Sounding the Depths – A Skeptical View of Listed Investment Company Investing

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Measure what is measurable, and make measurable what is not so.
Galileo

Investing using Listed Investment Companies (LICs) is one of the most commonly suggested investment options for Australians interested in pursuing financial independence. Yet it is also one of the least questioned, as well as the least empirically examined and supported approaches.

LIC investment is covered in many beginner personal finance and investment books such as the best-selling Barefoot Investor series from Scott Pape. Discussions of the benefits of LIC-based investing by established Australian financial independence blogs are also common and have been jokingly described as a growing ‘bandwagon’ (see for example, Strong Money Australia, Aussie Firebug and Pat the Shuffler). LIC-based and conceptually similar ‘Thornhill’ approaches are also frequently discussed and compared in Reddit financial independence threads.

A theme of much of this coverage is that LICs are a logical and preferable path for many Australian investors seeking financial independence. The universality of this theme made me curious to examine this popular proposition in more detail. As with all received wisdom it is sometimes worth looking more closely, and seeing if the claims for the position put actually hold water.

This long-read article seeks to start the process of doing that, and provide a more skeptical examination of eight of the common explicit or underlying claims for the use of LICs as an alternative to passive investing though equity index Exchange Traded Funds.

Some caveats to begin. The purpose of the article is not to suggest that LICs can never form part of a sound portfolio, or that an investor that has fully or partly invested their savings in a broad-based dividend focused LIC has made an irredeemable error that will hopelessly compromise their path to financial independence.

Any investor saving a large proportion of their income into reasonably diversified equity based investments should, on average and historically speaking, do well.

Rather, the purpose is to provide some food for thought on the risks and drawbacks of LICs for those either invested, or considering investing in LICs, drawing where possible on relevant academic and hard empirical evidence. This evidence has been either absent, or difficult to consistently spot, in the discussions on the merits of LICs and index ETFs that I have seen to date.

So, to turn to the claims.

Claim #1
LIC managers can skilfully and strategically select reliable dividend stocks

Underpinning any rational choice to invest in LICs is the belief that its management skill can reliably result in at least equivalent risk and return performance as accessible passive alternatives (such as Betashares’s A200.ASX or Vanguard’s VAS.ASX exchange traded funds) through initial and ongoing selection of equities that is enough to at least outweigh the cost of such management. Falling short of this means reducing one’s risk adjusted return with no offsetting benefit.

Importantly, an observation that some LICs may have outperformed a passive equity index even over the long-term does not tell us anything about whether this performance was due to skill or luck. Nor does it tell us, critically, whether this superior performance was identifiable in advance, compared to any other LIC available to investors at the start of the period in question that then went on to deliver below average returns. 

Those empirical finance studies just ruin everything

In fact, it is one of the most widely published and replicated empirical findings in finance literature that professional investment managers are unable to reliably outperform relevant passive index benchmarks (see Fama and French “Luck versus Skill in the Cross Section of Mutual Fund Alpha Estimates” (pdf) in the Journal of Finance).

This evidence includes exhaustive studies of unit investment trusts, which are comparable equivalents in the United States to Australian LICs. Unfortunately, recent empirical studies show that unit investment managers typically reduce returns by poor stock selection by between 2.5-2.8 per cent per annum compared to the market index, and even fail to outperform active mutual funds despite having no requirement to hold cash for redemptions (see Comer and  Rodriguez “Stock Selection Skill, Manager Flexibility, and Performance: Evidence from Unit Investment Trusts“).

It is difficult to know what to make of a lack of engagement with this established literature and record in the argument sometimes seen that the active management LICs offer the potential for superior risk adjusted returns to the benchmark.

But Australia is different, right?

An accompanying claim sometimes made to discount this clear evidence is that Australia is different, that there is something fundamentally different or special about Australian LIC managers that they are able to achieve results different to those systematically observed across other investment markets. Typically, little clear explanation is given as to why this should be the case, especially in a modern globalised equity market.

In fact, what limited published academic evidence is available suggests the opposite (see Robson “The Investment Performance of Unit Trusts and Mutual Funds in Australia for the Period 1969 to 1978“.

The unfortunate reality is that there is simply no robust evidence that managers in LICs have demonstrated any reliable capacity to select equities, or see trends in advance and act, to the benefit of their investors after costs.

Reviewing the LIC selection pitfalls: a worked example

This same point is evident from comparisons of a Vanguard Australian share ETF (VAS) and four popular Australian-managed LICs (AFI, Argo, BKI and MLT) made recently by Aussie Firebug in a discussion on moving to invest more in LICs. Taken over a recent five-year period, this analysis shows that this underperformance risk is pervasive and not avoidable in advance.

To see this, looking at the four fund and VAS example given in detail it is clear that:

  • LIC underperformance risk doesn’t magically disappear if funds are split between different LICs – An investor that split their funds evenly between the four well-established LICs would have received a lower total return than if they had simply invested in the index fund;
  • Choosing a single LIC doesn’t help – If an investor chose a single LIC, they faced a 2 in 4 chance of choosing a fund that would underperform on a total returns basis, and just a one in 4 chance of choosing a LIC that went on to outperform by more than 0.1 per cent; and
  • Getting it wrong has real consequences – If an investor had had the misfortune to select Argo, a LIC focused on producing highly reliable dividends, they would have received a total return that was 3 per cent lower than the unmanaged Vanguard ETF, with a lower dividend.

