2026 investments

Talking about bonds... I've never worried about them much when I was younger, but now in 50s feel like "shouldn't I have some bonds?" for diversification, risk reduction, et al.

Well, the answer I have come to is yes and no.

For risk reduction and diversification as part of portfolio allocation, I am seriously underwhelmed. They're more correlated than they used to be and the return is lower. And more inflation risk. Why not just buy utilities instead? Doesn't make a lot of sense to me, certainly the old 100-age % allocation thing is total BS imho.

But here is where I do think they have a purpose. Time. They do have less risk over say 2-4 years than equities, but better return than money market. So if you are doing the "buckets" thing in retirement, they work in that middle timeframe bucket. Keep the money you need for this year and next in cash/MM/CD/etc. Keep what you will need in year 3,4,5 in bonds. Keep the rest in your equities portfolio.

Now, if you want to say that all 3 buckets are your overall portfolio, then that's OK, but rather than pick an overall %, you pick the DOLLARS needed, and then the % is what it is. Two examples - $100k annual expenses needed, one portfolio has $2M assets, the other $4M.

View attachment 167104

So just saying "you should have x% in bonds" doesn't work for me at all, its a super lazy thing to do. But I do see they have a use. IDK, maybe I have discovered that fire is hot, but this helped me think about bonds differently.
My suggestion for bond suggestions, buy higher dividend stocks instead. I’ve been the treasurer for a non profit that gets donated some investments. Some mutual funds but one decent donation was a set of bond funds. The bond fund averaged 4-5% in interest. Gains are +-1% total for several years so basically the return is the interest. There are several stocks that will do the same thing for you.
 
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For the retired

How was it mentality to move from building the nest egg to spending?

I alluded to my current issue of trying to gear down without feeling Iike I'm underperforming the market. I've been hyper focused on growing the portfolio. Taken specific risks. Been all-in, risk on, and was rewarded.

In a few I'll be looking to tap that reserve. I don't believe that will be easy.
 
Talking about bonds... I've never worried about them much when I was younger, but now in 50s feel like "shouldn't I have some bonds?" for diversification, risk reduction, et al.

Well, the answer I have come to is yes and no.

For risk reduction and diversification as part of portfolio allocation, I am seriously underwhelmed. They're more correlated than they used to be and the return is lower. And more inflation risk. Why not just buy utilities instead? Doesn't make a lot of sense to me, certainly the old 100-age % allocation thing is total BS imho.

But here is where I do think they have a purpose. Time. They do have less risk over say 2-4 years than equities, but better return than money market. So if you are doing the "buckets" thing in retirement, they work in that middle timeframe bucket. Keep the money you need for this year and next in cash/MM/CD/etc. Keep what you will need in year 3,4,5 in bonds. Keep the rest in your equities portfolio.

Now, if you want to say that all 3 buckets are your overall portfolio, then that's OK, but rather than pick an overall %, you pick the DOLLARS needed, and then the % is what it is. Two examples - $100k annual expenses needed, one portfolio has $2M assets, the other $4M.

View attachment 167104

So just saying "you should have x% in bonds" doesn't work for me at all, its a super lazy thing to do. But I do see they have a use. IDK, maybe I have discovered that fire is hot, but this helped me think about bonds differently.

100% agree. Then ChatGPT of all places put it in language that I resonated with me - its not about growth or the return on your bonds, its about having access to a pool of funds that you can use to rebalance, i.e. buy more equities when the market is down.

This works if you are looking at a retirement (or a potential extended break in my case) within the next few years. Basically the #1 goal in an early retirement is you don't have to sell equities at low points.

If you are on a much longer timeline and won't touch those equities for 10-20-30 years, bonds are probably less important.
 
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I have some Silver and Gold etfs I bought about 5 years ago, didn't even know what was happening until a few days ago. Caused a few raised brows on my my face, with a few whisper cusses (in a good way).

hell yes
 
I do not finance anything, pay cash. Buy a new car for the wife and a new pick up for me, alternating every year so I'm trading two year old vehicles with less than 50,000 miles on them. After rebates, I usually average around $3,500/$5,000 per year X 2 to have vehicles that are under warranty 100%. I can write the pick up as a farm expense. I've been too lazy to do the math to see if I should be driving them longer to see if it would be a better financial play. One of the issues I'd bring up in the investment discussion and retirement is the extreme expense of Assisted Living and Nursing Home facilities. $100,000 a year is reality now and it's not getting any cheaper down the road. My father-in-law was a successful insurance and investment sales/manager, he and his wife both ended up in Assisted Living. He went first and if she had lived another 4 months, I would have been paying the bill as all their investments were gone.
 
I do not finance anything, pay cash. Buy a new car for the wife and a new pick up for me, alternating every year so I'm trading two year old vehicles with less than 50,000 miles on them. After rebates, I usually average around $3,500/$5,000 per year X 2 to have vehicles that are under warranty 100%. I can write the pick up as a farm expense. I've been too lazy to do the math to see if I should be driving them longer to see if it would be a better financial play. One of the issues I'd bring up in the investment discussion and retirement is the extreme expense of Assisted Living and Nursing Home facilities. $100,000 a year is reality now and it's not getting any cheaper down the road. My father-in-law was a successful insurance and investment sales/manager, he and his wife both ended up in Assisted Living. He went first and if she had lived another 4 months, I would have been paying the bill as all their investments were gone.
Medicaid is the answer for most elderly people. My mother is living in the same place she was living in before, which was costing her $9k/month. She quickly ran out of money, and went on Medicaid. They then gave her $50/month in spending money. This sounds absolutely horrible, but when you're in a nursing home, there isn't anything to buy. It's just a sad existence, and not something I will allow myself to go through.
 
I do not finance anything, pay cash. Buy a new car for the wife and a new pick up for me, alternating every year so I'm trading two year old vehicles with less than 50,000 miles on them. After rebates, I usually average around $3,500/$5,000 per year X 2 to have vehicles that are under warranty 100%. I can write the pick up as a farm expense. I've been too lazy to do the math to see if I should be driving them longer to see if it would be a better financial play. One of the issues I'd bring up in the investment discussion and retirement is the extreme expense of Assisted Living and Nursing Home facilities. $100,000 a year is reality now and it's not getting any cheaper down the road. My father-in-law was a successful insurance and investment sales/manager, he and his wife both ended up in Assisted Living. He went first and if she had lived another 4 months, I would have been paying the bill as all their investments were gone.

I'm 36 and have been thinking about this for the future... can't it all be put into a trust or somehow moved to a loved one you can trust? cant take it if its not yours
 
I'm 36 and have been thinking about this for the future... can't it all be put into a trust or somehow moved to a loved one you can trust? cant take it if its not yours
There are lookbacks that prevent people from doing this, which I have no issue with. IMO,If you're relying on the government/tax payers to pay the full bill, you shouldn't have any money to give to your family. Once they qualify for Medicaid, each year you have to resubmit your earnings, which in her case is social security and a $200/month pension. They then take the rest and leave her $50. The whole process is pretty eye opening.

I probably should update my feelings on this. My mother is over 90 and single. If this is a couple, I feel differently. I believe there are workarounds for couple like Medicaid compliant annuities.
 

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