Value stocks have not done very well past 5-10 years,
Only some. Buying VLO at 66 worked fantastic.
Value index returns aren't going to double the SPY, but IMO there is significantly less risk of loss.
Having stable value is nice because next time the market takes a 40% hit, you can buy in at a good price. Let prices recover and the rotate some money back to value again.
Your current hurdle rate is 5% with risk-free US Treasuries
I love 5% risk free treasuries. I can keep money off to the side and earn over 5% with a one month commitment.
You are storing your wealth
I see it less as "storing my wealth" and more as, using it to fund specific activities. People have this weird assed idea that wealthy people have a Scrooge McDuck style vault full of cash.
Especially Bitcoin folks seem to have this blind spot.*
Wealthy people mostly use their money to buy a stake in income producing activities.
Bitcoin is just ledger entries. There's no voting shares. There's no product, plant or equipment. You're just buying a ledger entry.
Yes, cherry picked returns on Bitcoin have been impressive, but so are the returns on winning lottery tickets. When you look at the lottery or at Bitcoin generally, you see that it never returns any more than what was put into it. If you're good at predicting the price you might be able to make money, similar to a professional sports better or poker player. In all those cases, for you to win someone else must lose.**
*Often I hear Bitcoiners talking about getting outside the fiat system, etc. They generally ignore the point that the real issue is excessive government spending and taxation. Money printing is just a piece of the puzzle. They pretend that as long as you assets aren't denominated in dollars you are safe. The real situation is, you must pay taxes regardless. In addition all that government spending competes with your own spending power for goods and services.
**Technically, that's slightly unfair to Bitcoin. Assuming that people use Bitcoin forever. It could theoretically grow at a long term rate of global GDP growth.