Updating the worked example: the problem worsens

Updating this example with Sharesight returns data to 14 January 2019 further demonstrates the potential risks. Using the past 5 years of data a depressing picture emerges in which:

  • Performance universally falls short – All four LICs underperformed on a total returns basis by more than 1 per cent, a worse result than chance might suggest;
  • Even the claimed dividend performance of LICs is ‘hit and miss’ –  2 out of the 4 of the LICs delivered lower dividends than the VAS, meaning an investor choosing a single LIC fund had only an even chance of keeping up with VAS dividends;
  • There was still no help from diversifying between LICs – an investor splitting their fund evenly between the LICs would have received a total return that was 2.3 per cent lower than the index alternative (VAS), and also would have received lower dividends; and
  • The laggard performers fell even further behind – with AFI investors receiving a total return around 3.4 per cent lower than the Vanguard VAS ETF alternative, with a lower dividend just adding to disappointment.

The recently published ETF and LIC annual performance report by ETF Watch turns up further anomalies, of commonly discussed ‘established, steady and reliable’ LICs paying lower income, and experiencing higher return volatility than equivalent benchmarks (such a VAS).

Of chance, LIC selection and cognitive dissonance

Of course, some of this could be the result of chance, but this is a knife that cuts both ways – in particular, into frequent objections along the lines that “…but LIC XYZ has outperformed the market over the past 10 years”.

Simply put, a claim that ‘XYZ LIC delivered returns of 7% where the market delivered only 6% during this period’ is not convincing evidence of management skill that an investor should pay much attention to. As noted above, academic evidence consistently demonstrates that most managers destroy value, and those vanishingly few skilled managers who will outperform (by chance or skill) are not identifiable in advance.

It is striking to see investors who willingly and rationally concede their own inability to make individual equity selections – by the very act of considering a LIC or index investment – to go on to act as though they are likely to be able to exercise some value-adding investor skill by seeking to research and make distinctions between even a relatively small range of well-established LICs investing in broadly similar assets.

Claim #2
Relying on LICs that have been around for decades adds safety

Many proponents of LIC-based investing advocate following an investment rule of only investing in older ‘tried and true’ and well-known LICs, for added safety. This rule was recently discussed, for example, in Aussie Firebug’s interview with Peter Thornhill (see 22:00-23:00 of this podcast).

Trusted brands in markets usually exist because past performance of a product or service gives confidence in the ability and incentive of the business to continue to deliver a good standard of service.

This is a reasonable approach to take to purchases of jeans, cars, and many services. It is a potential trap when it comes to actively managed investment products.

Tried and true – or a partial sample overdue for mediocrity?

This is because of two factors:

  • Survivorship bias – when investors compare the performance of Listed Investment Companies with alternatives, they are comparing the performance of LICs that have survived the period of comparison, which is only a subset of those investors actually invested in. Active funds and LICs that underperform for substantial periods typically close, leaving the actual comparison being made between those firms that performed well enough to survive and the benchmark. This is not the relevant comparison. Rather, the relevant comparison is: how did the average active fund or LIC that might have been chosen by an investor perform? In many cases, the average fund or LIC is located in the metaphorical graveyard. Some US estimates of this effect are that it leads to the equivalent of an overstating of likely returns from actively managed funds of around 1.5 per cent (see Malkiel, A Random Walk Down Wall Street, p.270); and
  • Performance is not persistent – While a LIC may have a strong investment selection process that performs well in one market, past performance does not tell an investor anything about likely future performance. Indeed there is some academic evidence that the performance of newer managers is systematically stronger that those will a long track record:

“Pastor, Stambaugh and Taylor came to another interesting conclusion: The rising skill level they observed was not due to increasing skill within firms. Instead, they found that “the new funds entering the industry are more skilled on average than the existing funds. Consistent with this interpretation, we find that younger funds outperform older funds in a typical month.”

Good managers never die, they just get replaced by average managers

In any LIC operating over decades, the investor is invariably assuming a ‘manager risk’ – i.e. the risk that a given manager will make mistakes that see them lose money against the benchmark.

This is not alleviated by selection of ‘tried and true’ LICs. In fact, there is good empirical evidence that manager risk is not just the risk of current managers making errors, as some studies have shown that investment company owners typically hire managers with good track records, which on average disappear right after appointment (see Goyal and Wahal “The Selection and Termination of Investment Management Firms by Plan Sponsors” (pdf) in Journal of Finance).

Claim #3
LICs are ‘more diversified’ and lower risk than the index

The claim is sometimes made that LICs are superior because they are ‘more diversified’ than equivalent equity indexes.

Often the point being made is that the Australian equity index has significant banking and resource components, and that LICs are investing in a more diversified set of ordinary industrial or other businesses that will exhibit lower risk or volatility over time.

The risks of index departure

This claim is hard to assess on its face because the role of diversification is to lower risk of loss or underperformance. If a LIC has a different make up to the index it is important to recognise that two things are potentially happening. The LIC could be:

  1. Making sector bets – making a series of active sector bets compared to the market index; and/or
  2. Assuming lower market risk (or ‘beta’) – in which case expected returns will be lower than the market and the same outcome could be achieved with lower cost through a market index added to a bond or cash position.

If active sectoral bets are being made, the managers are by default making an active assessment that the return from a subset of sectors within the broad market composition will outperform the whole.

The same record of evidence applies here as the broader, incorrect, claim that LICs demonstrate a capability to outperform the market index. Long-term evidence for sectoral outperformance is not strong, and returns data instead tends to show final returns from each sector such as financials, resources and remaining firms are strikingly similar, as the Reserve Bank of Australia recently noted (see graph below).

sp-so-2018-12-13-graph3

Risk happens from what is left out of the LIC portfolio, not just what is left in

A further problem for the claim is that LICs often have substantially narrower set of holdings than comparable benchmarks such as the ASX200 (which can be invested in for a 0.07% MER though Betashares A200).

