Best Laid Plans

Everyone has a plan until they get punched in the mouth

–Mike Tyson

As I write this the world is in lock-down due to the spread of a global virus. I write mostly about financial issues but try to consistently keep the perspective that your time is really your most valuable resource, and your continued health is what enables you to make the most of that time. So, remember that if you and your loved ones are relatively safe from this, consider yourself among the fortunate. My friends and family who are doctors and nurses see it up close and personal, and I don’t know any of them who have their stock portfolio as one of their top 10 worries. Just keep that perspective.

With that as an important backdrop, looking at this as merely a financial impact can be jarring. I’ve talked about this in prior posts, the occasional, even significant decline in the stock market is completely expected, and is actually a positive. One of the other positive things to result from a downturn is it gets you to measure your real response to a crisis. I can ask myself, what would I do right now if this were happening and I was already retired with my 50/50 stock/bond portfolio? If I’m being honest with myself, I’d be freaking out. This is extremely valuable insight into my psyche, and allows me to avoid those freak-out moments as an old man, at least when it comes to money.

I still think the 50/50 portfolio can work for many people, but recall my analysis for that example showed there was a 10% chance of outliving your money using the 4% rule for withdrawals. As risk-adverse as I am, I realize for me, that’s too big of a chance. I also realized that to mitigate the impact of this kind of downturn in the future, I’d want to have a plan that required no stock sales, so as things dropped it wouldn’t really cause any short term panic selling, which as a stock investor is what you have to avoid.

Here’s the difficulty. At today’s interest rates and stock dividend yields, you can’t count on 4% yields. You can’t really even count on 3%. To get to 4% in today’s environment you have to be reliant on some gains of your investments, or be willing to dip into principal–which can be a vicious cycle of reducing your investment assets, which leads to less yield, which causes you to withdraw more principal. I’ve adjusted my plan to try to address this.

In earlier posts, I talked about two buckets of funds, one to sustain your life from age 59.5 using designated retirement funds, and another to get you from whenever you stop working to age 59.5, your “bridge” to retirement. I’m still a believer in the long term value of stocks, so still recommend my asset allocation for those long term assets. I may rethink the retirement age allocation, but I’m sticking with it for now. For the shorter term assets, part of my solution is an asset I’ve tried to avoid up until now, rental real estate. I’ve avoided this not because I think it’s a bad investment, but because unlike other assets classes, it requires work, so to call it passive income is a stretch. It’s a little bit investment, a little bit part time job. But I’ve come to realize this is my favorite income-producing risk-adjusted asset right now. I’ll have a follow up post on this, but I’ve dipped my toe in, I can’t stay out any longer.

For shorter term, bridge assets, I recommend the following. Instead of my prior approach which was to determine the earliest possible date you can retire, take a little more conservative approach and lay out your intended work plan. How long do you believe you’ll work full time? Part time? With that plan, you can estimate each year’s income and with your forward-looking budget you can estimate expenses. You can do this for each year going out to age 59.5, I even try to estimate when I will make major purchases, like cars.

With your short term assets you can also estimate both yield (income produced) of those assets and growth of those assets. The following is a reasonable example, you may want to adjust these based on interest rates, market conditions, etc. Note the yield and growth values for Real Estate vary considerably depending on how much you initially invest. If you buy the property outright, more yield, less growth. If you finance a great deal of it, less yield, more growth.

AssetYieldGrowth
Stocks2%5%
Bonds3%0%
Cash2%0%
Real Estate3%3%

For each year, assume the yield of your investments can be used to supplement your income and add that to any money you expect to earn working. If your expenses exceeds your income (from investments and salary) draw money only from cash and bonds (the ratio of this draw can be varied but one approach is 50/50). If your income exceeds expenses, put the extra into cash and bonds. A reasonable place to start is equal 25% allocation in each of the asset classes above then project out your balances for each of these assets classes for every year until you are 59.5 or whenever is your long-term retirement age. Do you finish with positive cash and bond balances? If yes, then you have a plan to get to 59.5 without needing to sell any stocks or real estate holdings, so when the market tanks again (remember these downturns are nearly guaranteed, the difficulty is predicting when they will happen, not if they will happen), you are positioned to continue to live your lifestyle pretty much as planned. The idea is trying to set up a condition where a down stock market or down real estate market has no significant bearing on your life.

