysts See End of Commodity ‘Supercycle’ http://t.co/SEddMlCxug Probably true intermediate-term, but not long-term $$ Jul 22, 2013
  • Investors Struggle With Cash Conundrum http://t.co/qgTjBIegEy Cash is unique & useful, preserves value when inflation or real rates rise $$ Jul 22, 2013
  • SEC?s White Takes on Two Billionaires in One Day to Make Mark http://t.co/o9F6N9fdoz I like the current aggressive posture of the SEC $$ Jul 21, 2013
  • Junk Bonds Jump as Bonds Boom http://t.co/RA46qT8g8A Yield lust resumes as bonds begin to rally more generally amid new issuance $$ Jul 21, 2013

 

Other

 

  • Advances That Regrow Babies’ Hearts http://t.co/rDJ7c3sEih “Our theory is that a newborn heart has amazing growth potential…” $$ #Cool Jul 23, 2013
  • Does it matter if students can?t write? http://t.co/b8txYKVd0K Yes! Ability 2 write is a proxy for ability 2 analyze qualitative data $$ Jul 24, 2013
  • Wrong: How an Introvert Can Be Happier: Act Like an Extrovert http://t.co/cGEZEr6xu4 B what u like 2b & you will b happy; don’t force chg $$ Jul 23, 2013
  • Duchess Casts Midwife Tradition Aside for Royal Birth http://t.co/EX1mfFiiae 4 normal births midwives r the best, they give better care $$ Jul 23, 2013
  • SIM Cards Have Finally Been Hacked, And The Flaw Could Affect Millions Of Phones http://t.co/hKQbe2x2zp Watch yr cell phone bill 4 chgs $$ Jul 22, 2013
  • Forget campfires, more kids heading to entrepreneur camp http://t.co/6KwzH0rv0J Interesting idea, maybe I’ll send one of my kids $$ Jul 22, 2013
  • Burger Binges at Red Robin Fuel Hospitality Hiring Spree http://t.co/ri97tWIuBd Optimistic sign 4 job growth on the low end of wages $$ Jul 22, 2013
  • What happens to entrepreneurs after their one-hit wonder falls from favor? http://t.co/yYpIqHrsyU 4 examples: what happens after hot->not $$ Jul 22, 2013
  • A Buffett Fortune Fades in Brooklyn http://t.co/bCvLZYVSaw An unscrupulous charity invades the principal of an endowment & fails badly $$ Jul 21, 2013
  • Rise of the Warrior Cop http://t.co/f9vCdBjBiu Cops become more like soldiers, trampling on rights of Americans 2 life, liberty & virtue $$ Jul 21, 2013
  • Fifteen Years After Autism Panic, a Plague of Measles Erupts http://t.co/N7UmpedzYi The measles return after 15+ years of low vaccination $$ Jul 21, 2013
  • Germiest Places – 8 Ways to Protect Yourself in Restaurants http://t.co/BDDbA4i9p3 U may never again feel the same about ketchup bottles $$ Jul 21, 2013

 

Comments, Replies, & Retweets

 

  • Planning would be better http://t.co/eoCliTfLP2 Jul 25, 2013
  • @JLGull1 It applies to Berkshire Hathaway, Perry Corp, Markel, and many other holding companies Jul 25, 2013
  • @kaylatausche Honored to have you following me. Keep up the good work at CNBC; you do it well. Jul 24, 2013
  • @chadstarliper What I saw was fwd rates 5 years out move up pretty hard, and not move back, much Jul 24, 2013
  • @chadstarliper I agree w/ that, though in the short run, most don’t look at the fwd cv. But didn’t the fwd cv move when BB said “taper?” Jul 24, 2013
  • @chadstarliper But it does affect the yield the debt is offered at vs the open market Jul 24, 2013
  • @srochetrading thanks Jul 24, 2013
  • @chadstarliper QE is buying ~50% of US debt issuance, Democrats would like that to continue. Jul 24, 2013
  • @srochetrading I don’t know GL that well, would @ProfSteveKeen talk 2 me if I asked him? Jul 24, 2013
  • I just left a comment in “Warren Buffett sidekick Munger creates a mini-Berkshire at Daily Journal” http://t.co/T4S7rdjHVp Jul 24, 2013
  • I just left a comment in “Warren Buffett’s long-term stock picks – MarketWatch” http://t.co/1DB0TniNTu Jul 24, 2013
  • I just left a comment in “Stagflation: The Fed?s worst nightmare – Irwin Kellner – MarketWatch” http://t.co/cHFQluVzPY Jul 23, 2013
  • @Bonjubs Yes, being a Christian, a Libertarian, a loving father & husband, adopting 5 children & having 3, are all crimes against humanity Jul 22, 2013
  • @Bonjubs Rebellion is almost always a mistake. It has not helped most of the Arab Spring. Most long-lasting change comes via peaceful means Jul 22, 2013
  • RT @StevStiffler: ????? s??? p??? o? ?uo?d ?no? u?n? o? ???? ?up?p no? ?? ??????? Jul 21, 2013

