I started serious Investing Journey in Jan 2000 to create wealth through long-term investing and short-term trading; but as from April 2013 my Journey in Investinghas changed to create Retirement Income for Life till 85 years old in 2041 for two persons over market cycles of Bull and Bear.
Since 2017 after retiring from full-time job as employee; I am moving towards Investing Nirvana - Freehold Investment Income for Life investing strategy where 100% of investment income from portfolio investment is cashed out to support household expenses i.e. not a single cent of re-investing!
It is 57% (2017 to Aug 2022) to the Land of Investing Nirvana - Freehold Income for Life!
This blog is authored by an old multi-bagger blue chips stock picker uncle from HDB heartland!
"The market is not your mother. It consists of tough men and women who look for ways to take money away from you instead of pouring milk into your mouth."- Dr. Alexander Elder
"For the things we have to learn before we can do them, we learn by doing them." - Aristotle
It is here where I share with you how I did it! FREE Education in stock market wisdom.
Yup, its a lot easier to manipulate with percentages ;)
That's why competent fundamental investors prefer to Trust but Verify using the Cash Flow statements, as its a lot harder to "manipulate" than the Profit & Loss or Balance Sheet statements.
Oh the flip side, if your returns in percentage is not sexy, focus the headlines using actual numbers like:
1) Total Net Portfolio Value crossed $400 billion for the first time! Limpeh "big stick" or what?
2) We made $22 billion last year! Or-yi-or!
Of course somewhere obscure in the middle of the article then you reveal (most people don't read beyond the headlines anyway), you reveal you made 5.81% last year. And the year before? 24.5%...
Got cleavage reveal cleavage; got thighs show thighs ;)
I prefer XIRR as the common denominator for comparison as it already incorporates cashflows. Supposedly anyway. ***
Using ROC can be as misleading as saying "My portfolio grew from $100 to $1M". but it's the great-grandfather who started it with $100 a hundred years ago.
Or "My portfolio hit $1M within 1 year", but it's a million dollar salaryman who puts in $100K each month.
*** The only problem is some don't really know how to come up with XIRR, and mix it up with CAGR, ROC, time-weighted returns, simple interest etc. And then you have garbage in garbage out numbers lol.
For retail investors who are highly dependent on their investments, if the returns in absolute money terms is not enough to grow wealth or at least cover expenses with a wide margin, then high percentage returns is irrelevant. Returns measured in percentage alone is not practical.
In a bear market when there is no returns to speak of, there should be enough cash and liquid assets to cover the period when markets are depressed.
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I am 66 yrs old uncle living in HDB heartland who has achieved financial independence @ 56 and finally retired @ 60 from full-time job as employee on 1 Oct 2016.
Single household income since 1995 with three children.
Currently, two sons and one daughter are working.
I have been doing 22 years of long-term investing and short-term trading in Singapore stock market only since Jan 2000 so I am that so-called Panda or Koala in the investment world.
Currently, I am on my way to Investing Nirvana - Freehold Investment Income for Life after 23 years of building up Investment Portfolio through long-term investing for growth-dividends and short-term trading on Rounds after Rounds.
I have also achieved sustainable retirement income for life from CPF and Year-on-year Diminishing Bear Market Impact stock Investment Portfolio in local market, SGX! i.e. Beary Safe!
Cheers!
Disclaimer: Stock trading involves significant risks. Create Wealth trader is not a licensed Investment Adviser and will not be responsible for any losses which you incurred. You are advised to always do your own homework before making any trading decision.
LOL!
ReplyDeleteYup, its a lot easier to manipulate with percentages ;)
That's why competent fundamental investors prefer to Trust but Verify using the Cash Flow statements, as its a lot harder to "manipulate" than the Profit & Loss or Balance Sheet statements.
Oh the flip side, if your returns in percentage is not sexy, focus the headlines using actual numbers like:
1) Total Net Portfolio Value crossed $400 billion for the first time! Limpeh "big stick" or what?
2) We made $22 billion last year! Or-yi-or!
Of course somewhere obscure in the middle of the article then you reveal (most people don't read beyond the headlines anyway), you reveal you made 5.81% last year. And the year before? 24.5%...
Got cleavage reveal cleavage; got thighs show thighs ;)
Your wise words - Trust but verify. LOL! Most of us are too lazy to verify.
DeleteUncle8888,
ReplyDeleteI prefer XIRR as the common denominator for comparison as it already incorporates cashflows. Supposedly anyway. ***
Using ROC can be as misleading as saying "My portfolio grew from $100 to $1M". but it's the great-grandfather who started it with $100 a hundred years ago.
Or "My portfolio hit $1M within 1 year", but it's a million dollar salaryman who puts in $100K each month.
*** The only problem is some don't really know how to come up with XIRR, and mix it up with CAGR, ROC, time-weighted returns, simple interest etc. And then you have garbage in garbage out numbers lol.
For retail investors who are highly dependent on their investments, if the returns in absolute money terms is not enough to grow wealth or at least cover expenses with a wide margin, then high percentage returns is irrelevant. Returns measured in percentage alone is not practical.
ReplyDeleteIn a bear market when there is no returns to speak of, there should be enough cash and liquid assets to cover the period when markets are depressed.