Why keep any money in stocks at all? Well, you could argue that the risk isn’t worth it, but I still believe that you should have exposure to the growth power of stocks. Over the long term this should still finish as your most productive asset.

What if that plan doesn’t work? What if it shows you run out of cash? Make adjustments. Maybe you have too much money in stocks or real estate. Maybe your date to quit working is too early and needs to be pushed back. Keep adjusting until you have a plan that shows positive numbers for all your assets.

Finally, remember that history says fortunes are made during market downturns. Warren Buffett’s famous financial advice to be “fearful when others are greedy, and be greedy when others are fearful” is difficult to execute. However, hopefully this provides you the confidence that investing in stocks for your long term assets is still a good idea, if buying prior to the crash made sense, certainly buying after the crash makes even more sense. These purchases do not care about the price of stocks tomorrow or next week or next year. These purchases are made looking out 10-20-30 years, where if history is a guide, stocks will be a smart purchase.

Think Critically

A key component of making good decisions, financial or otherwise, is learning to think critically. This is especially important when so many people are bombarding you with misleading, flawed logic for their own gain (arguably this is the main role of the advertising industry). You need to be able to recognize these traps and navigate around them, my short list is below:

  1. “If A then B” does not necessarily mean “If B then A”
  2. Correlation is not Causation
  3. A data point is not necessarily representative of a larger trend
  4. The primary motivation for every for-profit company, is profit
  5. Gambling is hoping for improbable outcomes, decisions should be based on most probable outcomes
  6. Data and Information are not the same

We’ll look at these one by one.

  1. “A then B” does not mean “B then A”. This is a concept taught in your middle school math class, but how many have forgotten middle school math (or middle school entirely–thank goodness)? This is easiest to illustrate with an example. If I say “Millionaires invest in stocks”, that does not mean “If I invest in stocks, I’ll be a millionaire”. Confused? Look at it from a Venn diagram perspective (by the way, Venn diagrams are on the Mount Rushmore of diagrams. I know this doesn’t exist, but it should)

In this case, the statement says that investing in stocks is necessary to be a millionaire, but not a guarantee of being a millionaire. FYI, this is just an example, plenty of successful investors invest exclusively in real estate, for example. I see this concept constantly confused, in politics, science discussions, health care debates, and many other arguments. Try to keep this in mind.

2. Related to the above is the causation/correlation debate. In short, correlation is simply showing two things are related (when you see one, you often see the other), without making a statement about if one thing caused the other. This is much easier to show than causation, which requires careful study and accounting for all variables. You can see where this is particularly difficult in the field of nutrition, where there are so many different variables among people’s behavior. For example, what if I say “People who eat fast food have a much higher incidence of poor health”, or in Venn diagram mode:

Again, just a made up example, though I’d imagine the actual data are similar. The above says poor health and fast food are correlated but can we say fast food causes poor health? The above information is not enough to make that statement, because I haven’t shown you how we’ve accounted for other variables. For example, maybe we note that many people who eat fast food are financially disadvantaged (fast food is cheap) and we find later it is their financial position that is the true cause of their poor health. Or, maybe they eat fast food as comfort because of their poor health (the poor health causes fast food!). Now it may very well be that the fast food is in fact causing the poor health, but before we start making cause statements we need to make sure we have done specific study for other potential influences. You can see why this is so important, and why proper science is needed behind anyone’s claims. We often find ourselves in a situation wanting a certain outcome (health, wealth) but can only try to create the outcome indirectly (eat specific foods, make specific investments), so causation is critical. Otherwise, we may end up wasting time, money, and other resources chasing ineffective influences for the outcomes we want. Again, this is constantly confused. Watch any prime time news show and wait for someone to confuse these concepts, you won’t need to wait long.

3. The data point as evidence is constantly used in various advertising campaigns, and is particularly popular with financial seminars/software tools.

“Here’s our great financial system/strategy. It’s great! Meet Joe (close up on Joe): ‘I’ve used the XYZ System for 2 years and crushed the market!’. And Sue says ‘I’ve outperformed the market too!'”