 

Many Will Not Retire; What About You?

Many Will Not Retire; What About You?

 

Retirement.? A concept of the late 1800s to the present.? Easy to swallow when the population is growing rapidly.? Tough to do when populations are growing slowly, much less shrinking.? I would point you to two articles I have written:

With stock prices high and interest rates low, many people look at their portfolios and smile: high current market values.? But what would happen if you had to turn?it into income?? Interest rates are low.? Dividend yields, though better than the past, are still pretty low.? This is another place where total return blinds us to economic reality.? If market values have risen solely because people are desperate for yield, earnings, etc., and not because future productivity is likely to be far higher, the rise in asset values does not represent a rise in distributable cash flows, which is what investors truly need.

Think of this a different way, and ignore markets for a moment.? How do we take care of those that do not work in society?? Resources must be diverted from those that do work, directly or indirectly, or, we don’t take care of some that do not work.

Back to?markets: Social Security derives its ways of supporting those that no longer work from the wages of those that do work.? That’s one reason to watch the ratio of workers to retired.? When that ratio gets too low, the system won’t work, no matter what.? The same applies to Medicare.? With a population where growth is slowing, the ratio will get lower. If the working population is shrinking, there is no way that benefits for those retiring will be maintained.

Pensions tap a different sort of funding.? They tap the profit and debt servicing streams of corporations and other entities.? Indirectly, they sometimes tap the taxpayer, because of the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, which guarantees defined benefit pensions up to a limit.? There is no explicit taxpayer backstop, but in this era of bailouts, who can tell what will be guaranteed by the government in a crisis?

Current low interest rates imply that there aren?t a lot of highly productive projects yearning for capital.? This is a product of overly easy monetary policy that never let recessions clear away bad projects.? Low interest rates make future promises more expensive for defined benefit plans, and make it harder to accrue assets for defined contribution plans.

Do you have one million dollars socked away yet?? No?? Under optimistic assumptions, maybe you can earn 4% on your money without touching the principal.? That would give you $40,000/year pre-tax.? Add in Social Security, and maybe you can make things work.

If you want to give up liquidity, and any sort of estate for heirs, you could annuitize all or part of your assets, bringing your yield up 1-2%.? For whose who have less money, that could make things work.

That said, inflation could throw a monkey wrench into all of this.? Buying inflation protection knocks around 0.5% off yields.? But who knows how much the government will encourage or discourage inflation?? That is the leading open question at present.

Summary

So long as interest rates remain low, and asset values high relative to replacement cost, funding retirement will be an expensive proposition.? Not many will be able to do it.? As population growth slows, government entitlements will prove difficult to maintain at current levels.

As such, we should expect older people to work longer than their parents and grandparents did.? In many cases it will be ?Work till you die.?? The idea of retirement as a long vacation at the end of life will only be true for the well-off, a minority of the population.

And compared to prior history, that?s how it should be.? A comfortable retirement is an expensive proposition, and not something that can be given to everyone by government fiat.? The economy only has so much productivity; to the degree that retirees suck off resources, there is that much less to help the economy grow.

