The Private Office Blog

You Know More about Investing than You Think You Do. By Dimensional Fund Advisors.
Olivia Peterson Olivia Peterson

You Know More about Investing than You Think You Do. By Dimensional Fund Advisors.

No matter how familiar we are with investing, we’ve all navigated uncertainty, weighed risks and rewards, and made carefully considered tradeoff decisions. Just by being human, we’ve been compelled to tackle the central challenges of life—which also happen to be the central challenges of investing.

At Dimensional, we believe that having a good investment experience is about more than returns. What matters just as much is how someone feels along their financial journey. And that’s really what the investment business should be about: helping people live better, more fulfilling lives.

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How to Outperform. By Ben Carlson.
Olivia Peterson Olivia Peterson

How to Outperform. By Ben Carlson.

Kerala is a coastal state in India with a large fishing industry.

Beginning in 1997, mobile phones were introduced to the region. By 2001 more than 60% of the fishers and traders were using phones to coordinate sales and set prices for the fish.

Robert Jensen used data from this market in a research paper called The Digital Provide to show how the addition of more information impacted fish prices in the marketplace.

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The BIG Picture: Portfolios perform for the passive and patient. By Ashley Owen.
Olivia Peterson Olivia Peterson

The BIG Picture: Portfolios perform for the passive and patient. By Ashley Owen.

One of the most important, but difficult, aspects of long-term investing is learning to not let day-to-day market chatter and scaremongering media headlines affect your long-term strategies. Although I keep a close eye on financial markets daily (mainly to respond to a daily email inbox full of panicking punters), I look at my own long-term portfolio only once or twice per year, typically during the January break, and at financial year-end.

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One Year Returns Don’t Matter. By Ben Carlson.
Olivia Peterson Olivia Peterson

One Year Returns Don’t Matter. By Ben Carlson.

One of the hard parts about trying to focus on the long-term as an investor is the short-term toys with your emotions.

In years like 2022 when everything is going down, you’ll always wish you would’ve taken less risk.

In years like 2023 when everything is going up, you’ll always wish you would’ve taken more risk.

Long-term returns are the only ones that matter but you have to get through a series of short-term emotions to get there.

Short-run returns can play tricks on you.

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Losing Value. By Adam M. Grossman.
Olivia Peterson Olivia Peterson

Losing Value. By Adam M. Grossman.

Perhaps you’ve seen charts like the one below, which comes from Dimensional Fund Advisors. The message: Investors who try to time the market in search of better returns often end up damaging their results. To many investors, this seems intuitive, because trading isn’t easy.

But to others, market timing appears to make a lot of sense. For instance, for years, Yale University professor Robert Shiller has been maintaining a measure of market valuation known as the cyclically adjusted price-earnings (CAPE) ratio. It’s a way of measuring how expensive the market is, and it has an intuitive appeal of its own.

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Investing Is Half Mathematics, Half Shakespeare. By The Evidence Based Investor.
Olivia Peterson Olivia Peterson

Investing Is Half Mathematics, Half Shakespeare. By The Evidence Based Investor.

One of the smartest advocates of low-cost, evidence-based investing is the neurologist-turned-investment-adviser William Bernstein. He is the author of several books, including The Intelligent Asset Allocator, If You Can: How Millennials Can Get Rich Slowly, and The Delusion of Crowds. A new edition of his best-known book, The Four Pillars of Investing, has just been published.

Bill this week makes his third appearance on The Long View podcast, produced by Morningstar, and we highly recommend you listen to it. Here are seven key takeaways.

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Look Inside. By Jonathan Clements.
Olivia Peterson Olivia Peterson

Look Inside. By Jonathan Clements.

As we manage our financial life, we’re compelled to cope with heaps of uncertainty—which way the stock and bond markets will head, what financial misfortunes will strike, how long we’ll live and so much more.

But there are also ways we can exert a measure of control: spend thoughtfully, save diligently, keep a close eye on risk, hold down investment costs and manage our annual tax bill. To this list, I’d add one other key way to reclaim the advantage: have a good handle on who we are.

To that end, below are nine questions I believe we should all try to answer for ourselves. As you’ll see, the questions often probe the same issues but from different angles.

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Do You Have Too Much Wealth in Your Home? By Capital Partners.
Olivia Peterson Olivia Peterson

Do You Have Too Much Wealth in Your Home? By Capital Partners.

Owning your own home, in your dream suburb, and living a lifestyle you’ve always aspired towards, is arguably seen as the Australian dream. Significant wealth assets such as your home represent the fruits of your hard work, family bonds, stability, and security. However, to live a life free of uncertainty, wealth deserves to be managed purposefully. That’s why it’s essential to evaluate whether having too much of your wealth tied up in one asset such as your home, aligns with your long-term goals. By being crystal clear on your goals, it is possible to stay on track, make the most of your resources and lean into the best decisions for your future.

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Those with large KiwiSaver balances are taking too much risk. By Janine Starks.
Olivia Peterson Olivia Peterson

Those with large KiwiSaver balances are taking too much risk. By Janine Starks.

