
Digital Wealth
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Content
- Intro
- Title page
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Preface
- Note
- Acknowledgments
- Chapter 1 America's Savings Challenge
- We Don't Save Enough
- The Key Change in America's Retirement Planning Process
- How Financial Innovation Helps
- The Magic of a 15 Percent Savings Rate
- Notes
- Chapter 2 The Risk of Not Investing in Stocks
- The Short-Term Risks
- The Historical Perspective
- The Logic
- Chapter 3 The Enemies of a Stock Portfolio
- Why Inflation Matters
- Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS)
- Asset Confiscation
- Recession
- Chapter 4 The Value of Time for Investors
- Why Long-Term Stock Investing Is Less Risky than It May Seem
- The Long-Term Picture
- How Bonds Can Help
- Note
- Chapter 5 Core Assets of a Robust Portfolio
- Asset Classes We Include
- Individual Asset Classes We Exclude
- Notes
- Chapter 6 Dynamic Asset Selection: Determining the Lowest-Cost Option for Each Portfolio
- Chapter 7 What Software Does Better than People
- How Software Helps Investors
- Example: All the Decisions an Algorithm Makes
- Chapter 8 How International Investing Can Smooth Returns
- Demographics Matter
- Diversification Improves Your Industry Mix
- Notes
- Chapter 9 The Advantages of Exchange-Traded Funds
- The Benefits of ETFs
- In-Kind Transfers
- The Risks of ETFs
- Securities Lending Policies
- Notes
- Chapter 10 The Triumph of Low-Cost Investing: How Paying Less Gets You More
- Fooled by Randomness
- A Triumph of Marketing over Results
- Notes
- Chapter 11 Learning from Nobel Prize Winners
- Milton Friedman, 1976
- James Tobin, 1981
- Harry Markowitz, 1990
- William Sharpe, 1990
- Daniel Kahnemann, 2002
- Eugene Fama and Robert Shiller, 2013
- Chapter 12 The Costs of Being Active
- The Cost of Closet Indexing
- The Other Costs of Active Management
- Notes
- Chapter 13 The Greatest Mistakes Made by Novice Investors
- Starting Saving Too Late
- Are You Using Tax Shelters Effectively?
- Are You Taking Advantage of 401(k) Matching If Available?
- Are You Diversified Internationally?
- Are You Chasing Returns?
- Are You Overpaying in Fees?
- Are You Tracking the Right Index?
- Do You Trade Too Much?
- Chapter 14 Tilts and Other Ways to Help Long-Term Performance
- History of Market Thought
- Data Mining
- Debunking Strong-Form Market Efficiency
- Rationality
- The January Effect
- Sell in May and Go Away
- Momentum
- Value
- Small Cap
- Quality
- Longer-Term Mean Reversion
- Assessing Tilts in a Portfolio Context
- Notes
- Chapter 15 Establishing a Tax-Efficient Portfolio
- Tax Shelters
- Tax Efficiency for Retirement
- Tax Efficiency for College
- Tax Efficiency for Giving
- Tax-Efficient Asset Placement
- Tax Loss Harvesting
- Offsetting Gains with Losses
- The Principal of Tax Deferral
- How Tax Loss Harvesting Works
- Challenges of Implementing Tax Loss Harvesting
- Conclusion
- Chapter 16 The Value of Rebalancing and Glidepaths
- Rebalancing Keeps a Portfolio on Course
- Tiered Rebalancing
- Glidepaths
- Notes
- Chapter 17 How to Manage a Market Crash
- Keep Stock Market Investing for Longer-Term Money
- Making Saving an Ongoing Activity
- Pay Attention to Extremes of Long-Term Valuation Signals
- Don't Consider Stocks in Isolation
- Remember that You May Underestimate Your Risk Tolerance in Good Markets
- Chapter 18 Your Own Worst Enemy Is in the Mirror
- The Biggest Threat to Your Returns Is in the Mirror
- Always a Reason to Avoid Staying Out
- The Returns You See Aren't the Ones You Get after Tax
- The Media Isn't Your Friend
- Overtrading
- Home Bias
- Failing to Take a Long-Term Perspective
- Availability Bias
- Chasing Performance
- Ignoring Fees
- Holding Too Much Cash
- How Software Can Help
- Note
- Chapter 19 Saving for Goals beyond Retirement
- Tax Efficiency
- Portfolio Construction
- Emergency Funds
- Investment Flow Chart
- Chapter 20 A History of Diversified Portfolio Performance
- Stocks vs. Bonds
- The Impact of Recessions
- The Impact of Inflation
- The Danger of Averages
- The Benefits of Combination
- An Emerging Market that Has Emerged
- Chapter 21 The Future of Wealth Management
- Lower Costs
- Democratization of Services
- Increasing Customer Intimacy
- Improved Financial Awareness
- Note
- Chapter 22 Conclusion
- Author's Disclaimer
- About the Author
- Index
- EULA
Chapter 1
America's Savings Challenge
"The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago; the second best time is now."