Importantly, these LIC holdings are human selected, meaning that LICs can fail to acquire the critical dividend producing firms of the future, or fail to sell those that persistently underperform.

By contrast, a passive index approach means an investor will always hold those firms that rise to become earnings producers of the future, and have eliminated from their portfolio those firms whose poor returns performance sees them drop out of the index.

This is a critical strength of index investing, because of a characteristic of equity markets that a failure to invest in a relatively small proportion of total firms can mean missing the majority of the strong historical performance of the equity market.

That is because firm earnings are highly skewed, in statistical terms – that is, a small number of firms account for a disproportionate amount of future earnings and growth. Missing those rising stars will inevitably result in underperformance compared to a passive index.

Claim #4
The closed unit structure of LICs provides greater protection investors from panic, and enables bargain hunting

A further claim sometimes made for LIC investment is that the ‘closed end’ structure, where units are traded but not created automatically by new investors joining the fund, is a positive advantage compared to Exchange Traded Funds.

This time, I’m different, or ‘hell is other people’

Typically, so the argument goes, investors are irrational and emotional, and therefore:

One should always be suspicious of arguments based on assumptions that others will behave – or are behaving – irrationally, whilst one’s own conduct will be guided by a consistently superior temperament or insight. As is commonly observed, far more people similarly consider themselves to be above average drivers than can statistically be the case, and overconfidence is a key contributor to poor investor returns.

There is little evidence to suggest that any investor can systematically buy individual stocks at below their fair market value. In fact, empirical academic evidence such as the classic study by Odean and Barber The Behavior of Individual Investors (pdf) which uses real trading account data consistently show that investors:

  • Underperform standard passive investment benchmarks in stock selections;
  • Sell winning investments while holding losing investments;
  • Unduly weight past returns in purchase decisions;
  • Engage in learned reinforcing behavioural loops, repeating actions that brought pleasure in the past (in part this could account for the popularity of the injunction to “buy the dip”).

There is no clear reason typically suggested why this situation would be transformed by the introduction of a LIC structure between the underlying stocks and the investor.

In fact, making a single individual stock purchase decision is arguably a much less complicated analytical decision than buying a bundle of 50-100 equities in one LIC versus another. In such a comparison of bundled products the information disadvantages and complexities faced by the LIC purchaser is multiplied exponentially.

NAV-igation errors?

In a way, the myth of the ‘bargain’ LIC bought ‘on sale’ is understandable. The presence of a published Net Asset Value (NAV) seems to suggest an alluring prospect of the ‘true value’ being on display, opening the gates to the possibility of buying a set of assets below their actual value. Yet, this view ignores a few cautionary facts.

LICs are capable of being valued, and differences between their underlying asset values and prices are subject to arbitrage opportunities by well-informed market participants with greater access to information, trading execution speeds and expertise than any average retail investor.

It is unclear on what basis an individual investor could reasonably be expected to consistently be on the winning side of this grossly uneven contest.

Shallow reefs to port, or a storm to starboard?

Indeed, the situation is worse just than being up against well-informed market players in trying to ‘bargain hunt’ a LIC at below its NAV.  It turns out that a buyer faces a difficult choice with ambiguous and incomplete information regardless of whether the LIC is trading at a premium or not.

If the investor purchases at a premium to NAV, they are, all else equal, paying above market prices for a stream of future dividends, compared to buying the same shares and dividend entitlements directly on the open market. This is the equivalent of buying a loaf of bread for $2.20, when the same loaf can be purchased for $2.10 from a shop next door.

The typical answer to this is that one is paying a ‘premium’ for the supposed skill of the LIC manager, that is, one is locking in paying an upfront price now in the hope or speculation that any past superior performance was skill-based, and repeatable. As has already been seen under Claim #1 however, evidence for either of these propositions is scant.

A simple rule that suggests itself might therefore be to avoid ever purchasing a LIC at a premium to NAV, and some have adopted this rule. This apparently neat solution runs into a few difficulties though. For example:

  • Out of the market – Some LICs trade for quite extended periods above their NAV, meaning the investor will be effectively locked out of some LICs, and be forced to choose a non-preferred alternative;
  • Aged NAVs – Given NAVs are not always updated regularly, investors may be making purchase decisions on out of date and non-transparent valuations, and end up paying a premium anyway (note to try to mitigate this recognised problem, Pat the Shuffler recently developed a NTA estimator);
  • Discount for a reason – The trading of a LIC at a discount to its NAV could well not be a random opportunity to buy goods at less than fair value, it could instead reflect real price relevant information that trading market participants setting prices have that the ordinary retail investor does not have.

The logic of the argument that LICs provide a special protection against market panic is not readily apparent.

LICs shares themselves are subject to the same herd panic risks as their underlying share holdings, with the added risk that the market for individual LICs may be less liquid than the markets for their underlying holdings or ETF alternatives commonly also used by institutional investors (for a discussion of some of the misconceptions of ETF liquidity, see here). Moreover, the same arbitrage opportunities that keep LICs broadly in line with valuations of their holdings could be expected to expose LICs the same pricing pressures as the equities that make up their holdings.

Claim #5
LICs are just a substitute for low cost index ETFs – which way to go is just a question of taste

Perhaps in recognition of some of the weaknesses in the claims made, a further position sometimes put is that LICs and ETFs are effectively close substitutes, with the choice between them coming down largely to a matter of personal taste.

