The Home Stretch…
In January of last year I asked what people thought would perform the best of the four Permanent Portfolio Assets (Stocks, Bonds, Cash or Gold). While I tossed my hat into the stocks camp (which have recovered sharply since last year), the gold bulls seem to be winning. Here’s the breakdown according to Morningstar using a standard ETF version of the Permanent Portfolio for ease of performance tracking:
SPDR Gold Shares (Ticker: GLD): +30.54
Vanguard Total Stock Market (Ticker: VTI): +25.44%
iShares Short Treasury Bond Fund (Ticker: SHV): +0.20%
iShares Barclays 20+ Year Long Term Treasury Bond Fund (Ticker: TLT): -17.76%
YTD Morningstar Total Returns (capital gains, interest and dividends): +13.21%
Gold has been able to beat stocks so far this year. I was pretty sure that stocks would rebound strongly but didn’t expect gold to still do so well. We still have a month to go, but looks like the gold bulls may be buying the champagne come New Year’s Eve.
Long term bonds took a beating so far, but usually it is the case that one or more assets in the portfolio may be doing poorly while one or more may be doing well. Normally what happens are the gains from the winners can offset the losses from the loser. Not always, but mostly. So even though LT bonds are down almost 20%, the stocks and gold have provided more than enough power to grow the portfolio in total. And of course that’s what really matters. Don’t look at assets in isolation, look at how they work together in the total portfolio value.
Right now is also a good time to remind taxable investors to start planning for end of year rebalancing sales to capture losses (such as the Long Term Bonds), to take gains to offset against losses, etc. If this is confusing to you, talk to an accountant for some advice as smart tax loss harvesting can significantly reduce your tax bill.
Happy Thanksgiving…
about 2 months ago
Vanguard announced a slew of new bond ETFs:
https://personal.vanguard.com/us/insights/article/fund-announcement-11232009
Do you think any of these should replace the iShares bond funds in the standard permanent portfolio?
They are tied on expense ratio, so at first glance it looks like a wash to me.
However the corporate bond funds might be appealing for the folks that boycott government bonds.
about 2 months ago
If the expense ratio is low they may be a possibility. I need to read the prospectuses. What bothers me about the Vanguard treasury bond funds is they are often not 100% treasury bonds but sometimes mix in govt. agency bonds. I just need to see what they have cooking inside of these things.
Long Term Corporate bonds can be used for LT govt bonds if you have ethical objections to loaning the US Govt. money. Just be aware that you may not get the deflation protection of LT Treasury bonds if the bottom falls out of the market.
As always, it’s best to just own LT Treasury bonds directly if given the choice. Corporate bonds should use a fund because you want to stay diversified among many different issuers in case some default.
Thanks for the link…