Monthly Portfolio Update – October 2021

Remember that you are an actor in a drama, whatever kind the playwright desires

Epictetus, Encheiridion XVII

This is my fifty-ninth monthly portfolio update. I complete this regular update to check progress against my goal.

Portfolio goal

My objective is to reach a portfolio of $2,585,000 by 31 July 2022. This would produce a real annual income of about $90,500 (in 2021 dollars).

This portfolio objective is based on an assumed safe withdrawal rate of 3.5 per cent.

Portfolio summary

Vanguard Lifestrategy High Growth Fund$820,102
Vanguard Lifestrategy Growth Fund$43,914
Vanguard Lifestrategy Balanced Fund$79,229
Vanguard Diversified Bonds Fund$98,895
Vanguard Australian Shares ETF (VAS)$365,976
Vanguard International Shares ETF (VGS)$248,767
Betashares Australia 200 ETF (A200)$287,934
Telstra shares (TLS)$2,036
Insurance Australia Group shares (IAG)$6,081
NIB Holdings shares (NHF)$7,944
Gold ETF (GOLD.ASX)$107,668
Secured physical gold$17,186
Plenti (P2P lending)$809
Bitcoin$905,100
Raiz app (Aggressive portfolio)$20,771
Spaceship Voyager app (Index portfolio)$3,461
BrickX (P2P rental real estate)$4,982
Total portfolio value$3,020,855
(+$260,052)

Asset allocation

Australian shares33.5%
Global shares21.0%
Emerging market shares1.5%
International small companies1.9%
Total international shares24.4%
Total shares57.9% (-17.1%)
Total property securities0.2% (+0.2%)
Australian bonds2.4%
International bonds5.4%
Total bonds7.8% (-7.2%)
Gold4.1%
Bitcoin30.0%
Gold and alternatives34.1% (+24.1%)

Presented visually, the chart below is a high-level view of the current asset allocation of the portfolio.

Chart - Asset Allocation

Comments

This month the financial independence portfolio rose in value by $260,000, growing around 9.4 per cent in a single month.

As a consequence the portfolio has just unexpectedly crossed the threshold of $3.0 million, less than a year after the portfolio passed $2.0 million in value.

The monthly movement across October was the largest ever change in the value of the portfolio in dollar terms, and the third largest increase in percentage terms since this record began in 2017.

Chart - Monthly Portfolio Value

Unusually, over the month the capital value of all major traditional financial asset classes – equities, bonds, and gold – fell quite uniformly. Each declined by between 1.0 to 1.5 per cent.

In the case of Australia equities, payments from September quarter dividends meant that a small positive total return of around 0.5 per cent was achieved. This helped portfolio equity holdings reach their highest ever value this month, of about $1.75 million.

The poor recent performance of fixed interest bonds extended this month. The total value of Vanguard Diversified Bond fund holdings, for example, have declined around 10 per cent this year – noting that this also includes paid out distributions.

The unmistakeable forward motivating force for the portfolio was Bitcoin, which increased in value by 35 per cent through the month. This contributed over 90 per cent of the overall positive movement of the portfolio – or around $235,000.

Chart - Monthly Change in Value

This pushing forward is a broadly similar pattern as that seen for most of the year to date.

Momentum has been further accelerated by the US Securities and Exchange Commission approval in recent weeks of a number of Bitcoin futures exchange traded funds, and continuing macroeconomic expectations of higher inflation outcomes in the United States, and globally.

Even as this occurs, both Bitcoin holders and its emerging community of commentators continue wonder what exactly “it” is, and debate whether it is time, a clock, or indeed an Italian renaissance city. The answer is not wholly clear.

The wider financial market, inflation and other monetary policy developments are increasingly feeding into bond market outcomes, with the Reserve Bank’s yield curve targeting measures pushed aside by short-term bond market participants last week, amidst rising global yields and falling bond prices.

As a radical demonstration of this, the Australian two-year bond rate experienced the sharpest upward movement in 20 years. For the moment at least, some governments appear to be back into a more traditional the position of following, rather than shaping and defining, fixed interest markets.

Amidst these broader instabilities and developments I continued to target the longer-term asset allocation goal of an equal balance between global and Australian shares.