This is difficult claim to support, when considering that:

  • LICs typically have holdings that differ significantly from the capitalisation weighted market index, meaning that a different return and risk package is being purchased;
  • If the LIC does happen to be broadly invested in weights that closely reflect an equity index such as the ASX200, then they are effectively charging a mark-up for providing index-like results – a phenomenon so common it has been dubbed ‘closet indexing’
  • LICs cannot reliably be selected in advance in a way that will match index return;
  • The majority of LICs can be expected to underperform their closest relevant index benchmark, due to a proven inability of investment managers to reliably outperform passive index benchmarks after costs;
  • LICs can often have higher management costs than their equivalent benchmark, lowering returns even before an expected underperformance penalty – and if the LIC costs are lower than an unmanaged equivalent, a skeptical investor is at least entitled to wonder about the likely extent of actual value-adding research resources available to management; and
  • An investor not willing to pay a premium penalty over the current market value of the dividend flows (intrinsic value) may not be able to purchase their desired LIC at any given time.

These are substantial, and compounding, factors and differences that will have real world effects on a portfolio. They will affect returns, risks, out of pocket costs, the time taken to reach financial independence, and potentially willingness to stay on the journey.

Impacts of differences

As a practical example on costs – even small differences compound over time. This means that over a 25 year holding period a LIC investor paying 0.15% (around the level of many established LICs frequently suggested for consideration) could be paying as much as $27 500 extra on an $250 000 portfolio when compared to a purchase of the low cost Betashares A200 index exchange traded fund.

Note that this example assumes no particular ongoing performance disadvantage, or bad purchase timing with NAV premiums. Paying $27 500 to potentially assume the accumulated manager risks accruing over 25 years, and to obtain index-like or worse results does not sound like a close or effective substitute.

There is a role for personal tastes in investment and everyday purchase decisions between close substitutes. One day, you might prefer lemonade over cola. On another day, you might make the reverse choice.

But the differences between LICs and indexes are more fundamental than such a trivial everyday choice. If either are to form the cornerstone of a journey to financial independence potentially involving the investment of hundreds of thousands of dollars over a decade or more, the differences and risks should be consciously and carefully considered and accepted.

Claim #6 
LICs may earn lower returns from their focus on dividend stocks, but still fits with my investment needs

This is not so much a claim, as a position reached by some who either don’t make, or have abandoned, Claim #5 that there is no significant difference between capturing whole of market returns, and the smaller actively chosen portfolios within LICs.

For those taking a conscious choice to accept a combination of lower overall returns, and potentially higher portfolio volatility, from the selection of a LIC, there is no reasonable objection that can made.

This decision should flow, however, from a close and full appreciation of one’s own risk tolerance, and the actual risks of underperformance to an investor’s financial independence goal.

The cost of locking in a persistent below market return should not be underestimated. Compounding will significantly widen the gap between outcomes of an investor earning even 0.5% less over a significant period, and have the potential to result in either higher savings requirements to reach the same outcome, or lower protection against the key risk facing investors of not earning sufficient real returns after inflation.

Claim #7
LICs have special value because they provide a more stable flow of dividends

Another claim made is that LICs provide a smooth and stable flow of dividends, compared to alternative index ETFs. This is due to a policy of many popular listed investment companies choosing to retain some of the dividends they receive for the benefit of their investors, in order to pay out these dividends during future periods of dividend cuts.

 Paying another for self-control

The important thing to consider about this service is its value to an investor, versus its price.

In some sense, this dividend retaining approach by LICs is a benevolent act of the same kind as a parent withholding some of a child’s weekly pocket money in case it is spent unwisely. Importantly, however, over any period of investment it is likely to be slightly net present value negative, given than a benefit is being withheld through time, for future payouts. Arguably, if the LIC reinvests this cash, the opportunity cost to the investor is reduced somewhat. What is still lost, however, is the opportunity cost of being able to use the full dividend amount in the way the investor best sees fit at any given time.

There are perhaps some psychological benefits from this ‘dividend smoothing’ service. The same essential function, however, could be replicated by the investor, whilst retaining quarter to quarter to flexibility, if desired, with one option being through simple employment of ones bank account. Again, choosing to accept this externally imposed control may have value to an individual.

Some hidden risks and costs of outsourcing control

But if there are benefits, there are also hidden costs and risks.

In any rapid and sustained change in earnings and dividends payments, LIC distributions will potentially send a false signal of comfort, and not alert an investor that lifestyle or spending adjustments may be justified.

The unhappy fact for investors is that usually a LIC is either withholding part of your owed distributions, or it is paying to you a stream of income that is not sustained by the underlying earnings of its portfolios. Neither outcome appears an unmitigated positive.

Claim #8
But fully franked dividends…there are clear tax advantages inherent in the LIC structure

A final claim sometimes made is that the company structure of LICs confers some special benefit on investors relating to the receiving of franking credits.

In fact, once fully traced through the situation is as you would expect in any rational tax system – the vehicle does not magically alter the total effective liability. Aussie Firebug has ably debunked this claim already.

Summing up – taking their LICs

Many of the claims of benefits of LICs compared to passive equity indexes do not appear to be supported by relevant academic or empirical evidence.

The decision to select a LIC rather than a passive equity index ETF carries with it a range of risks that have been well-documented over past studies, such as taking more risk than necessary, to achieve below average results.

Yet there are a series of other, less visible, risks and costs that also lie in wait for even those investors that seek to mitigate against the weaknesses inherent in relying on actively managed LICs.

Careful thought is warranted about the risks, costs and tradeoffs being assumed in investing in a LIC, particularly if it forms part of a plan to achieve financial independence.

To learn more about my own choices and investment path start here, review my goals and investment plans or browse all posts here.