Do you have $50,000 invested in KiwiSaver? These days that’s not an unusual achievement, given the scheme has been around for 15 years. If you’re a full-time older professional, it’s more likely your savings sit in the $100,000 to $200,000 range.

Despite this enviable success, this scares the heck out of me. Why? Because all your money is invested with one manager.

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Anticipated Joy vs. Anticipated Regret. By Ben Carlson.
Olivia Peterson Olivia Peterson

Anticipated Joy vs. Anticipated Regret. By Ben Carlson.

Frank Rabinovich was a portfolio manager and technology specialist at bond giant PIMCO in the 1990s.

The way his colleagues treated him was a microcosm of the culture at the firm in its heyday.

Co-workers would douse him with bug spray, claiming he smelled bad. They cut off the bottom of his ties when they didn’t like the look of them. They tackled him relentlessly in games of touch football since he wasn’t as athletic as the other employees.

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The Private Office Winter Update
Olivia Peterson Olivia Peterson

The Private Office Winter Update

We are pleased to enclose our Winter Update covering the period from April to June 2023.

With the global fight against inflation ushering in higher interest rates, the economic environment has remained challenging. Growth in most regions is currently slowing or even slightly negative.

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If Investing Feels Exciting, You’re Probably Doing It Wrong. By Mary Ellen Cagnassola.
Olivia Peterson Olivia Peterson

If Investing Feels Exciting, You’re Probably Doing It Wrong. By Mary Ellen Cagnassola.

Investing can be fun. That doesn’t mean it should be.

Technology’s increasing role in investing has made dabbling in the market more accessible than ever. In 2021, 44% of investors used mobile apps to place trades, up from 30% in 2018, according to the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority’s investor education foundation. A substantial swath of new investors entered the market in recent years, platforms like TikTok and Instagram became forums for bragging about investing wins, and even high schoolers took to trading investing tips between classes. Investing newbies watched as meme stocks like GameStop and popular cryptos like dogecoin exploded in value.

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The Three Pillars To A Happy Retirement. By James Gruber.
Olivia Peterson Olivia Peterson

The Three Pillars To A Happy Retirement. By James Gruber.

This is an edited transcript of an interview between Dr. Daniel Crosby and Dr. Michael Finke, Professor of Wealth Management at The American College of Financial Services, on the Standard Deviations podcast.

Dr. Daniel Crosby: I've read your writing on the three pillars of retirement satisfaction. Can you tell us what they are and spend a little time unpacking what can be done about the nonfinancial ones to help us prepare for the nonfinancial dimensions of retirement that I think are often overlooked?

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Five Reasons To Hold Your Investment Nerve. By Duncan Burns.
Olivia Peterson Olivia Peterson

Five Reasons To Hold Your Investment Nerve. By Duncan Burns.

Global financial markets have been volatile in recent times, for a whole range of reasons.

They include the overhangs of high inflation and interest rates around the world and their flow-on impacts to different economies. Then there’s the ongoing geopolitical tensions occurring in different parts of the world, primarily in Europe, Asia, and Africa, but also in the United States.

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Lessons In Life and Investing from Harry Markowitz. By The Evidence Based Investor.
Olivia Peterson Olivia Peterson

Lessons In Life and Investing from Harry Markowitz. By The Evidence Based Investor.

Nobel laureate Harry Markowitz was a giant of academic finance. But Robin Powell will remember him as a kind and humble man who put his success and fame into healthy perspective.

There are probably only two people who can claim to have genuinely changed investing. One of them was Jack Bogle, and the other Harry Markowitz. Bogle died in January 2019, and now we’ve lost Markowitz too, at the age of 95.

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The Seeds Of A Downturn, and Opportunity. By Clay Smolinski</a>.
Olivia Peterson Olivia Peterson

The Seeds Of A Downturn, and Opportunity. By Clay Smolinski.

There is a long-held pattern in markets:

Consumers and businesses become accustomed to prevailing interest rate conditions.

The situation changes, and then rates rise rapidly.

Interest rates hit a level that becomes restrictive, high enough to slow activity. Two signals that become restrictive are:

  • Activity in interest-rate-sensitive industries, such as housing and used car sales, contracts.

  • The yield curve (the difference between 10-year and six-month interest rates) turns negative.

  • From that point, when interest rates become restrictive, 12-18 months later, activity starts to contract, company profits start falling, layoffs rise, and stock prices tend to fall.

Historically, it has been worthwhile paying attention to when this interest rate pattern started unfolding - and we are seeing this same pattern unfolding today.

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The Future is Always Normal. By David Andrew.
Olivia Peterson Olivia Peterson

The Future is Always Normal. By David Andrew.

I write this article because of a conversation I had with a long-term client who was overwhelmed by the complexity of everything happening in the world.  It was useful for me because it was a timely reminder that occasionally people feel out of their depth – perhaps a little out of control.

Humans gain comfort from the consistency and predictability of their everyday lives, and when something big happens, we tend to get uncomfortable. We accept change, but most change in the world occurs slowly. When it happens too fast, we are left feeling all topsy turvy.

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