As of May 12 of this year, the US market as measured by the Standard & Poors Index is down by more than 18%! Retirees invested in the US market will see their retirement fund shrunk by almost the same amount! This is a serious number! Provisions intended for 10 years will now be sufficient for only 8.2 years.
Berkshire Hathaway on the other hand is UP by 3.8%! a similar 10 year retirement fund would have grown by about 5 months!
Over the last 10 years, Berkshire Hathaway grew by 336.4% over the S&P 500 195.6%!
How great would it be if we have the great Warren Buffet as our fund manager!
Some may have access and resources to invest in Berkshire, but for those without, is there any way to generate returns in a volatile market?
Success in investments is all about "choosing" the right mix of assets to be included in your retirement portfolio, as each asset class will have its own specific risk to reward characteristics, to optimize returns and to minimize risk as much as possible, the key is to decide how much percentage of each asset class should you allocate your funds to
Two guidelines?
Time horizon - the years to your retirement
the earlier you start will give you the advantage of having the ability to be more aggressive, as risk is almost always relative to return, placing a larger portion of your funds in equities may translate to two benefits, first is that the amount of money needed to achieve a target retirement fund level may be smaller (hence cheaper), as the higher projected returns may translate to a higher growth rate
the second benefit is that allocating the same amount of money may grow to a much sizeable retirement fund
Accept "volatility" as a fact in generating returns
The market will not be moving up or down in a straight line but in a series of oscillations, a proper asset allocation strategy from the onset of the investment will provide the flexibility to take advantage of these swings
a 60/40 (equity/bond) portfolio for example will have a different asset percentage distribution after a period of time, in a case where the stock market goes up, it may become 65/35 because of stock market appreciation, the idea here is to bring it back to 60/40 by moving the excess funds from equities to bonds, this is the so called re-balancing
regular re-balancing serves two purpose: first it that it sets a limit to the amount of risk to the portfolio, a 60% allocation to equities limits market risk exposure to 60% of your retirement fund, second is that it provides an automatic mechanism for profit taking, this can serve as buffer when the need to average down arises as the market moves down
we may not have the privilege of having Mr. Buffet manage our retirement fund, a structured disciplined approach (asset allocation + regular re-balancing) may be the second best approach to achieve our retirement goals
all the best my friends!
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