Further reading

Barber, B and Odean, T. “The Behavior of Individual Investors” in Handbook of Economics and Finance, Vol 2, Part B, 2013

Comer, George and Rodriguez, Javier Stock Selection Skill, Manager Flexibility, and Performance: Evidence from Unit Investment Trusts May 19, 2015

Ellis, C. Winning the Losers Game: Timeless Strategies for Successful Investment, McGraw-Hill, 1993

Fama, E. and K. French, 2010, “Luck versus Skill in the Cross Section of Mutual Fund Alpha Estimates,” in Journal of Finance, 65, 1915-1947

Goyal, A and Wahal, S. The Selection and Termination of Investment Management Firms by Plan Sponsors in Journal of Finance, August 2008

Kohler, M. ‘The Long View on Australian Equities’ Presentation to 31st Australasian Finance and Banking Conference, Sydney – 13 December 2018

Malkiel, B. A Random Walk Down Wall St, W W Norton, 2003

Robson, G. The Investment Performance of Unit Trusts and Mutual Funds in Australia for the Period 1969 to 1978 in AFAANZ Journal of Accounting and Finance, November 1986

Shifting Tides – New Portfolio Goals and Portfolio Income Update – Half Year to December 31, 2018

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A good plan violently executed now is better than a perfect plan executed next week

George S. Patton

Just over two years ago I set out on an exploratory voyage to try and build a passive income of around $58 000 by July 2021. With good initial progress, I reset the compass a year ago to seek to meet this initial financial independence objective by the end of 2018.

As I covered in detail in my recent year in review post, that accelerated timetable has not been met. The past few weeks have been spent reviewing my plans, assumptions and proposed approaches into the future to build both on what I have learnt and new information.

The half-year portfolio income update below forms part of this new information. To begin however, this post explains findings from my review, details my updated portfolio goals and assumptions, and discusses how I will approach my FI journey from here.

Shifting tides and new ports of call

To start with the ultimate goals, I have decided to refine my two complementary objectives, and re-base the target portfolio level of each.

Updated Objective #1 – The revised first objective is to reach a portfolio of $1 598 000 by 31 December 2020. This would produce a real annual income of about $67 000 (in 2018 dollars).

This is an increase of around $120 000 on my previous objective. This moves to a benchmark that I consider to be a better reflection of the original objective.

This new passive income benchmark equals the median annual earnings of an Australian full time worker. This is drawn from Australian Bureau of Statistics earnings data, which is updated at least annually, and which therefore can be consistently tracked through time. This replaces the previous goal of $58 000, a number which had not been inflation indexed since 2016, and which was taken from a variety of ad hoc sources.

Updated Objective #2 – The second objective is to reach a portfolio of $1 980 000 by 31 July 2023. This would produce a real annual income of about $83 000 (in 2018 dollars).

This is a small decrease on my previous Objective #2, a result of changes to some return and asset allocation assumptions discussed more fully in sections below.

The passive income target for this objective remains the approximate equivalent of average Australian full-time ordinary earnings, and a little above my average annual credit card liability. This second longer-term goal is designed to reflect a more ‘business as usual’ lifestyle, rather than more of a ‘leanFIRE’ concept – at least in my current phase of life – of $63 000 pa. As I have observed, it is closer to the level of expenditure at which I think I would truly become indifferent to working or not.

To set the target timeframe for both objectives, I have used very approximate and conservative estimates, based on previous average total portfolio increases over the past five years. This method largely ignores extra contributions arising from above average portfolio distributions, or any return impacts, given the relatively short time until both targets. Achievement of each target will inevitably be impacted by market fluctuations over the next few years, so constructing exact yearly forecasts of the impacts of average returns does not appear particularly worthwhile.

The portfolio targets levels are estimated by dividing the passive income target by a real return of 4.19%, equivalent to a nominal return of 7.19%. The real return assumption is based on the portfolio allocation discussed further below.

Measuring the journey

With the destination set, the next issue is how to measure the journey. So far I have just measured progress in simple percentage terms against the two objectives.

I plan to continue this, but to expand it in two significant ways.

First, recognising that I have some significant superannuation that currently sits outside of the investment portfolio, I will now seek to assess progress on two metrics:

  • the current measure based on reliance on the investment portfolio alone; and
  • a new ‘All Assets’ measure with superannuation assets taken into account.

The reason for this approach is that it increasingly seems artificial to entirely ignore a substantial potential contributor to a FI target, even if it comes with accessibility restrictions and some legislative risk.

Due to these risk and restriction factors, I continue to target financial independence through my private investment portfolio alone, with superannuation providing an additional margin of safety and buffer. Recognising this, I plan to simply report a total ‘All Assets’ measure, rather than detail or write about my superannuation arrangements (spoiler, they are almost exclusively in a low cost index fund).

Second, I plan to report against an expanded set of benchmarks, beyond just my formal investment objectives. Currently I plan to report against two additional measures. My average annual credit card expenditure (a ‘credit card FI’ benchmark) is one, and the second is an aggregated rough estimate of total current annual expenditure. This latter measure is quite approximate and results from adding some known fixed expenses to my total credit card expenditure. I recognise that it is by no measure a frugal existence, and how fortunate I am to be able to live in this way.

For simplicity I will report these progress percentages as below in future monthly updates, using the portfolio position on 1 January this year as inputs in this example.

Measure Portfolio All Assets
Objective #1 – $1 598 000 (or $67 000 pa) 82.5% 115.5%
Objective #2 – $1 980 000 (or $83 000 pa) 66.6% 93.3%
Credit card purchases – $73 000 pa 76.8% 107.5%
Total expenses – $96 000pa 57.6% 80.6%

What can be seen from this is that on a couple of measures, using an ‘All Assets’ basis that includes superannuation, I have already reached some of these basic FI benchmarks. On other purely portfolio measures I am still well-progressed, in sight of Objective #1 and about two-thirds of the way to Objective #2, for instance.