As a result this month new investments were mostly directed at the Vanguard global shares (VGS) exchange fund.

A milestone passed – third quarter distributions continue to grow

With the September quarter now passed, third quarter portfolio distributions discussed last month can be exactly calculated.

The below chart sets out the history of third quarter distributions over the past five years.

Chart - Third Quarter Distributions

The 2021 results represent the largest set of payments for the third quarter by some margin, reaching $10,280.

This exceeded earlier projections by around 20 per cent, and further signals the arrival of this set of distributions to a significant level in terms of their contribution to expected annual distributions.

Dividends from Australian equities dominated this set of payouts, making up more than 90 per cent of the total value.

In part, these higher dividend payouts likely continue to represent the distribution of income initially held back on a precautionary basis through the early phases of the pandemic. This factor was also a driver of higher previous distributions.

The continued growth in distributions from exchange traded funds has led to a second milestone being reached recently.

Since 2017, and in fact through essentially the entirety of the journey, the dominant source of portfolio distributions has been the Vanguard High Growth retail fund.

Now, however, growth in the exchange traded holdings (A200, VAS and VGS) means that for the the first time the Vanguard High Growth fund makes up less than half of total projected future distributions.

Chart - Project Distributio Income

Yet the impact of the Vanguard retail index funds (which collectively include smaller separate holdings in growth, balance and diversified bonds funds), taken as a whole, is still significant.

From the chart above it can be seen that the Vanguard retail funds combined still make up nearly two-thirds of projected distributions, with the exchange-traded funds making up just over one-third.

With and without – reviewing the performance of the pure ‘financial portfolio’

This month makes starkly apparent that while the financial independence portfolio is one entity for most purposes, it is made up of two distinct though interacting parts – namely Bitcoin, and everything else.

It is useful to occasionally step back and view what is happening beyond the extraordinary and visible contribution that Bitcoin is making to the journey, and to focus the smaller underlying ‘financial portfolio’.

Here, that term is taken to refer to the total of every traditional portfolio asset class in the portfolio, excluding Bitcoin.

Starting at the most basic level – this can be done by momentarily assuming away Bitcoin holdings, and seeking to understand the shape and performance of the remaining ‘financial portfolio’.

Defined this way, the financial portfolio currently has a value of around $2.11 million. The chart below sets out the overall asset allocation of this narrower financial portfolio.

Chart - Asset Allocaton of Financial Portfolio

What is immediately apparent is that it is strongly growth-oriented. Around 82 per cent is allocated in equities, and close to 50 per cent of financial portfolio holdings are Australian-based equities. The remainder of the assets are split between bonds and gold.

The financial portfolio examined over time – course divergence

Another different perspective is offered by the performance over time on a ‘with’ and ‘without’ Bitcoin basis.

Until 2019, diverges between the entire portfolio and the narrower financial portfolio were limited and temporary – a brief rise and fall in the value of Bitcoin in 2017 being the only exception to this.

The chart below tracks the progress of the overall portfolio ‘with and without’ Bitcoin from 2019 to the present.

Chart - Portfolio With and Without BTC

As can be seen, the financial portfolio has performed in the same broad manner as the overall portfolio, but with markedly less volatility. Growth since in March 2020 pandemic equities pull-back has been strong and relatively consistent.

This same trend can be seen if the monthly change in the financial portfolio is examined.

The chart below sets out changes in the value of equities, bonds, gold and property holdings over the past two years.

Chart - Monthy Change Financial Portfolio

This shows the generally lower levels of overall volatility in the financial portfolio compared to the overall financial independence portfolio.

Movements in the financial portfolio value generally fall below $50,000 per month and are often much smaller.

This is consistent with recent findings that Bitcoin has been approximately four times as volatile as US equities on a weekly basis over the past five years. Further interesting observations on the impacts of Bitcoin on a more traditional portfolio are in this piece (h/t Aussie HIFIRE).

Tracking a new meridian for the financial portfolio – progress to the equity target

One of the critical metrics I look at in contemplating my readiness to consider changed or reduced work arrangements is the progress towards the dollar value target for equity holdings.

This dollar target is around $1.93 million, being calculated as 75 per cent (i.e. the equity asset allocation target in the portfolio plan) of the total portfolio goal.

