Quote:
Originally Posted by Vegas69
I broke out the book and here is the breakdown:
7.5% Gold
7.5% Commodities
15% US Intermediate Bonds
40% US Long Term Bonds
30% Stocks/Index Fund
The portfolio must be rebalanced every year, minimum.
He claims there are four economic seasons this strategy is based on:
1. Inflation
2. Deflation
3. Rising economic growth
4. Declining economic growth
The average return from 1984-2013 was 9.72%.
I'm not even close to being an expert on this stuff or utilizing this strategy at this point. I just thought it was interesting and it got me thinking about taking advantage other types of markets with different strategies and buckets.
"Bull markets start at the time of pessimism. The rise on the time of skepticism. They mature at the time of optimism, and they end at the time of Euphoria!"-John Templeton
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Todd ---- I'm not "disputing" any of the information in the book or tape or anything else. But INVESTING 102 is about SIMPLE - reliable - relatively safe - understandable basic saving and growing money. People can barely recite the 10 stocks they own or want to own..... Let alone keep track of "asset allocation" and all it's nonsense. Sorry.
The below info has been factual for years and years.... and, of course, are AVERAGES -- and don't account for many years of LOWS or spectacular rises (like 2008 to present).
Siegel found that stocks have been returning a long-term average of about seven percent for 200 years.
If you’d purchased one dollar of stocks in 1802, it would have grown to more than $750,000 in 2006.
If you’d instead put a dollar into bonds, you’d have just $1,083.
And if you’d put that money in gold? Well, it’d be worth almost two bucks — after inflation.
Siegel’s findings aren’t unique. In fact, every book on investing shows the same thing. Over the long term, the stock market produces an average annual return of about 10%.