Plotting the course

Having set the objectives, the most critical part is planning how to achieve it. This is the purpose of an annual investment policy which I have been reviewing over past weeks.

From a review of articles and research on Australian safe withdrawal rates and asset allocation I have elected to move to a portfolio target of 75% allocation to equities with the following other target allocations.

Target allocationDec18-2Specific asset allocation targets

  • 75 per cent equity based investments, comprising:
    • 30 per cent international shares
    • 45 per cent Australian shares
  • 15 per cent bonds and fixed interest holdings
    • 7.5 per cent Australian bonds and fixed interest
    • 7.5 per cent international bonds and fixed interest
  • 10 per cent gold and commodity securities and Bitcoin
    • 7.5 per cent physical gold holdings and securities
    • 2.5 per cent Bitcoin

Reasons for allocation targets and assumed asset returns

Equity returns, safe withdrawal rates and international diversification

Equities provide the fundamental engine of returns in the portfolio, with the best chance of outperforming other asset classes, and maximising after inflation returns.

The overall asset allocation approach has been driven primarily by reference to a study How Safe are Safe Withdrawal Rates in Retirement: An Australian Perspective (pdf). This is public study which calculates safe withdrawal rates for a range of possible asset allocation mixes over a range of timescales, between 10 and 40 years, using historical Australian data.

At a 75% equity allocation, a withdrawal rate of 4% has had a 88% success rate, and over 30 years a withdrawal rate of 4.0% provides a 95% success rate. In addition to this, I have examined Early Retirement Now’s brilliant US-focused safe withdrawal series. Recently, AussieHIFIRE and Ordinary Dollar have produced excellent shorter and simpler analyses of Australia returns, which have largely reinforced the findings from the study mentioned above, with slightly more recent data.

This represents a 10% increase in my equity allocation. Separately, to help estimate the portfolio target, I have also reached long-term real equity return estimates. These are 5.65% for Australian equities, the mid-point of measured long-run historical returns over risk-free assets over the past century. For global equities the real return estimate is 4.5%, a historical figure sourced from the 2018 Global Investment Returns Study.

The split between Australian and international equities is designed to maximise total returns and minimise portfolio volatility, while taking advantage of the tax advantaged nature of Australian franked dividends. The equities sub-targets above seek to achieve a target 60/40 split between Australian and foreign equities, which this recent published academic survey determines to be optimal for most Australian investors (see Optimal Domestic Equity Allocations for Australian Investors and the Role of Franking Credits published in the Journal of Wealth Management and also discussed previously here). A key finding of the study is that Australian equity exposures at higher rates significantly increase portfolio volatility, and maximum potential losses.

Bonds and fixed interest

Bonds and fixed interest play a role in diversification, reducing overall portfolio volatility. The assumed return of 2.0% for these assets is in line with long term global averages measured since 1900, sourced from the Dimson, Marsh and Staunton book Triumph of the Optimists – 101 Years of Global Investment Returns. 

Property, gold and Bitcoin

I have no formal property allocation, excepting my small exploratory investments through BrickX. In the current market environment my assessment is Australian property is likely to enjoy low yields and returns for a considerable period, and not offer much diversification benefit over Australian equities or other asset classes.

The role of gold and Bitcoin are primarily as non-correlated financial instruments for diversification, and as an insurance against extreme capital market events. No real return is assumed for either asset, and I plan to only rebalance by purchasing low cost gold index ETFs if the overall alternatives asset class falls well below its 10% allocation.

Taking into account the above asset allocation and return assumptions, the overall portfolio return is estimated on a weighted average basis at 4.19%. This is equal to a nominal return of 7.19% based on an assumption of inflation being at the top half of the Reserve Bank’s target band over the medium-term.

This is a little above the safe withdrawal assumptions detailed above, but within a sufficient margin of error for current planning, considering that the above studies are all entirely based on patterns of realised historical returns, which will not necessarily be determinative of future returns.

Sailing out of port

Going though the process of testing assumptions and goals has been useful, even where the refinements have been modest. I am now more comfortable that my return assumptions are realistically modest, and that my goals accurately anchor my journey to points of greater psychological significance, rather than past rough approximations.

Remembering why a choice was made, and being forced to develop or find evidence for assumptions made is a critical part in my building greater confidence over time to tackle the remaining journey.

Portfolio Income Update – Half Year to December 31, 2018

A large income is the best recipe for happiness I ever heard of.

Jane Austen Mansfield Park

Twice a year I prepare a summary of the total income from my portfolio. This is my fifth passive income update since starting this blog. As part of the transparency and accountability of this journey, I regularly report this income.

As discussed above, my goals are to build up a passive income of around $67 000 by 31 December 2020 (Objective #1) and $83 000 by July 2023 (Objective #2).

Passive income summary

  • Vanguard Lifestrategy High Growth – $8 044
  • Vanguard Lifestrategy Growth – $444
  • Vanguard Lifestrategy Balanced – $539
  • Vanguard Diversified Bonds – $86
  • Vanguard ETF Australian Shares ETF (VAS) – $1 812
  • Betashares Australia 200 ETF (A200) – $2 194
  • Telstra shares – $146
  • Insurance Australia Group shares – $455
  • NIB shares – $188
  • Ratesetter (P2P lending) – $1 528
  • Raiz app (Aggressive portfolio) – $122
  • Spaceship Voyager app (Index portfolio) – $0
  • BrickX (P2P rental real estate) – $43

Total passive income half year to December 31, 2018: $15 602

Presented in a pie chart form, the following is a breakdown of the percentage contribution of each investment to the total half-year income.