By this measure, too, progress has been continuing steadily over the last two and a half years.

Chart - Progress to Equity Target

At the beginning of 2019 the equity portfolio was only at around 50 per cent of the final target for equity holdings.

During March 2020, significant progress made over the prior year was effectively reset, but strong markets since have contributed to the equity portfolio reaching around 90 per cent of the total final equity target today.

The remaining ‘deficit’ to the equity target by this measure is around $190,000.

In summary, two key observations can be made:

  • A strong trend of underlying financial portfolio growth with lower volatility – assessed on a ‘without Bitcoin’ basis, the financial portfolio has continued to grow steadily, advancing towards the original goal.
  • The journey is not yet quite complete in financial asset terms – assessing just the narrow ‘financial portfolio’ assets, there is some distance to travel before the journey is complete, with a need to continue to build equity holdings.

There is likely no perfectly correct way to view the portfolio in times of significant market transitions, when the nature, permanence and value of major portfolio elements are less than certain.

Viewing the portfolio on a ‘with and without’ basis can, however, provide an extra perspective on the progress, movements and risks inherent in sub-components of the overarching portfolio.

Trends in average distributions and expenses

Monthly credit card expenses continued their fall this month, consistent with the lockdown conditions which were mostly prevailing through this period.

As anticipated, day-to-day living expenses have declined to such a degree that I have temporarily lowered regular payments on the card, to avoid the account moving into a credit amount.

Three-year average distributions are continuing to slightly increase each month, and equivalent average credit card expenses have also continued their steady fall.

The blue line of distributions, therefore, continues to rise and is at around $7200. The credit card expenses (red) line continues to track downwards, to now under $4800.

The most recent results are illustrated in the chart below.

As with last month, there is a significant and expanding ‘gap’ opening up between average total distributions received and monthly credit card expenses.

Only a period of more normalised post-lockdown expenditure patterns will reveal how permanent and wide that gap – which is currently around $2,000 per month – proves to be.

Progress

MeasurePortfolioAll Assets
Portfolio objective – $2,585,000 (or $90,500 pa)116.9%148.0%
Total average expenses (2013-present) – $84,000 pa125.9%159.4%

Summary

Months such as this reinforce that to a greater or lesser extent, we may carefully deliberate upon and choose the starting of a journey, but there is less choice about how arrival occurs.

What is also being demonstrated over the past few months is a strange fact about the relative importance of decisions made on the journey. These are made, as it were, through a glass darkly.

The decision to experiment in Bitcoin was an investment of just over $4,400 across 2015-16, less than a car purchase made at the same time, and less in fact than experimental amounts eventually placed in other investments such as trialling BrickX.

Yet it transpires that this act of experimentation, counted at this passing moment at least, has turned out to be more consequential than any of these other comparably-sized economic decisions.

Peculiarly, it has exceeded, for the second time, the dollar value of the previous largest single investment vehicle, the retail Vanguard High Growth fund, which has received regular contributions over a period of around 17 years.

Similarly, it as exceeded for the moment the combined impact of superannuation contributions over 20 years of work.

Here, too, is a sign of portfolio change and expectations upended: at the beginning of this record that fund was the bedrock of the portfolio, making up nearly 60 per cent of the total portfolio.

Now, combined, Bitcoin and the equity-based exchange traded funds represent 60 per cent of the portfolio by value, and only around 1 in 4 dollars sits in the Vanguard High Growth fund.

This month has been largely spent in lockdown, but with the opportunity to take many longer walks in nearby nature reserves.

On these I have been avidly listening to Trillions, a detailed biographically-based retelling of the history and development of index funds and ETFs, written by Financial Times journalist Robin Wrigglesworth.

This has also encouraged a re-reading of one of my favourite books on the history of financial concepts – Against the Gods: The Remarkable Story of Risk by Peter Bernstein. It highlights the roots of the idea of risk and its evolution through time, again by examining the lives of key early contributors to risk and probability.

These long walks listening to books were really an attempt to capture and hold time, a concept explored in this interesting Guardian piece focusing on those seeking to be ‘time millionaires’, in control of their single most valuable asset.

In fact, there is a strong case to be made that the entire FI and FIRE movement is simply seeking this: to be the equivalent of ‘time millionaires’.