-Chinese Proverb
We Don't Save Enough
As many an NFL star can attest, it can be easy to have wealth in the short term but not keep it for the long term by spending beyond your long-term means. This problem plays out across U.S. society. The allure of advertising and broad availability of debt don't help. It can lead to a bias toward spending, rather than saving, to try and keep up with the neighbors. This often comes at the expense of long-term security.
Unfortunately, the numbers for savings rates in the United States are poor relative to both history and other countries. As you can see from Figure 1.1, up until the 1980s, the U.S. savings rate was comfortably around 10 percent. Since the 1980s, the savings rate has fallen and now trends around 5 percent. Recessions generally cause the savings rate to spike, but the long-term trend in the United States is clear. The savings rate has basically halved.
Figure 1.1 US Personal Savings Rate
Source: US. Bureau of Economic Analysis
This rate is lower than all but a handful of developed countries. Of course, adjustments need to be made for demographics and the degree of "safety net" that a government offers to replace the need for saving for emergencies such as unemployment or healthcare costs. However, even after considering both factors, it seems clear that the U.S. savings rate is insufficient for many to achieve a comfortable retirement.
Social Security presents an additional risk. In the United States, the amount Social Security expects to pay out exceeds the amount coming in. As the report of the Trustees of Medicare and Social Security report:
Neither Medicare nor Social Security can sustain projected long-run program costs in full under currently scheduled financing, and legislative changes are necessary to avoid disruptive consequences for beneficiaries and taxpayers.1
The numbers of Social Security don't add up due to demographic trends. America has a rate of immigration that keeps its population, on average, younger than in many developed countries because immigrants tend to be younger than the average population. Despite this, the average age of the U.S. population is approximately 37,2 and there will be increasingly more people in retirement than are working. That's a problem because the system is generally expected to balance what gets paid in (contributions from workers) with what gets paid out (payments to retirees). As retirees become a larger proportion of the population the balance breaks down. The Social Security problem is something that can be addressed with political will. However, doing so will likely mean a higher retirement age and potentially lower payments. As a result, reliance on individual savings is likely to increase.
Many people are ill prepared for retirement. Northwestern Mutual runs an annual study on the topic and finds that 42 percent of U.S. adults have not spoken to anyone about retirement, and that people are generally more comfortable talking about death or sex than retirement topics.3 Often, those who have limited confidence in their retirement also describe themselves as having "debt problems," according to Employee Benefit Research Institute (ERBI) research.4
The Key Change in America's Retirement Planning Process
It used to be different. Previously, defined benefit plans avoided this problem; an employer took responsibility for retirement outcomes of their employers and the investment allocations to meet those needs.