PIPieChartDec18

A time series of past passive income delivered from the portfolio is below.

CorrectPortDisDec18

Comments

The half-year passive income from the portfolio was $15 602, the equivalent of $2 600 per month, falling significantly below my base expectations.

The fall from the previous half-year result in July 2018 was the largest ever experienced for the portfolio. It seems the ‘reversion to the mean’ I have previously mooted has arrived, sending the December half-year income back to around 2016 levels.

This is likely the result of the a few different factors, such as:

  1. the overall poorer performance of nearly all asset markets in late 2018
  2. lower realised capital gains from the Vanguard retail funds, after previous strong equity returns in the past two years
  3. lower cash returns from a slow fall in the balance of the Ratesetter account, and a re-allocation of these funds to new equity ETFs with lower total distributions

The pattern of consistently lower distributions in the December half-year period continues. The results do exclude the value of franking credits, and so there is some understatement of total after-tax returns. My preference, however, is to seek to track cash actually delivered into my bank account as a tangible and easy to calculate metric.

The results do seem to suggest a focus on the overall portfolio objective, rather than narrowly interpreting this single half-year measure as a true indicator of the long-term income potential of the portfolio. Alternatively, it illustrates the value in viewing portfolio returns in smoother annual terms, such as on a whole of financial year basis. Interestingly, overall annual distributions have not fallen once over the past seven years. As a positive, as well, it is apparent that in calendar year 2018 just past, portfolio income was $61 600, not too distant from my revised Objective #1 target of $63 000 pa.

For forward planning purposes, I have settled on the average of the past five full years of distributions as a reasonable conservative estimate of future distributions. This implies an estimate of $45 000 per annum, which I use as one input into estimates of my required emergency fund and insurances.

Forecasting distributions from Vanguard managed funds has proved quite challenging. Based on past averages, I had expected higher distributions from the Vanguard High Growth fund. Using naive averages of overall portfolio distribution rates and averages had led to total portfolio income estimates for the half year of between $20 000-$25 000.

What has proved much more accurate in the case of the Vanguard funds is using past ‘cents per unit’ distribution data for the five previous December half years, which up to a few weeks ago I had never explored. Another method was to observe the overall change in value from 31 December to 1 January fund values, though this obviously has some market noise in it. These methods came within about 20-30% of the final lower distributions from Vanguard.

Some of these large variations I expect to be slightly reduced in the future by the increasing role of ETFs in my portfolio. These should have a more stable distribution profile that will be based on underlying firm earnings rather than the pre-mixed funds that are realising capital gains in an effort to seek to track a particular asset allocation. In this regard, it is pleasing to see that together the Vanguard VAS and A200 ETFs accounted for just over 25% of all portfolio income.

Over the hot summer days in prospect I will be eagerly waiting for the Vanguard fund and ETF distributions and then settling how to reinvest them. My current target asset allocation suggests purchases of more Australian equity ETFs such as A200, to reach my new target allocation for equities, and between Australian and international shares.

Overall, while the half-yearly income has not been what I expected, I still feel very fortunate to have had, on any measure, my portfolio providing additional income of $2600 per month over the last six months, meeting just under half of my typical monthly credit card expenses.

Just two or three years ago, these types of results were ambitious new highs. With each new investment in 2019, I will be looking forward to growing the total distributions income further in the future.

Monthly Portfolio Update and Year in Review – December 2018

IMG_20181227_114716_585
He who has begun has half done.
Horace Epistles (Book I.ii)

Year in review

This year began with resetting my objectives to reach a portfolio value of $1 476 000 by the end of the year, to support an annual passive income of around $58 000.

This goal has not been met, despite the overall portfolio coming within about $60 000 of the target in September. Just as expected at the start of 2018, it did indeed prove a more challenging environment for closing on this goal than the previous year.

In fact, instead of reaching the target as hoped, the portfolio actually finished the past year around 3 per cent below where it commenced at the start of 2018, despite significant investments regularly though the year.

12month2018progThe reasons for this are two-fold.

First, the fall in the price of Bitcoin from its highs early in 2018 has provided a steady, and sometimes sharp, headwind to the journey. Through the year the resulting loss of around $130 000 simply could not reasonably be made up for, even assuming good performance of all other assets. Bitcoin has reduced from 14% to just 4.5% of the portfolio, so perhaps the only positive to take from this grinding performance is that it will not have the ability to have this same kind of depressing effect on next years record. Nonetheless, I am happy enough to retain my current holdings. This is because I agree with sentiments from Nassim Taleb that it represents a unique form of insurance policy against very poor future outcomes.

Second, recent falls in equity markets have worsened the results. Given normal volatility in shares, however, this has not concerned me or reduced my intention to continue to invest in equities. What is perhaps more interesting than a negative single year performance of shares is that 2018 has been highly unusual in the high proportion of all asset classes experiencing negative returns.

Overall, the failure to meet my objective #1 is not particularly surprising or a source of dissatisfaction. It has been on the cards for the last few months, and I have had time to adjust. An additional factor has been that my nominal passive income target of $58 000 per year has been the same since July 2016, unadjusted for inflation, or median income movements. This has meant that I have known for some time that I would not be likely to feel comfortable with it as a defining triggering point of financial independence. Thus it has felt like missing a target that had more symbolic than practical or intrinsic meaning.

Finally, I’m sanguine about missing the target because I think that with the passage of time and ongoings savings, passing that particular value will be most likely be achieved, even if perhaps 6-18 months later than anticipated.