By an inescapable inversion, time itself will determine if this unforecast progress, pushed by unanticipated forces, will reverse. What is true today, may change and be altered by tomorrow.

For the moment, then, time remains the playwright of a drama whose acts and scenes are as yet unrevealed.

26 comments

  1. Hey mate. Just curious as to why you moved away from the vanguard high growth retail fund? Fees? Tax reasons from distributions?

    1. Hi Ben – Thanks for reading!

      At the time, yes, it was primarily a fees driven decision, the ETFs slightly lowered the management costs. It was also just some curiosity to try the newer structure – the fee difference was not large.

      Theoretically there should be a minor taxation efficiency benefit by fewer distributed gains from others redemption decisions in the ETF structure.

      But how material this gain is is open to question, because your average Vanguard retail fund holder also probably has a relatively low propensity to sell or trade excessively.

  2. Have you considered generating a return on your bitcoin holdings through the different Defi options available? Would be interested to hear your thoughts on this angle.

    1. Thanks for the comment Russ!

      I have heard about those options, and done some very initial reading and listening to podcasts on it.

      My current view is that that really involves taking a number of unquantifiable risks above and beyond exposure to the asset.

      I don’t really have the tools or knowledge to assess those risks, and the additional returns that are offered to give up custody and control just don’t appear sufficient to compensate for the potential loss. For me, asset price exposure is enough! 🙂

  3. I’m also a fan of Bernstein’s Against the Gods, especially the story of the seven million muscovites and an elephant. You’ve inspired me to re-read it. Panics, Manias and Crashes by Charles Kindleberger is another favourite, and is a reminder that when you cut through the hype there is little that is new in speculation and that human sentiment and emotions are often the driver of extreme market behaviour. Insights from those books help me to retain perspective when things such as the gfc and the covid crash occur.

    Anyway, congratulations on another sensational month! When monthly changes in portfolio value (up or down) dwarf the monthly income from employment it puts employment in a different perspective! Your mapping of distributions v expenses in the Robin & Dominguez style brings some great perspective to the numbers. I trust that nobody ever accuses you of underthinking things 😊

    1. Thanks for commenting Jay!

      You have great taste in books, as well as blogs! 😉 It is a fantastic book, you might know, there is a follow on companion called ‘Capital Ideas’ which I also mean to re-read – the same style, but continuing on into the world of modern portfolio theory and investment. Some of this is also lightly covered in the Trillions book. I have also enjoyed Kindleberger.

      Thanks for good wishes! It does put it in a different, more abstract perspective, it’s true – I should write about this more.

      You’re exactly correct about the inspiration for those distributions and expenses being inspired by Your Money or Your Life – that was a really important formative read for me on this concept, way back in the 2000s. I started plotting monthy income (then mostly interest) and expenses right away!

      You’re right! I am never accursed of that – that’s something I need to go away and think about! 🙂

  4. Well done on achieving the number you set out to hit FI. Surely you cash everything in now, and live off the 3.5% otherwise this isn’t FI its just watching someone’s portfolio?

    1. Hi DataAndy, thanks for reading!

      At the moment, there’s a few reasons I don’t do that, practical life related reasons, compounded with tax efficiency, and genuine curiosity about how any ‘cashing’ process should work, and whether it is a good idea in the first place. Most mainstream allocation approaches would have seen a very early exit, and cut off most of the progress to date. That makes me a little cautious about applying one right now.

      It’s an entirely reasonable question though, if you’re interested in it, I write more about it in the FAQ section, and also the February 2021 update! 🙂

  5. Working out what to do with Bitcoin is an interesting challenge. It is obviously not providing any income, so it doesn’t help greatly with the “RE” portion of FIRE in terms of providing regular income to cover your living expenses. I assume if you did want to convert your BTC into an income producing asset (such as shares), you would need to sell and hence incur a large tax liability which would have a significant impact on the value of your portfolio. You may also be very happy letting BTC continue to run because it’s still working out spectacularly for you at the moment.

    Someone once said to me that having to pay tax is a good problem to have because it means you’ve been making money.

