Portfolio Income Update – Half Year to June 30, 2018

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“The only answer that I give to you is doing it,” he said.
Dante, The Divine Comedy

Twice a year I prepare a summary of the total income from my portfolio. This is my fourth passive income update since starting this blog. As part of the transparency and accountability of this journey, I regularly report this income.

My goals are to build up a passive income of around $58 000 by 31 December 2018 (Objective #1) and $80 000 by July 2023 (Objective #2).

Passive income summary

  • Vanguard Lifestrategy High Growth – $34 923
  • Vanguard Lifestrategy Growth  – $1 823
  • Vanguard Lifestrategy Balanced – $1 985
  • Vanguard Diversified Bonds – $3 140
  • Vanguard ETF Australia Shares ETF (VAS) – $1 659
  • Betashares Australia 200 ETF (A200) – $31
  • Telstra shares – $146
  • Insurance Australia Group shares – $350
  • NIB Holdings – $108
  • Ratesetter (P2P lending) – $2 275
  • Raiz app (Aggressive portfolio) – $125
  • Spaceship Voyager app (Index portfolio) – $0
  • BrickX (P2P rental real estate) – $125

Total passive income half year to June 30, 2018: $46 606 

June 2018 income

Comments

This half year passive income result was another positive surprise, at $46 606. Prior to my Vanguard distributions being posted, I had anticipated around $24 000 in distributions, but the result has been nearly double this.

This means that in the past financial year I have achieved a passive income from investments of over $76 000. This has actually exceeded my first investment objective (of $58 000 per year) and come close to meeting my second (of $80 000 per year) as well, from distributions. Note that these distributions do include some realised capital gains from within the Vanguard funds, the result of automatic rebalancing in the retail funds to stay within target allocations.

I have long expected a ‘reversion to the mean’ to take overall distributions back to 2015-2016 levels, but this has not occurred. This could mean that I have moved to an interesting new position of having substantively achieved Objective #1 in practical income terms, even where my portfolio has not reached the target level.

Whether this has occurred will only really be knowable from December 2018 and beyond, as I see the level of the next six months of passive income. It does pose a dilemma, though, as to whether I should believe in the target number, which are based on concepts of long term average returns, or an established pattern of actual observed income flows over multiple years.

The half year result mean that in effect distributions are enough on pay each months average credit card bill, which include most of my daily household expenses. This means in turn that almost my entire salary can be considered as being able to be invested through the year.

This is quite a surreal prospect, and continues to be difficult to fully process. It does increasingly contribute to a sense of calmness, and gratitude as I go about my daily life, as well as a quiet underlying feeling of enhanced financial strength. It is a feeling of having at least some notional extra protections against inevitable financial or life uncertainties.

Over coming days I will be waiting for the Vanguard distributions and other dividends to arrive, and then turning to how to reinvest them. At the moment my main considerations are continuing to reach my target equity allocation, and so I am likely to seek to direct them to the Betashares A200 ETF, with potentially some expansion in my very small investment in the Spaceship app. This latter has the benefit of no fees for investments under $5000, but its interface and transparency around distributions has not been impressive compared to more expensive established alternatives such as Raiz.

While overall I continue to have caution around market levels, the Australian equity valuations are currently close to 35 year averages, something that cannot be said for global shares (in particular, US equities). In the meantime, I’ve been trying to keep the focus on long-term investing, reading the Russell Investments/ASX Long Term Investing Report 2018, which contains some interesting data on 10 and 20 year average returns. I have also enjoyed a very tough review by LadyFIRE of BrickX on her website.

9 comments

  1. Great update that’s just about my year’s spending covered right there😊

    I’ve been wondering about Raiz since the dividends are automatically reinvested it’s like I can see them but can’t touch them. This might be the factor that makes me keep it as a lower percentage of my holdings. What are your thoughts ?

    I haven’t looked into spaceship yet though would it be safee to assume it’s a simillar kind of system?

    Thanks

    1. That’s very impressive cost control there J.D.!

      Yes, I agree, for any larger amounts, it’s worth considering ETFs or a different vehicle, if you want control on your dividends. I can see why they take that approach though, if part of the business model is seeking to keep people motivated about the concept of the power of compounding. And notionally you could still withdraw funds.

      I see it mainly as a motivational tool, savings I make from actions I used to take automatically, but no longer do, I put in there to show the power of small actions repeated over time.

      On Spaceship, that’s part of why I say what I did. I don’t really know. There are certainly no dividends yet visible in the bare bones transaction history. There is just a dollar amount and a % return. Distributions are supposed to be annual, so perhaps I just have to wait. Unlike Raiz you can’t go in and see the distributions from the underlying securities/ETFs.

  2. Congratulations on reaching your first milestone objective FI. Awesome that you can have the peace of mind that passive income provides. What are the main attractions for you re. a passive index/etf portfolio? I’ve been thinking about them more and more…

    Good luck in the next 6 months!

    1. Thank you very much wealthfromthirty! Let’s see if it holds! The main attractions for me are its low cost (tax and fees) and very low maintenance, compared to some other asset classes. Liquidity is also a psychological benefit, I suppose, though not one I consider much.

      1. Thanks for the reply FI – low maintenance is appealing for sure. I think there are a lot of psychological benefits to indexing, also that there is less buyers remorse – if you DCA in price doesn’t really matter and you just keep accumulating.

        1. Exactly, there is something dispiriting about buying an individual stock, and watching it go down. Yes, I am talking about you, Telstra. 🙂

  3. Absolutely amazing – you obviously have been hard at work saving to be able to reach such success. I wish to be in a similar situation one day. Thanks for posting, it keeps me inspired to keep plugging away.

    1. Thanks very much for the comment beatingthebears! I’m so glad it can do that, that’s very motivating.

      Look forward to reading more of your blog as well, congratulations for making a public start on the journey. 🙂

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