InvestorsFriend Inc. Newsletter
December 8, 2009
My Investment Performance
As an investment newsletter
writer, it seems to me to be important that I reveal my own investing
success.
The fact is that
my personal investment results have
been very good.
And 2009 has been an
exceptionally good year.
The biggest earner in my house
this year is not me and it's not my wife. It's our money! (Unfortunately or
fortunately, it's not money we can spend as it is almost all RRSP money)
One of our two RRSPs is up 49%
this year. If we look at the return on the total dollars that we invested,
it is even more impressive. This RRSP has earned $1.54 this year alone for
every dollar ever invested in it!! In other words on an historic cost basis
(as opposed to a market value basis) this RRSP is up 154% this year. Our
other RRSP is up 27% this year on a market value basis and 83% on an
historic cost basis.
Here is a graphical picture of
our cumulative earnings on money invested each year since we started
investing 21 years ago.

The graph shows the following:
The money I invested 1 year ago
is up about 40%
The money I invested 2 and 3
years ago is not up much at all (thanks to the crash of 2008)
The money I invested 6 years ago
has now doubled
The money I invested 7, 8 and 9
years ago has about tripled (up 200%)
The money I invested 15 and 16
years ago is up 400%
The money I invested 21 years
ago is up over 800% Unfortunately I was just starting out investing and so
the amount I invested 21 years ago was just $2,000. But that is worth over
$16,000 today.
And note that my overall average
compounded return on the money invested 21 years ago is 11.3%. That's a good
return. But it's not spectacular or unbelievable or anything like that. A
good return will grow money quite spectacularly when the time frame gets
over 20 years.
The graph above illustrates that
rather than timing the market, what is really important is
Time In the Market. It's
extremely unlikely that you will make 300% in a year. But in a couple
decades it's easy to do.
Defining Financial
Independence
One definition of financial
independence is that it would be reached when you have enough investment
assets that the return on your investments is as large as a a "good salary".
Such a financially independent person would be able to quit their job and
still have a "good salary" coming in the door.
The following section discusses
how it might be possible to reach the point where your money is making the
equivalent of a "good salary".
When Your Money Makes More
Than You Do.
Imagine a person making $50,000
per year. Assume 5% or 2500 per year is invested. Assume an 8% return.
The result after 8 years is a
portfolio of $31,219. What is interesting is that at 8% the return on that
would be $2,500. So, in just eight years your money is now contributing as
much to the pot as your annual contribution.
If you can keep this up for 39
years then at that point your portfolio would be $647,647. And the return on
that at 8% would be just over $51,811. Remember this assumed your salary was
$50,000 per year. So in this example, your money is eventually making more
than you do.
Now imagine you are in a Defined
Benefit type pension plan. You contribute 5% of you salary and your employer
also contributes 6%. Now we have a $50,000 salary and $6000 per year invested.
Assume the same 8% return.
Now, after 29 years this money
would be earning about $50,000 per year. After 29 years it earns more per
year than its owner does.
Basically this shows that
Freedom 55 is still a possibility. It would take a savings of probably 12 to15%
or more of salary (including an employer funded portion) and it would take
getting a good return on money. But it is possible.
The point is that it is possible
for an investor to get to a point where his money earns more than he does.
It's a nice place to be.
I've gained temporary residence
to such a place this year myself. But it took a 40% return to do it. I won't
likely be in that place next year but I am almost sure to be there again in
a few years and before too many years can realistically hope to take up permanent residence
there.
Is the U.S. Stock Market
Over-Valued at this Time?
We have just updated our popular
article that analyses
whether or not the S&P 500 index is over-valued or not. Click to see the
results.
END
Shawn Allen, President
InvestorsFriend Inc.
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