I write this as a 52-year old man.? I have opportunities ahead, but for most people in the Western nations, as demographics lead to older populations, economies will decline unless something comes to revive growth in population.

To those who are older, I say ?Be ready to work.?? To those who are younger I say, ?Plan and prepare, save, and figure out how to supplant the oldsters who occupy the positions you want to have.?

It?s not going to be easy over the next forty years.? But if it were easy, everyone could do it.? Instead, those who are prepared will do it.? And so my readers, get ready to do it.

What NOT to do in Job Interviews

What NOT to do in Job Interviews

I have made my share of mistakes in interviewing.? I?d like to share them with you.? I have many faults, but the one that applies here is overconfidence.? Confidence is a huge part of interviewing.? They want to see a strong candidate confident in his skills.

I remember when I interviewed with a prominent mutual insurer, and the interviewer asked what I knew about the company.? I have a good voice, so I sang the theme song from the company as I remembered it.? He looked at me and said, ?That theme song was discarded 20 years ago; it is astounding that people still remember it.?? (Note: they should have kept the theme song; it worked.? Marketers get tired of their advertising long before clients do.)

With another large mutual insurer, I regaled them with tales of what I did at a smaller stock life insurer.? I spent a lot of time talking about the company as a whole, also.? What was going right, wrong, etc. ?It convinced them that I would not fit their culture, because no one had that kind of authority in their large firm.? I seemed to be a ?wild man? to them.? They wanted someone to be ?another brick in the wall,? whereas I was more of a businessman, liking big projects that were multidisciplinary.

Avoid musing about novel ways to modify the industry ? I remember suggesting to a credit card company that it should provide additional services to those that pay in full each month, such as a high yield money market fund, or other sorts of investments.? Why not make more money off of those who have more money?? After all, that?s valuable client information.

Then there was the time that I had recently discovered the game ?Set.?? The game has three attributes in four dimensions ? a great game for the mathematically minded.? So I showed to another actuary at lunch during an interview, that couldn?t have harmed my chances, right?

At another interview, an older guy asked me what I would find interesting in investing.? I gave him an honest answer, ?Buying broken insurance companies, fixing them, and selling them for a profit.?? He said, ?Ah, merchant banking.?? In hindsight, I know he dismissed me at that point.

That brings me to another point, beware big guys.? I often impressed the guy who would have been my boss, but ended up losing on his boss, who was looking for a conventional hire.

What can I say?? I?ve always been a threat to badly run hierarchies.

One more note: in the early days, I always had a bright tie color; this worked against me, as insurance companies generally did not like those who were certain in their views.? I was visually too bold.

Last point: when I knew I didn?t want the job, I would give them free consulting.? I would tell them where their strategy was wrong, and what they needed to change.? That never got me a job, but it scored points for me regarding honesty.

Conclusion

I am glad I did not get many of the jobs to which I applied.? I would have been smothered by the bureaucracy, and would not have liked it.? My weaknesses helped to expose the culture of the firms to which I applied.

And so I would say, unless you are desperate for work, be yourself.? Inquire into the culture of the firm to which you are applying to see if there is a good fit.? Don?t work somewhere that will be? constant pain for you unless you have no good alternatives.

On Long-Term Care Insurance

On Long-Term Care Insurance

I’ve said this before, but it bears repeating: be careful in any transaction where the other parties know the deal better than you do.? In most insurance transactions, the company knows more about the transaction than the individuals or firms seeking coverage.? There are exceptions, though, when the model for policyholder claims behavior is not well-understood.? This exists in life and annuity coverages in small ways, and in health, disability, and long-term care coverages in greater ways.

The main advantage that a potential life/disability/health insurance buyer has is that he knows the details of his health far better than the insurer does.? Underwriting standards vary across companies, and not all companies are as thorough at checking the health of the insured as the others do.

With life and annuity coverages, outside of life settlements, this risk to the insurance companies is small, because the actuaries expect the potential losses from the hidden knowledge of the insureds, and build it into pricing.? Death is a tough way to make money, and those using it to make money off insurers must pay a heavy price to do so.? When death stares you in the face, it seems kind of callous to say, “How can I make money off this for my heirs?”? Most people realize that there is something more serious going on than making money, when death is near.