Over time, the emphasis for most nongovernment employers has switched to providing contributions that employees can use to plan for their own retirement in 401(k) plans and similar tax-efficient vehicles. However, this apparently simple switch conceals a fundamental transfer of risk. Whereas previously employers bore the risk of their employees having a successful retirement, now employees carry the risk. The employer was once on the hook for providing a payout in retirement; now they no longer guarantee any payout in retirement. If the employee makes poor investment decisions or doesn't save enough, then their employer isn't going to step in and help when retirement comes. And, of course, most people are untrained in investment management.
An employer can be expected to bring in the expertise to understand investment allocations and cost minimization in retirement choices. However, evidence suggests that employees can chase historic returns and use basic strategies such as investing 20 percent across each of five options that are present, even if some choices are very similar and some are not, or loading up on stock in their employer, since they are familiar with the company. These sorts of errors may seem trivial, but can translate into worse investment outcomes when compounded over decades. Other errors, such as significantly overpaying for investment advice or investing in dubious asset classes, can have far worse consequences.
Of course, advice is available, but while employers could find some of the best consultants available and spread that knowledge and benefits over thousands of workers, employees typically seek advice one on one, which is less efficient because it doesn't scale across a large group of people, and can cost as much as 2 percent of the employee's assets to get solid, if fairly generic, retirement advice. The problem of high-cost investments is discussed in detail in a later chapter, but unlike other goods and services, with investment advice you typically pay for the advice with the very savings you have, so high costs can make it hard to achieve your investment goals. This is unlike other purchases because with investment advice you are reducing your rate of return with the fees you pay in order to attempt to increase your rate of return-a direct contradiction. This is why keeping costs low matters.
How Financial Innovation Helps
Fortunately, just as the landscape for retirement support has changed, so innovation has enabled employees to get a better deal. Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are a critical ingredient here. Unlike mutual funds, which have cost and tax inefficiencies, ETFs often provide the building blocks to assemble a robust portfolio at low cost. In conjunction, algorithmic advice can scale practically infinitely using technology. This provides portfolio management techniques that previously were the reserve of secretive quantitative teams to be publicly available. This means both the instruments and the techniques to ensure a successful retirement are now broadly available. The benefit here is not in lowering the costs of an existing service, but in expanding the reach of that service. Previously, even with relatively high fees, it simply wasn't economical for a financial advisor to serve a client with less than half a million in assets. The percentage of assets to make it worth the advisor's time would eat into the client's investment returns and provide only a meager return for the advisor. This meant that prior to digital investment services, most of America was in the painful position of not necessarily wanting to manage their own investment portfolios, but often having to do so because there were few other viable choices open to them.
The Magic of a 15 Percent Savings Rate
However, we should remember that even the smartest techniques and lowest fees cannot solve the savings rate problem. Prospective returns can be improved but there is no magic wand. With a 6 percent rate of annual growth, you can double your money in 12 years, but if you save nothing, you'll still end up with nothing at the end. That's true however long you have to save and however well balanced a portfolio is on offer.
And, unfortunately, the savings challenge is getting harder, not easier. The global increase in life expectancy is a good thing, but it puts a lot more pressure on your retirement dollars that now have to last years longer than previously. Retirement actually is a relatively new phenomenon. Previously, people would quite literally work until they died. At the end of the Second World War, the average life expectancy of an American at birth was 65, meaning that many would have no retirement at all. Now, for those born in 2010, it is just over 78.5 That is an increase of 13 years over two generations, and so retirement moves from being a short period to something most people can plan on experiencing for a decade or longer. The moves for an increased retirement age are unsurprising in the context of this stark improvement in life expectancy and quality of life for the elderly. Figure 1.2 shows U.S. life expectancy at age 65 over time, and the trend of increasing life expectancy is clear: this puts a greater burden on retirement savings as the retirement period lengthens.
Figure 1.2 Life Expectancy in the United States since 1930
Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Without proper planning, retirement may also be a luxury. This is an understandable outcome if Social Security diminishes in significance and savings rates remain at low levels. Increasingly, retirement is being delayed or potential retirees are continuing to work in old age. In the past two decades, the proportion of...
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