Rather, the achievements of this past year that stand out are:

  • Continued exploration: this has included switching from use of Vanguard retail funds to regular investments in low cost ETFs such as the Betashares A200, using a low cost broker, lowering management costs on new investments, and trying new Fintech providers such as Spaceship.
  • Following the course: having set an asset allocation plan, this has driven portfolio choices that inertia and absence of a plan would not have, such as a systematic reduction in my Ratesetter holdings, regular new investments in Australian equities during periods of volatility, and stopping allocation of any new funds to bonds.

A pleasing part of the past year has also been the growth in readership, which I am grateful to readers for. This has genuinely been a pleasant surprise, and has been somewhat accelerated by a kind profile of Australian FI bloggers in the April edition of Money Magazine.

20180429_173419

As I do each year at this time, I have been reviewing my investment policy and looking at possible new goals. I have also been stress-testing my plans, assumptions and asset allocations.

Before finalising these, as with last year, I want to understand the shape and level of fund and ETF distributions arising from the past six months. This means waiting until December distributions are finalised or announced. I am looking forward to sharing these updated plans – including possibly some new portfolio objectives – in the next couple of weeks or so.

Monthly Portfolio Update – December 2018

This is my twenty-fifth portfolio update. I complete this update monthly to check my progress against my goals which, as mentioned, are likely to be evolving soon.

Portfolio goals

For the moment, however, my objectives were to reach a portfolio of:

  • $1 476 000 by 31 December 2018. This would produce a real income of about $58 000 (Objective #1).
  • $2 041 000 by 31 July 2023, to produce a passive income equivalent to $80 000 in 2017 dollars (Objective #2)

Both of these were based on a real return of 3.92%, or a nominal return of 7.17%

Portfolio summary

  • Vanguard Lifestrategy High Growth Fund – $669 046
  • Vanguard Lifestrategy Growth Fund  – $39 448
  • Vanguard Lifestrategy Balanced Fund – $72 167
  • Vanguard Diversified Bonds Fund – $101 645
  • Vanguard Australia Shares ETF (VAS) – $71 070
  • Betashares Australia 200 ETF (A200) – $138 346
  • Telstra shares – $3 799
  • Insurance Australia Group shares – $12 208
  • NIB Holdings shares – $6 240
  • Gold ETF (GOLD.ASX)  – $82 863
  • Secured physical gold – $13 365
  • Ratesetter (P2P lending) – $30 131
  • Bitcoin – $59 570
  • Raiz app (Aggressive portfolio) – $ 12 584
  • Spaceship Voyager app (Index portfolio) – $1 430
  • BrickX (P2P rental real estate) – $4 851

Total value: $1 318 763  (-$13 869)

Asset allocation

  • Australian shares –  38%
  • International shares – 24%
  • Emerging markets shares – 3%
  • International small companies – 4%
  • Total shares – 68.9% (3.9% over)**
  • Australian property securities – 0.4%
  • Total property – 0.4% (4.1% under)
  • Australian bonds – 7%
  • International bonds – 12%
  • Total bonds – 18.8% (3.8% over)**
  • Cash – 1.3%
  • Gold – 7.3%
  • Bitcoin – 4.5%
  • Gold and alternatives – 11.8% (3.2% under)

Presented visually, below is a high-level view of how the asset allocation of the portfolio currently looks.

Dec18AssetAlloc

Comments

The portfolio has fallen short of the target, reflecting the factors discussed above. Over this month I have concentrated on continuing to make new investments though the significant equity market volatility, while undertaking some of the reflection and research required for the review of my investment policy and goals.

For the sharp-eyed a small but significant change in allocation seems to have occurred in the past month. This is because in the course of reviewing of my investment plans and working sheets I have had time to integrate some larger than initially expected changes made to the Vanguard Lifestrategy retail funds standard pre-set asset allocations.

The effect of this has been to lower my property security allocation to almost nothing, and mildly increase my share allocation. It has also shifted the balance between Australian and foreign equities. Rather fortuitously, this has moved in the direction I was actually intending to pursue, increasing my international equity exposure, which had previously stagnated as my Australian equity ETF index purchases occurred through this year.

The last few months have seen the largest ever declines in my overall portfolio, giving a sense of ‘treading water’ while making regular purchases into a falling, or at best sideways, market. Positively, this has seen purchases of A200 at the lowest prices I have paid so far. This adds some minor upside to the generally unhappy story of portfolio value over the year set out below.12monthchngport-Dec18

Progress

Progress to:

  • Objective #1: 89.3% or $157 237 further to reach goal.
  • Objective #2: 64.6% or $722 237 further to reach goal.

Summary

As summer heat has kept me inside, there has been ample time to take a long perspective on the journey so far, and the shifting priorities and themes of the year. What has become more apparent is the sense of building momentum, particularly in the passive income element of the portfolio.

Calculating the other day, I discovered that 2018 was, in paper value terms, the most difficult, loss-making part of my long journey so far. That it does not feel this way is testament to my increasing focus on and confidence from two other components of the journey – portfolio income, and its steadily growing capacity to meet regular life expenses.

The next few days, and specifically knowledge of distributions that are due to be calculated and paid, will prove important for my future sense of the speed of progress. It’s not impossible that distributions, like the portfolio value, could go backwards compared to the last few periods. The level of distributions will determine other important parts of my investment plan – such as required emergency fund levels, and insurance coverage levels.

So as 2019 begins, progress continues, and distributions and the new information they provide will flow into my next updated set of plans for financial independence.

** These variances have been recalculated from this month onwards to be in reference to my longer term allocation targets for equities and bonds (65/15), rather than a previous lower transitional target of 61-62 over the past two years.