True Wind – A History of Taxable Investment Income

My treasure’s in the harbour, take it.

Shakespeare, Antony and Cleopatra, Act 3, Scene 11

Introduction – why analyse taxable income investment?

Each year measuring taxable investment income produced by the financial independence portfolio has provided an alternative independent benchmark of progress on the journey to the portfolio goal.

This measure is distinct from the regularly reported portfolio distributions, through being generated entirely from annual tax records.

Generally, my portfolio income analysis focuses solely on ‘after-tax’ dollars received in the bank account as the primary data. This is reported twice a year.

Nevertheless, this separate annual series of taxable investment income can also help illustrate progress. For example, it can highlight exactly what my taxable income might be in the absence of any paid work. That is, if early retirement was taken today.

Last year some analysis showed some broad trends. More time and new data, however, now provides the opportunity for a longer and fuller view of trends in taxable investment income across the journey.

This longer read post expands the analysis from the last review. It builds into this review data from four additional years of tax records covering the earlier phases of the journey.

The theme of this analysis is how the momentum of gradual progress can build over 15 years, turning a breath of wind into a powerful force through time, and compounding as the years pass.

Along the way it also corrects some minor inconsistencies in data reporting on dividends and franking credits in earlier years of previous analysis.* It also refines the analysis through a greater focus on income from income-producing financial assets, rather than all portfolio assets.

Taxable income investment grows significantly over 2020-21

Taxable investment income for financial year 2020-21 totalled over $68,000. This is a more than 60 per cent increase from the past two financial year totals of around $42,000.

Taxable investment income is defined here as the combined totals of taxable income from the tax assessment categories of partnerships and trusts, foreign source income, franking credits and ‘other income’.

That is, the measured taxable investment income is the total of Items 13, 20 and 24 on the 2021 tax return. Capital gains under Item 18 are excluded.

Figure 1 below shows the levels of taxable investment income for the past fifteen years. This is expanded to cover four additional earlier years, from 2006-07 to 2009-10.

[Chart - Figure 1 - Trends in Taxable Investment Income]
Continue reading “True Wind – A History of Taxable Investment Income”

Monthly Portfolio Update – September 2021

…it is sweet to see the sea from the land when you don’t have to sail any longer

Archippus

This is my fifty-eighth monthly portfolio update. I complete this regular update to check progress against my goal.

Portfolio goal

My objective is to reach a portfolio of $2,585,000 by 31 July 2022. This would produce a real annual income of about $90,500 (in 2021 dollars).

This portfolio objective is based on an assumed safe withdrawal rate of 3.5 per cent.

Portfolio summary

Vanguard Lifestrategy High Growth Fund$807,844
Vanguard Lifestrategy Growth Fund$43,486
Vanguard Lifestrategy Balanced Fund$78,870
Vanguard Diversified Bonds Fund$99,943
Vanguard Australian Shares ETF (VAS)$363,435
Vanguard International Shares ETF (VGS)$233,181
Betashares Australia 200 ETF (A200)$291,171
Telstra shares (TLS)$2,094
Insurance Australia Group shares (IAG)$6,233
NIB Holdings shares (NHF)$8,364
Gold ETF (GOLD.ASX)$108,834
Secured physical gold$17,413
Plenti (P2P lending)$1,145
Bitcoin$669,910
Raiz app (Aggressive portfolio)$20,705
Spaceship Voyager app (Index portfolio)$3,442
BrickX (P2P rental real estate)$5,033
Total portfolio value$2,760,803
(-$84,855)

Asset allocation

Australian shares36.6%
Global shares22.2%
Emerging market shares1.6%
International small companies2.0%
Total international shares25.8%
Total shares62.4% (-12.6%)
Total property securities0.2% (+0.2%)
Australian bonds2.6%
International bonds5.9%
Total bonds8.5% (-6.5%)
Gold4.6%
Bitcoin24.3%
Gold and alternatives28.8% (+18.8%)

Presented visually, the chart below is a high-level view of the current asset allocation of the portfolio.

Chart - Asset Allocation

Comments

The portfolio fell in value by around $85,000 this month, declining by just over 3.0 per cent.

Despite this, the portfolio remains for the moment above the formal portfolio goal, as it has since May. Taking a slightly longer view, the portfolio is still over 50 per cent larger today, than a year ago.

Chart - Monthly Change in Value

The declines this month were broad-based and across almost all of the portfolio.

The value of Bitcoin fell by around 9 per cent, while remaining firmly higher than at the start of the year.

Australian equities have fallen around 2 per cent, and international equities also fell by 1.8 per cent. Partly as a result, the overall equity portfolio has declined by nearly $20,000. This leaves the equity portfolio at around 89 per cent of the amount targeted in the plan.

Amidst some evidence of rising long-term bond rates, the value of gold holdings also fell by 3.3 per cent.

Finally, adding to the negative picture, the value of fixed interest holdings in the Vanguard Diversified Bonds fund fell by 1.3 per cent. Consequently they are now at their lowest dollar level since the last major investments in that fund were made in 2014.

Continue reading “Monthly Portfolio Update – September 2021”