But when we deal with health matters, things get more murky, particularly the older we get.? Again, insurers will attempt to determine those that have the greater probability of making significant claims, but the ability to do so is more limited, because people know when they are not well beyond when they have sought medical help in the past.

(This is one reason why Obamacare (PPACA) will end up increasing costs for most healthy people.? By attempting to cover everyone, and limiting the ratio of premiums from the sick to the healthy to a factor of three, those who are healthy will pay a lot more, or find some clever way to drop out.)

As an aside, before the modern health insurers found their footing around 1988, cumulative profits for the industry as a whole was negative.? Since then, they got better at discriminating on what groups/individuals they would cover, and those they would not.

But with long-term care insurance, the insurance industry has not made money to date. Why?? Insurers have consistently underestimated the willingness of people to file claims on their policies.? Thee is no incentive not to do so, unlike death.

Thus the insurers have been in a battle involving raising premiums on new and old business, with healthier business leaving.? The model doesn’t work, I don’t care what the largest writer Genworth thinks, when the article says:

Genworth Financial Inc., with about a 33% market share of long-term-care policies sold to individuals, said in May that it is seeking premium increases averaging more than 50% to stave off more losses in its oldest policies.

Genworth also halted sales June 1 through AARP, the older-Americans’ group with a huge pool of potential customers.

“We’ve learned a lot over the last 30 years, and we now believe we have a better ability and more knowledge” to issue policies that “provide significant financial protection to Genworth,” Genworth Chief Executive Thomas McInerney said in an interview.

The insurer started requiring blood tests and other medical screening, which the industry generally hadn’t done before. And it is charging women who apply individually more than men for the first time because women tend to live longer and require more years of care.

That brings me to this summary: don’t own companies that are deep into long term care, like Genworth.? Think of Penn Treaty, and other companies that went bankrupt as a result of long term care.? Long-term care? is not insurable; those insured have too much control over when they make claims.

As for those with long-term care policies, if they are old, keep paying on them, you will likely do well on them when you finally need to draw on the policies.? You have benefits that benefits that can no longer be purchased.? Enjoy the exclusive club you are in.

Book Review: Pound Foolish

Book Review: Pound Foolish

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To my readers: if you like this review, please vote it up here at Amazon.? Thanks a lot.

Personal finance has issues.? This is because there are many things that are true on average that will not always prove true in the short run.? Here are some examples:

  • Those that save more and spend less for personal needs will usually do better in the long run than those that spend a higher proportion of their income.
  • Those that take moderate risks in investing tend to beat both those that take low risks, and those that take high risks.? But over short periods of time, who can tell?
  • Over the long run “buy and hold” tends to work.? In the short run, who can tell?
  • Good investing is boring.? It is not entertaining.? An average person looking at the portfolio that I own for my clients would only recognize 10 of the 36 companies that I hold.? The best stocks are those of neglected companies that do their boring business and make money quietly.
  • In general, it is wise to have as little debt as possible.? When you do have debt, pay it off rapidly, or make sure that the debt is non-recourse (the asset purchased collateralizes the loan in full.
  • In general, it is honorable to pay your debts in full.? Occasionally, some life event happens that makes it impossible.? That is what the bankruptcy code is for.? When bad providence is overwhelming, take the hit, declare bankruptcy, and battle back from there.? In the Bible, debt-slavery was limited to seven years — why should the loan sharks get more of your life than that?
  • Financial education, as well as education in general, is no panacea.? As one of my brighter friends at RealMoney, Howard Simons,? used to say (something like), “On Wall Street, to those that are expert, we give them super-advanced tools that they can use to destroy themselves.”? There is almost never a level playing field in investing, unless you do all of the work yourself.
  • Risk control is the key to investing, and women do better at that than most men.? I liken it to chefs.? Most of the best chefs are men, but women beat men on average in cooking.? (An aside: cooking is my hobby.? My wife likes my cooking.)
  • There is no way to get rich quick.? Ignore seminars that tell you that it is possible, like “Rich Dad.”
  • Peter Lynch popularized “buy what you know,” but he was far brighter than that and a real detail person.? Many people moved to residential real estate post-2002, but did not realize that if prices get high relative to rents, that prices can fall.? They bought what they thought they knew, and lost.
  • After the market declines of 2000-2003 and 2008-2009, many people swore off the stock market at the wrong time.? The uneducated buy and sell in response to fear and greed.? Buy and hold is better than that, always, and that is one reason to employ a professional that does not get shaken by market moves, good or bad.? (It took 5-10 years to develop ice-water in my veins.)
  • It is always good to be skeptical of those that talk to you about finance, even me.? Particularly be skeptical of those that will buy you a nice meal with the aim of getting your business.? There are many strategies to get you to say “yes.”? If you dare, read marketing books, they will help you develop sales resistance.
  • Defined benefit pension plans are better for workers than defined contribution plans like the 401(k), but they cost a lot, lot, lot more.? That’s why they don’t exist today.
  • Most people, if left to themselves, will not plan for the future.? That is why there are commissioned salesmen (brokers/insurance) to sell them products inferior to what they would get if they planned for themselves.

