Showing posts with label Asset Allocation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Asset Allocation. Show all posts

Friday, August 24, 2007

Links for Friday

This Week's Links:

A Post from the Past:

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Hurray for the Festival!

This week I will be hosting the July 2nd edition of Festival of Stocks! Investors from all around will be sharing their insights right here on this blog! Check out Value Investing News for the complete details on what this festival is all about. To submit an entry to the festival, simply click here and fill out the Blog Carnival form.


Last week, my Behavioral Finance article was featured on Fat Pitch Financials and The Digerati Life. Student Load Consolidation Lowdown also shared my article on Asset Allocation.


Hurray for the Festival!

Monday, June 11, 2007

It's Really All About Asset Allocation: Part 2 of 2

I negotiated the CNN tool with the following known variables (well some are assumed because I don't really have a job yet):
  • Current Age: 22 (My age when I start full time employment)
  • Desired Retirement Age: 65
  • Life Expectancy: 85
  • Current Income: 65,000 (I hope that is somewhere around my potential starting salary)
  • Typical Annual Raise: 4% (I believe that is a fair average)
  • Desired Annual Income @ Retirement: 65% of current income --> I figure I already will be saving 20% toward retirement and 10% toward housing expenses
  • Expected Benefits from Social Security: $0 --> Social Security will fail
  • Age Payments Begin: 65
  • 401k Balance: $0
  • Contribution %: 10%
  • Company Match: 25%
  • IRAs: $10,000 in my Roth
  • Annual Contribution: I plan on maxing it out $4,000
  • Tax Rates: Whatever CNN said
  • Portfolio: Aggressive ---> But this is the unknown!

The results were great! In order to achieve my goals, I only need to yield 5.06% on my investments throughout retirement, which suggests I can be pretty conservative if I maintain my current contribution rate!

Sunday, June 10, 2007

It's Really All About Asset Allocation: Part 1 of 2

One thing I learned at Merrill Lynch was a great system for retirement planning. The system is much like any Algebra course where you simply solve for the unknown. There are several main variables that go into the retirement planning equation: current age, desired retirement age, life expectancy, current income, expected annual raise, desired annual income in retirement, current retirement savings, and retirement portfolio. At Merrill Lynch our clients new their desired end of the retirement equation (desired retirement income). What they wanted to know was how to make the retirement variables achieve their goals. In order to do this, we simply established the rest of the knowns and found what mix of investments would allow them to reach their goals.

I have a beef with Fidelity's myPlan because it simplifies the retirement equation too much and gives no advice on an investment direction. The calculator asked what my desired investment style was, and I thought to myself, well that depends how close to my retirement goal I was. See this is how most people should think we planning their retirement investments; what asset mix gets me to my goal.

CNNMoney's retirement calculator is far superior to Fidelity's because it takes out all assumptions and offers an appropriate asset mix. I will share my retirement check in Part 2 of the series!

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Book Review: Investment Titans

Jonathan Burton's Investment Titans does a really great job covering some of the smartest minds in the investment community. Each chapter in the book is dedicated to a well known investor and articulates that investor's particular niche. While I have taken an extensive portfolio management course at my university, the book still managed to share many unique strategies that I had never heard of!

Overview: I almost guarantee that everyone will learn something new after reading this book. I found myself skimming over the first two chapters because I already new about the Capital Asset Pricing model and using the Long and Hold investment strategy, but I was really interested in Jeremy Siegel's argument about Equity Premium. Readers will also get a heavy dose of index fund praise and asset allocation. In short, the book covers everything an intermediate investor should know when investing.

Personal Takeaways: I thought I would simply share some passages to cover my takeaways
  • "Bonds and cash simple don't retain their purchasing power once inflation takes its toll."
  • "... asking whether you should keep a stock... is whether you'd be willing to buy it."
  • "Behaviorists combine psychology and finance - contending that preconceptions and cognitive errors lead investors to misinterpret events and to overlook opportunities."
  • "Value stocks around earnings announcements outperform growth stocks... by four percent."
  • "The better an investment has treated you, the more you should think about distancing yourself. The stock doesn't know you own it. It owes you nothing."
Recommendation:
I recommend investors of all skills levels at least flip through the chapters and find something new. Investment Titans has certainly given me a few tag lines to keep in mind when evaluating an investment and I am confident that the insights have contributed to my overall investor education.