    1. Thanks for reading, and that is a good point!

      Yes, it’s such an interesting challenging, expecially in light of continuing developments in my understanding about what ‘it’ even represents. I heard it yesterday described as a long option on volatility. So there is no simple way to decide on its treatment, with certainty.

      That is why I have focused also on reaching the equity sub-target as a condition of any decisions.

      At the very least, it would be optimal to be in a lower tax bracket when/if I did sell any of the Bitcoin. The February monthly portfolio update briefly considers one possible strategy.

  6. Good to see the compound growth really kick into gear, or fill your sails.

    I wonder if your monthly expense (credit card) will increase now that lock down is over? As it sure has affected me.

    Fair winds.

    1. Thanks for reading and commenting Ships Ledger! I have my notebook out for any other possible blog titles you use in this and future comments! 😉

      My sense is that it will increase, potentially by around 25% over time, but the three-year averaging approach I take will mute some of that.

      Thank you!

  7. Another great update, and what a month! Seeing the latter stage impact of compounding on your portfolio really drives home to me the importance of saving and investing as much as you can early to go that latter stage, so thanks for that. Also, your BItcoin return is a good demonstration that’s its always worth to have a small portion of ‘play money’ invested due to the potential of assymetric return…you may not get anything, but you really may get something as has been the case for you! Thanks again FI Explorer.

    1. Thank you Rajeev!

      It’s great to feel you are drawing some inspiration from the journey – that was definitely one of the reasons for starting in the first place! I really appreciate the feedback.

      The difference starting early, and the sizing of those initial regular investments, are truly a couple of the most underestimated but powerful factors in any lifelong investment process.

  8. Thanks FI Explorer, enjoying your updates as per usual.

    What is your current dividend reinvestment strategy?

    I’m interested to know whether you cash them out to then auto-invest for your portfolio balance, or whether you reinvest them, and portfolio balancing is done with new savings/investments?

    1. Thanks very much First mate! I really appreciate the comment!

      My current strategy is just to take the dividends as cash, as they help me redirect capital to underweight international/Australia shares over time.

      Psychologically, as well, given they are going to be taxed the same way in any case, I prefer to have them in my hands and make choices around them, rather than automatically having them reinvest in the vehicle that happens to generate them.

      But that is just a personal preference, there are perfectly sound reasons to ‘set and forget’ dividend reinvestment plans in some very specific cases (such as no cash needs, being early in the journey, for simplicity, and where the reinvestment is to a low cost broad based index fund).

      1. Thanks, that makes sense. I hadn’t thought about them being taxed in the same way. I had been getting caught up in thinking about the brokerage fees of re-investing because I’m at the very start of my investing journey and generally investing smaller amounts of capital. Particularly for my A200 holdings, I won’t generate enough dividend capital to purchase another unit, so I’d been considering cashing it out and redirecting it to a cheaper per unit choice from my holdings e.g. IWLD. It’s been an interesting learning curve for me the past few weeks, finding out that dividends and dividend-reinvestment, while definitely not to be sneezed at, are not the be-all-and-end-all of equity investing. Fair sailing to you, good Sir.

  9. It’s been interesting following your journey and reading about why you make certain decisions. I am wondering why you are still contributing to the portfolio and not trying to get it into super. Having the greater part of your net worth outside of super is not going to be very tax efficient going forward requiring you to have a great net worth to achieve the same income.

    1. Thanks very much Andy – I appreciate you following and reading!

      It’s a good point you raise – part of my current logic is that the dominant risk I might face is sequence of returns risk in the decade and half prior to preservation age, and also hitting the $1.6 m threshold for super accounts through just compunding of what is there.

      I also place quite a high personal premium on greater control and flexibility of the assets – so there is a conscious trade-off there with pure tax optimisation.

      Having said all that, I do intend to revisit any options I have on contributions post-FI and reanalyse it! 🙂

      1. Yes, I often mull over Super contributions vs Equities investment. I often see people cite the legislative risk with Super and I wonder whether similar legislative risks exist with Equities? Or whether changes to CGT or investing would receive more push-back from businesses and therefore be too risky for legislators to touch?

        1. Indeed, I do think there is legislative risk there as well, but for Super I think it is potentially easier for governments to announce prospective changes but which still are unavoidable for that ‘captured’ capital within that vehicle.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.