So, many people look at this and figure if Joe and Sue could do it, so could they. But what information do we really have about the XYZ System? We have the following, graphically,

Joe and Sue weren’t lying, they did beat the market, but this really isn’t evidence of the utility of the XYZ System, what we really need is the data from all the users of the XYZ System, and my guess is the results would look more like this:

If we had the full picture, we could see that Joe and Sue’s results weren’t representative of the whole, but actually outliers. In many ads they effectively admit this by putting in the fine print “Results not typical”. If the above chart were the truth, would you still pick XYZ System to beat the market? Of course not. This is why ad companies love testimonials. They can be truthful, but cherry pick the best results, which could be random chance, and conveniently ignore data points that don’t make the results look good. Truthful, but deceptive, which is the essence of advertising.

4. Another common ploy of people selling stuff is they try to hide the fact that their motivation is to make as much money as possible, specifically get your money. This is common in infomercials where a person selling a get rich quick scheme will talk about how they figured it out, got rich, and now all they want to do is help people do the same. No, they don’t. They want to get richer, there are plenty of other ways they could try to save the world if that was their goal. Bill Gates got rich and wants to save the world, do you see him doing infomercials for software? No, he’s busy trying to eradicate disease in Africa.

Remember, corporations aren’t here to help you, be your friend, give you a job, or make the world a better place. If their goal were to help people, they’d sell their product at cost for no profit, thereby getting to the max people possible. The product, employing people, and hopefully moving mankind forward are all tools for corporations to ultimately make money. This isn’t good or bad, just a reality that needs to be understood. This doesn’t mean corporations don’t care about their employees or their greater impact on society, or have other altruistic intentions. However always remember their primary reason for existence is figuring out how to get as much of your money as possible.

5. I’ve written on this before, decision making is based on probabilities, rarely guarantees. This means you occasionally will get a bad result despite making a good decision (and good results from bad decisions). The result is not necessarily always a judge of a decision. Good decision making involves taking in all available information, using prior experience and sound logic, and choosing a course of action based on the most probable outcome, e.g.

  • You expect to do well if you invest regularly in a diversified portfolio
  • You expect to keep your job if you work hard
  • You expect to stay healthy if you eat right and exercise

All of the above are probable but not guaranteed. This is why cash in an emergency fund for unexpected life events (e.g. job loss) is important and insurance against catastrophic loss (life, health, home, auto) is important. Knowing bad things can happen despite your best decision process is the rational for protecting yourself. It’s a small financial penalty for large peace of mind.

6. Data is not information. This is also a classic slight of hand in financial commercials. Look at all these charts and graphs we have! Let’s show you a wise, semi-grey-haired man knowingly (maybe even smugly) hitting enter on his computer, leaning back in his chair with his hands on his head with a smirk on his face, knowing he has charts and graphs. Charts and graphs are definitely data. They might even use proprietary algorithms. (Aside, “proprietary” also does not mean “useful”. Proprietary just means they have established that others can’t use the same approach without their permission. One would presume they wouldn’t do this unless the approach was actually useful, but that is not necessarily the case). The key is what they are giving you is not information unless it’s useful. I could develop an algorithm to buy or sell oil based on Alaskan temperature, but unless that algorithm is consistently predictive of the direction of the price of oil, this is just noise, not information. Financial companies imply their data is useful, but generally don’t outright claim this because likely they can’t. Useful information would mean using these data would allow the user, on average, to consistently beat the market, and study after study shows this is not achievable by almost anyone in the financial industry.

I’m sure I’ll think of more to add to this list, but if you keep the above in mind when listening to a Congressman come into Congress with a snowball as evidence that Climate Change isn’t happening…Wait a minute sir, that’s just a data point…not evidence of a larger trend…can I see the evidence of the larger trend?…Oh. Damn.

Gain or Pain

For many people, any time they are deciding on a big ticket item like a vacation or some luxury item, the calculation simply comes down to “Can I afford the monthly payments?” A little better question is “Have we saved up enough money?”, but I’d argue even this is the wrong approach when making a decision.

I don’t want to tell anyone where they should or shouldn’t spend their money. OK, I sometimes do, but really that is an individual decision based on what every person values, and everyone needs to make that decision for themselves. However, I think everyone needs to have the right information when making purchasing decisions, and that comes down to my common theme of using time, not money, as your limited resource.