That took more words than I expected. Before I go on, I want to say that I liked that book a lot with some reservations.

Let me now go to the book, and tell you what I liked and what I did not.

What I Liked

  • The book is honest, it flags all of the problems in personal finance.? Some of those problems are unavoidable, because returns in the market are lumpy, as opposed to the smooth projections of the financial planner.
  • It explains why defined benefit plans are better for average people, because they are not investors, they are budgeters at best, and need to receive a steady income in retirement.
  • She explains the ways that salesmen try to make you buy what you shouldn’t.
  • She understands that most investment advice is shallow, and wrong.
  • Expense and debt control aren’t everything.? That said, they are good things.
  • She recognized that women are better risk managers than men.? (Men are too certain of themselves; I have rules for myself that tie my hands so that I do not act on fear or greed.)
  • She gets that real estate is an expense, and not an investment.
  • Financial celebrities are often wrong.
  • She understands that the financial industry has many tendrils into academia & politics, to spread a message favorable to itself.

What I Did Not Like

  • It may be that most people in financial trouble have had notable accidents happen to them, but that does not invalidate the idea that being careful with your spending and sparing on debt are wise ideas.? Aside from that, people need to insure themselves properly, and be prepared for layoffs — have transferable skills that can work in multiple industries; be a continual learner.? Also, be aware of the finances of your company.? If you think it is in trouble, look for work before you are laid off.
  • She doesn’t get how expensive it would be to create defined benefit plans in place of defined contribution plans.? The costs are what led corporations to terminate the plans.
  • She doesn’t get that there are many people who will not take prudent actions for the future.? That is what commissioned salesmen are for.? They get the imprudent to do something good for them selves that they would not ordinarily do.
  • Talking about money is not enough.? With most people it is a mere sharing of ignorance, and not much better than what you get from other sources.? You *can* get educated about money, but it takes time, effort, and diligence.? Who is willing to do that?

Summary

She is long on critique, and short on real ideas to improve the situation.? The critique will help you know what to avoid.? But when you are done with this book, you will have no positive plan for what you should do.? If you want to, you can buy it here: Pound Foolish: Exposing the Dark Side of the Personal Finance Industry.

Full disclosure: I borrowed the book from my local library.

If you enter Amazon through my site, and you buy anything, I get a small commission.? This is my main source of blog revenue.? I prefer this to a ?tip jar? because I want you to get something you want, rather than merely giving me a tip.? Book reviews take time, particularly with the reading, which most book reviewers don?t do in full, and I typically do. (When I don?t, I mention that I scanned the book.? Also, I never use the data that the PR flacks send out.)

Most people buying at Amazon do not enter via a referring website.? Thus Amazon builds an extra 1-3% into the prices to all buyers to compensate for the commissions given to the minority that come through referring sites.? Whether you buy at Amazon directly or enter via my site, your prices don?t change.

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