The Silence of the Wolves

If you were a basic Couch Potato investor at the beginning of the year, your year is looking rather fine. If you weren’t, it’s time to get serious about investment simplicity.

Skeptics should consider some figures.

The Couch Potato wins. Again!

If you had $100,000 in a basic Couch Potato portfolio on Jan. 1, you had $107,182 at the close on Sept. 4.  Over the same period a $100,000 investment in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index would have closed at $107,381. (I learned this on the portfoliovisualizer website.)

That’s a tiny difference for the anxious ride we’ve had in this Year of Covid-19. It’s a tiny difference when you consider that the all-stock portfolio is twice as risky as the 50/50 portfolio. At its worst, the Couch Potato portfolio declined by 10.18 percent. That was about half of the 19.63 percent decline of the S&P 500.

If you had taken an even simpler route, $100,000 in the Vanguard Balanced Index mutual fund would have grown to $107,636 – you would have done better than the all stock portfolio with far less risk.

You can see comparative figures in the table below.

Couch Potato Index Fund Portfolios vs. the S&P 500

This table compares the year-to-date investment returns of three index fund stock and bond portfolios with the S&P 500. The results show very similar returns with much smaller declines during the early Covid-19 crash.
Portfolio YTD value 9/4 Return Maximum Decline
S&P 500 $107,381 7.38% -19.63%
Vanguard Bal Index (60/40) $107,636 7.64% -12.34%
Couch Potato (50/50) $107,182 7.18% -10.18%
40/60 Index Portfolio $107,160 7.16% –  8.09%
Source: www.portfoliovisualizer.com

 

How to make a Couch Potato portfolio

You create a Couch Potato portfolio by putting half your money in a fund that invests in the total U.S. stock market. Then you put the other half in a fund that invests in the total U.S. bond market. These days you can do this without paying any commissions. Better still, the annual costs of the exchange-traded funds that do this is now less than 0.05 percent a year.

Dirt cheap. Dirt simple.

And if you are arithmetically challenged, yes, you are allowed to use an electronic calculator for the heavy lifting part, dividing by the number 2.

No advanced degree required

So, you don’t need a Ph.D. in finance. You don’t need an MBA. You don’t need to study for the Certified Financial Analyst exam. You can be plain old, wonderful (but incorrigibly lazy) you.

But wait, there’s more!

Right now, stock brokers are out there talking about this being “a market of stocks.” They yell about the incredible danger of being in an index fund. Money managers are talking about diversification and the unsung potential of obscure countries.

What they definitely are not talking about is their miserable performance.

What brokers and professional managers won’t tell you

Here’s what they won’t tell you. The Vanguard 500 Index did better than 74 percent of its managed competitors.  It also beat the competition by a huge margin. With its return of 7.45 percent, it beat the average for the category by a stunning 3.67 percentage points.

This is not unusual. Indeed, it was the “worst” performance relative to longer time periods. Over the last year, three-year, five-year, 10-year and 15-year periods, the fund scored in the top 22, 18, 10, 10 and 15 percent of surviving funds, respectively.

Morningstar shows similar figures for the Vanguard Balanced Index fund, Investor shares. It was in the top 13 percent, beating 87 percent of its managed competition – just as it has for much longer periods of time.

Couch Potatoes: It’s time to brag

If you started this year as Couch Potato investor, now is the time to exercise some of your bragging rights. You’d be doing others a service. The millions of people who haven’t seen the wisdom of passive investing need to know. They need to hear what they will not be hearing from the usual noisy sources.

No, you won’t hear a word about this from the Usual Sources.

Think of it as The Silence of the Wolves.


Read More about Couch Potato Investing and Exactly How To Do It

Scott Burns, “The Simplicity Manifesto,” 3/31/2019  https://scottburns.com/the-simplicity-manifesto/

Scott Burns, “It’s 2020: Are you broke yet? Not hardly,” 4/11/2020   https://scottburns.com/its-2020-are-you-broke-yet-not-hardly/

Scott Burns, “How to build the basic Couch Potato portfolio anywhere for next to nothing,” 9/12/2018 https://scottburns.com/how-to-build-the-basic-couch-potato-portfolio-anywhere-for-next-to-nothing/


This information is distributed for education purposes, and it is not to be construed as an offer, solicitation, recommendation, or endorsement of any particular security, product, or service.


Photo by patrice schoefolt from Pexels

(c) Scott Burns, 2020

 

1 thought on “The Silence of the Wolves

  1. Scott- Thank you for bringing some of us back to reality–I sure appreciate your sound advice and commentary! Thanks

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