Monthly Portfolio Update – March 2018

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Be content to seem what you really are.

Marcus Aurelius

This is my sixteenth portfolio update. I complete this update monthly to check my progress against my goals.

Portfolio goals

My current objectives are to reach a portfolio of:

  • $1 476 000 by 31 December  2018. This should produce a real income of about $58 000 (Objective #1).
  • $2 041 000 by 31 July 2023, to produce a passive income equivalent to $80 000 in 2017 dollars (Objective #2)

Both of these are based on a real return of 3.92%, or a nominal return of 7.17%

Portfolio summary

  • Vanguard Lifestrategy High Growth – $693 605
  • Vanguard Lifestrategy Growth  – $41 574
  • Vanguard Lifestrategy Balanced – $74 220
  • Vanguard Diversified Bonds – $103 193
  • Vanguard ETF Australia Shares (VAS) – $74 236
  • Telstra shares – $4 279
  • Insurance Australia Group shares – $18 910
  • NIB Holdings – $7 824
  • Gold ETF (GOLD.ASX)  – $80 389
  • Secured physical gold – $11 612
  • Ratesetter (P2P lending) – $45 954
  • Bitcoin – $114 730
  • Acorns app (Aggressive portfolio) – $9 953
  • BrickX (P2P rental real estate) – $4 384

Total value: $1 284 863 (-$54 561)

Asset allocation

  • Australian shares –  33 %
  • International shares – 19%
  • Emerging markets shares – 3%
  • International small companies – 3%
  • Total shares – 56.6% (4.4% under)
  • Australian property securities – 3%
  • International property securities 3%
  • Total property – 6.3% (1.3% over)
  • Australian bonds – 10%
  • International bonds – 10%
  • Total bonds – 19.6% (0.6% over)
  • Cash – 1.4%
  • Gold – 7.2%
  • Bitcoin – 8.9%
  • Gold and alternatives – 16.1% (1.1% over)

Comments

This post is a few days later that usual as I have been holidaying overseas as the new month rolled over, making the update a bit more challenging to achieve with overseas data limits to contend with.

This last four months has been a challenging one, with declines in the overall portfolio, taking it ‘back’ to levels in November. Nearly all of this represents growth, and then sharp decline, in the value of my errant Bitcoin holdings, with some falls in equity markets also. I have concentrated on placing new capital into equity markets, and seeking to move my actual asset allocation closer to my target allocation over time.

Most of my financial moves this month have been incremental changes to how I fund longer-term irregular expenses. Around two years ago I moved to a system of regular deductions into higher interest allocated Ubank sub-accounts to set aside cash for car replacement, major insurance and holiday expenses. The system has worked well, but I had not revised its assumptions and structure materially after setting it up. By making a more realistic assumption on car replacement (every 8 years rather than five), and by taking into account my growing passive income and counting it as part replacement for a conservative emergency account, I have been able to free up some more cashflow (more than $8000 per annum) for regular investment.

The only substantial moves in the portfolio have been continued falls in Bitcoin, reducing its potential to add to future portfolio volatility (in a glass half full view), some falls in equity valuations, and some advance in the value of gold securities. I am looking through most of these changes and increasingly focused on what the end of first quarter dividends payments and distributions will bring, and the reinvestment opportunities that represents.

Progress

Progress to:

  • objective #1: 87.1% or $191 137 further to reach goal.
  • objective #2: 63.0% or $756 137 further to reach goal.

Summary

With time away from ordinary work this month, it has at times felt like a small trial of a future potential lifestyle, a weighing of one option for years ahead. Watching a portfolio shrink even as new investments are added is difficult, but I seek to recall that I have been investing in markets that are volatile steadily over around 20 years. This has caught upswings, periods of flatness, and the Global Financial Crisis. The next signal of progress will be my March quarter passive income, rather than abstracts updrafts or downdrafts in my portfolio.

10 comments

    1. Really good question. I am still figuring this out. Ideally I’d like a portfolio of some interesting work, lots of time to travel, and time to spend slowing down, and appreciating the freedom to spend more time based on my values. I have a messy and incomplete list of possibilities, that I plan to turn into a future post (when Bitcoin recovers. Joke!)

  1. Does it get easier to see those swings in your portfolio? I was just thinking it went down more than my current net worth!

    1. It does, I think. As the portfolio grew, I tended to think more about the percentage change more, and the absolute dollar amounts less. The other perspective is that the passive income and distributions flowing from the portfolio are what will actually change your lifestyle, where absolute portfolio level is only a proxy for that, if that makes sense. At your stage, enjoy the fact that savings decisions and a good month can really make discernible difference to your portfolio growth rate!

  2. Possibly a good time to be adding to equities at the moment, although we never know for sure of course.

    Do you use ETFs, or the managed fund versions? If managed, have you considered moving to the ETF version? Also curious which fund you’ve been adding to?

    Thanks. Looking forward to your upcoming passive income post 🙂

    1. Thanks SMA for the read! No, you’re right. I’m very cautious about global equity markets, despite the red blinking light of my asset allocation position. I started before many of the Vanguard ETFs came along, so I have the bulk of the investments in Vanguard retail funds. The tiered fee structure at least makes the marginal fee approach that of some of the newer ETFs. Where I have large lump sums I’ll now invest them into Vanguard ETFs such as VAS. Smaller regular sums go into the High Growth Vanguard fund that is my primary regular investment vehicle right now.

  3. We also have a UBank high interest account, but I’m curious – why did you decide to use multiple accounts? I’m putting aside money for an eventual car replacement as well, but it’s all lumped in with the rest of the cash.

    I can’t comprehend a (paper) loss of $55,000 in a month. That’s almost my entire yearly take-home pay. Strangely, I don’t have so much difficulty comprehending it as a monthly gain. Must be that inherent human condition to feel loss more strongly than gain.

    “…reducing its potential to add to future portfolio volatility” 😆

    Where did you head off to for your holiday?

    1. Good question! The answer is mostly psychological transparency, I actually have *ahem* 10 sub-accounts for different purposes, and the overall adequacy for all these purposes would quickly become a mystery if I wasn’t able to check, for example, the ‘insurance’ account for whether it had enough to meet upcoming bills. It’s probably overly conservative, but it does help me know where I stand on each goal or recurrent expense.

      Yes, I typed that quoted sentence with a wry smile. Sometimes maths can offer some slight comforts, you just have to look hard enough. 🙂

      To beautiful New Zealand! Lakes and mountains…

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