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I was perusing the always excellent Oblivious Investor today and came across a link to a post by Chris Mamula on the implications of the low interest rates on bonds. Here is the link. https://www.caniretireyet.com/retiring-extreme-low-interest-rates/ I have been thinking about this because I am notionally inside a three year
Liquidity, risk vs return, volatility, diversification: Your previous post was very well thought out. Although few in number, I believe the responses were excellent.
Do you (personally) need bonds in a crisis?
Do you (personally) need bonds for liquidity, return, volatility, diversification?
I personally think bonds have a very good purpose if properly used. Just not for investment returns, but for liquidity that accomplishes ones personal financial plan.
CM, Larry Ragman and Johanna would make a very interesting panel discussion at WCI2021 or a podcast. Likely a topic without a resolution because there isn't one!
My passion is protecting clients and others from predatory and ignorant advisors 270-247-6087 for CPA clients (we are Flat Fee for both CPA & Fee-Only Financial Planning)
Johanna Fox, CPA, CFP is affiliated with Wrenne Financial for financial planning clients👍 1Comment
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Most doctors get stuck in 101. They need an advisor.Last edited by EntrepreneurMD; 12-29-2020, 03:35 PM.Comment
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Could not info agree more that learning to invest with a low cost no load diversified portfolio of index funds is quite simple
Many docs think they can do better, a fool's game
Of course you need an estate planning atty and many need a CPA as well
All the info one needs about investing, pre and post retirement, is at your computer
Kitces and Pfau write much about retirement strategies; again not difficult to digest quicklyComment
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Every professional has the intelligence to manage your their own portfolio by just reading, Malkel, Bogle, Bernstein, and Swedroe
"IF YOU CAN"- 14 pg online PDF-print it out and spread these words to others-by William Bernstein
If you read and see how 1-2% in yearly fees decimates one's portfolio, it will motivate you to do it yourself
As Dr Dahle has said, a few mistakes one might make over their lifetime is far less costly than the massive fees paid to AUM advisors and othersComment
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The only scenario I can think of justifying half or all in bonds is a life expectancy of 5 years or less and a desire (no family)/need (medical bills) to spend it.
Trying to envision what I will do with portfolio heading into retirement age (20 years). Someone who is 67 and healthy today (life expectancy 90 based on family history), debt free, $10M investment portfolio, annual living expenses including taxes are $200K/year (2%, exclude SS/pensions for simplification) - is $1M in bonds reasonable leaving $9M to grow (90/10)? Or would an FA still recommend 60/40 or 50/50?Last edited by EntrepreneurMD; 12-30-2020, 08:38 AM.Comment
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Timed to mature at date of need confiding 5-yr goals. We use bonds for specific short term goals only, as articulated in their financial plan.My passion is protecting clients and others from predatory and ignorant advisors 270-247-6087 for CPA clients (we are Flat Fee for both CPA & Fee-Only Financial Planning)
Johanna Fox, CPA, CFP is affiliated with Wrenne Financial for financial planning clientsComment
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What is proper for physician level assets? Is there really any scenario where there is a need for more than 5 years of living expenses in bonds? 5 years is plenty to cover SORR, and more is likely to reduce long term returns with no real recessionary protection since most recessions recover within 5 years. Millions in bonds like a 50/50 portfolio doesn't make much sense to me IMO, especially given longer life expectancy.
The only scenario I can think of justifying half or all in bonds is a life expectancy of 5 years or less and a desire (no family)/need (medical bills) to spend it.
Trying to envision what I will do with portfolio heading into retirement age (20 years). Someone who is 67 and healthy today (life expectancy 90 based on family history), debt free, $10M investment portfolio, annual living expenses including taxes are $200K/year (2%, exclude SS/pensions for simplification) - is $1M in bonds reasonable leaving $9M to grow (90/10)? Or would an FA still recommend 60/40 or 50/50?
We don’t use bonds for living expenses. That is the purpose of liquidity.My passion is protecting clients and others from predatory and ignorant advisors 270-247-6087 for CPA clients (we are Flat Fee for both CPA & Fee-Only Financial Planning)
Johanna Fox, CPA, CFP is affiliated with Wrenne Financial for financial planning clients👍 1Comment
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Have owned individual MUNIS for 35 yrs and the tax free income is great and bought only long term with higher returns
As well owned Vang Hi Yield Corp for a long time and they buy the best of the junk many times
LT TREASURIES and corporates have done better than sp500 over last 20yrs as well as junk
LT Bonds in the 80's with double digit returns through zero coupon bonds funded my 3 kids educationComment
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Have owned individual MUNIS for 35 yrs and the tax free income is great and bought only long term with higher returns
As well owned Vang Hi Yield Corp for a long time and they buy the best of the junk many times
LT TREASURIES and corporates have done better than sp500 over last 20yrs as well as junk
LT Bonds in the 80's with double digit returns through zero coupon bonds funded my 3 kids educationComment
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Oh, so no bonds? Your risk diversification is international and your factor is healthcare. Ok. Or, are you saying you will hold your current bond allocations to maturity, and the plan described here is where the new money goes?Comment
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