Instead of asking “Can I afford the payments for that dream vacation?” or even “Do I have the $10,000 in my account for it?” a better question to ask is “How much longer will I need to work to offset this purchase?”. Instead of paying in dollars, you are really paying in “Pain Dollars” or working time. This is key, because the conversion of dollars to Pain Dollars is different for everyone. For example, let’s say that vacation meant you’d have to work 4 more months (more on this calculation in a moment) at your job. Is that worth it? For some, yes, the reward is worth the pain, and for some no. It depends on how painful your job is and how much you value the item you are about to purchase.

To figure out what your Pain Dollars conversion is, I use my early retirement “Crossing the Streams” approach, and compare my original asset curves with one set back by the purchase of the item ($10,000 in the case of this vacation). I suggest you read this blog post to understand this a little better if you haven’t already.

Looking back at that original scenario, we had a 32 year-old doing well, with a projected early retirement in March 2043 (age 56). What if she decides to take that vacation? Her current bucket one assets decrease by $10k and her crossover point shifts by 4 months:

I know what you’re thinking, if I make more than $10K in 4 months, how can the impact be this great? And, the impact above looks like a lot more than $10k! The answer is a) not all of your money you make goes to savings (in fact most doesn’t) and b) we are looking at the impact of a purchase today compounded over time. Is that dream vacation worth it? Some would say yes, some would say no, but I think everyone should be informed of its impact in his or her working time.

This is also part of the power of working in a job you really enjoy. For those lucky enough to love their job, the conversion rate of Dollars to Pain is very advantageous, meaning your able to exchange very little pain for a great deal of dollars. By thinking about “paying in Pain” everything just became cheaper! Four months for you might be pennies—doing your job everyday is a pleasure—four months to someone else might be a fortune.

Monte Carlo Analysis

Link

For those interested in how I got the probability numbers for reaching retirement goals, a little fun with excel.

I used the random number generator =RAND() for each possible outcome to simulate the randomness of the return of our investments for both stocks and bonds.  My example used a 30 year old in 2018, investing for 35 years until age 65 (year 2053).  Stock and bond returns for each year are generated based on our random number and the mean and standard deviation we have chosen to use, using the excel function =NORM.INV(A1, 10.4, 18.3) and NORM.INV(B1, 4.0, 2.8) assuming the random number for stocks and bonds is in cell A1 and B1 respectively, and you are using the 10 year averages for mean and standard deviation I mentioned in an earlier post for stocks and bonds.

I used an allocation following my recommended asset allocation based on age.  The overall return for stocks and bonds is calculated by using the randomly assigned returns from above and adding in our deposits made that year.  I also rebalanced at the end of the year to get us back into the proper allocation for the upcoming year and use that value when calculating my return for the next year.  This is repeated for every year until retirement.

Running this calculation once represents one potential future, or one run of the Monte Carlo simulation.  We really want to run 1000’s of simulations, but for this case, I’ve just run 100 for simplicity.  Each time I recalculate the sheet (hint, press F9), I record that bottom line number.  Note, you want to copy and paste the value of this cell into another cell, not just do a strict copy and paste, otherwise all your numbers will be changing.  For 100 runs, I got the following results:

monte carlo runs

For our purposes, these represent the universe of outcomes.  The randomness of returns keeps things far from guaranteed, but we can get a sense of how good or bad things can be.  I then use this list and the COUNTIF function in excel to determine how many “futures” get above certain thresholds.  For example if the data above is in cells M1 to M100 and I’m looking for how many cases were above $1.2M, that is =COUNTIF(M1:M100, “>1200000”).  For various thresholds, the results are below

monte carlo summary

There are still a bunch of assumptions here, most notably that the return for stocks and bonds for the next 35 years will look a lot like the past 10, but this philosophy gives some insight for making decisions in a very unsure world.  For instance, from the above you can feel good, but not great, about getting to at least $1.2M, but if you’re counting on $4M, you better be a very lucky person.  I know, Han Solo said “Never tell me the odds!”  I’m guessing Han had a substandard retirement plan.  You want to know the odds.