How would you invest without looking into past?
A legendary (though apparently no longer active) ET member would recommend using PriceDrivers™!
How would you invest without looking into past?
Have you worked out the details?
Here is the link with worked out details.
https://www.elitetrader.com/et/thre...st-index-investing.297648/page-9#post-4528944
@alexpun I assume that the currency is JPY? And thus that the annual withdrawal from the capital equals 1,126,774 JPY? That is hardly enough to live of in current Japan, cost of living is higher than that. If this capital was the only source of income then it would have been depleted by now.The details lazily calculated (45 years working life, 30% saving rate, withdraw rate 3% of 1985 total net-worth + the dividend)
Salary data here http://nbakki.hatenablog.com/entry/Changes_Wage-Workers_Salary_1950-2013
I don't have dividend details but I assume you will save up the dividends in your working life and use it later.
If you worked 40 years instead of 45 you would have about 7M yen remaining in 2017.
Yes, I am familiar with the various behaviourist explanations and theories for momentum effects. I am just curious that you're comfortable with an investment thesis which, essentially, explicitly relies on other investors in the market being "stupid".Then I would question the investment thesis, without incorporating behavior biases.
I was pointing out to the fact that delayed reaction by investors is one of the main reason for momentum affect. Finally they give up and chase returns. Skeptic view is persistent, that is main reason that premium prevails.
https://www.aqr.com/library/aqr-publications/explanations-for-the-momentum-premium
@alexpun I assume that the currency is JPY? And thus that the annual withdrawal from the capital equals 1,126,774 JPY? That is hardly enough to live of in current Japan, cost of living is higher than that. If this capital was the only source of income then it would have been depleted by now.
Yes. I posted my asset allocation in other thread.
80% in 14 asset classes, with value tilt, 10% in short vol currently (will move 5% to catastrophic bonds from this allocation) and 10% to trend following to compensate my value bias.
You need to incorporate inflation into account after retire. I know inflation is not an issue for japan. Japanese CPI figure shows, it was 89.7 in the beginning of 1990 and 103.5 during end of 2015. So about 15% of purchasing power erosion.
1) 30% savings rate of gross salary is pretty aggressive (20% reasonable) and 45 years of working life is little generous (40 might be okay). Don't know about tax rates in japan, 30% savings rate before tax is pretty close 50% savings rate after tax in US.
2) 1985 salary is 3,163,000, assuming 80% amount needed to retire, it is 2,530,400. You are assuming half of that. Don't know about your assumption of dividends saved will make up for that.
Anyway good analysis.
How do you invest in catastrophic bonds?