With the Coronavirus crisis hitting hard on the stock market and the Bulls run looking a bit weeker than last year I am starting to believe that perhaps we might be looking at a Bear Market scenario. I had some good returns from my IDECO portfolio last year however it is very much stocks funds based. With that said it is frightful to see all the returns going away with the possibility of a recession scenario, that is why I would like very much to hear you guys opnions on how are you managing your accounts for when the bear comes.
Keep it like it is, dont look at it and wait for the bulls again?
Switch from stocks to Bonds / Gold / REIT?
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RAKUTEN IDECO
Current Products / Type / Current Allocation %
楽天全米株式バンガード楽天DC (30) / Overseas stock / 35%
楽天INDEXバランス楽天DC (32) / Balance type / 31%
三井住友つみたてN日株楽天DC (02) / Domestic stocks / 17%
楽天ターゲット2050楽天DC (25) / Target / 5%
三井住友DC日本リート楽天DC (09) / Domestic REIT / 4%
明治安田DC日債楽天DC (08) / Domestic bonds / 4%
SSゴールド為替Hあり楽天DC (28) / Commodities (GOLD) / 2%
三井住友DC外国リート楽天DC (19) / Overseas REIT / 1%
Portfolio Management during Recession
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Re: Portfolio Management during Recession
I'm lazy, and don't believe I have any kind of edge in terms of information.
I am planning to completely ignore anything that happens, to continue making the same regular purchases, and to believe that in ten years' time nothing that happens this year will matter very much.
I may be wrong, but that is my plan right now.
I am planning to completely ignore anything that happens, to continue making the same regular purchases, and to believe that in ten years' time nothing that happens this year will matter very much.
I may be wrong, but that is my plan right now.
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Re: Portfolio Management during Recession
I agree with RetireJapan. I don't try to time recessions or bear markets because even if I guessed right about the time to sell I would probably miss the time to buy back in. Also the need to pay taxes each time you sell really hurts your returns (at this point something over half of my portfolio is unrealized capital gains; it would be very painful to pay all those taxes). I also don't try to use new funds for more conservative investments. Instead I try to stick with my investment plan. I don't enjoy watching the market go down and don't get much comfort from the idea that stocks are "going on sale" but I think Jack Bogle was correct when he admonished people to "stay the course!" in their investing.
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Re: Portfolio Management during Recession
Yep, that is my point of view. If I see the market going bad on the news better not even open my IDECO account.RetireJapan wrote: ↑Thu Feb 27, 2020 5:53 am I'm lazy, and don't believe I have any kind of edge in terms of information.
I am planning to completely ignore anything that happens, to continue making the same regular purchases, and to believe that in ten years' time nothing that happens this year will matter very much.
I may be wrong, but that is my plan right now.
By management I mean instead of selling, rebalancing the percentage of each allocation. Switching to other funds with lower risks than stocks such as bonds or commodities for example. But for sure, trying to time the market is no good. Therefore I am thinking to keep investing the same way however still interested to listening to other strategies to secure your portfolio.TokyoWart wrote: ↑Thu Feb 27, 2020 6:22 am ...even if I guessed right about the time to sell I would probably miss the time to buy back in. Also the need to pay taxes each time you sell really hurts your returns (at this point something over half of my portfolio is unrealized capital gains; it would be very painful to pay all those taxes).
Re: Portfolio Management during Recession
This 100%.RetireJapan wrote: ↑Thu Feb 27, 2020 5:53 am I'm lazy, and don't believe I have any kind of edge in terms of information.
I am planning to completely ignore anything that happens, to continue making the same regular purchases, and to believe that in ten years' time nothing that happens this year will matter very much.
I may be wrong, but that is my plan right now.
Back in 2007 Warren Buffet made a $1m bet that he could beat hedge-funds with all their complicated portfolios and risk strategies, just by investing in the S&P500. He won that bet. And that 10years included the 2007~2008 financial crash...
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新NISA -> Established
Jr NISA -> Established (Running quietly in the background)
UK Pension Voluntary Contributions -> Up and running
All thanks to RetireJapan...
Re: Portfolio Management during Recession
Don't fret, carry on investing in the same global index fund monthly +1
I wouldn't say I'm lazy, just that my investment strategy is to not change the strategy based on market conditions.
If you make conservative changes now, then the market bounces back, you'd have been better making no changes.
I don't know what's going to happen, so I just keep to the index.
It's probably a good time to re-assess your risk tolerance though, because it's easy to consider yourself tolerant when you're making a profit, no so much when the opposite is happening.
I wouldn't say I'm lazy, just that my investment strategy is to not change the strategy based on market conditions.
If you make conservative changes now, then the market bounces back, you'd have been better making no changes.
I don't know what's going to happen, so I just keep to the index.
It's probably a good time to re-assess your risk tolerance though, because it's easy to consider yourself tolerant when you're making a profit, no so much when the opposite is happening.