Tag: bonds

Riding It To The Bottom – Part 2 – Ditching the Bonds

Image by Michal Jarmoluk from Pixabay

I published “Riding it to the bottom” on July 6, 2022. Shortly thereafter, I ended up selling all my entire bond ETF portfolio and thus converted my asset allocation from an 80/20 stock-bond split, into a 100% stock allocation. I know I had written about staying the course, which is still what I stand by. Whatever your personal investment plan statement instructs you to do, is what you should do, as it is based on your own personal situation, comforts and risk levels.

However, I didn’t just randomly switch over to 100% stocks. I’d been thinking about it for a while, and decided to dust off my investment plan for review. I hadn’t really updated it in a couple of years and the whole situation with both the stock and bond market heavily plummeting caused me to re-evaluate my overall plan.


And I did. I thought about it a lot, and about the pros and cons of keeping or ditching bonds, and what my overall goals going forward should look like.

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Why I Hate Pensions: Episode 2 – Digging Deeper

Anyone who knows a little bit about investing and related strategies knows that it’s very beneficial to have a diversified portfolio. This helps reduce risk while maximizing long term returns. Anything from various combinations of stocks, bonds, real estate, to cash holdings, etc. The point is to not have all your eggs in one basket, lest the basket breaks and all your eggs get cracked.

The same could be said of pension plans. But how do you know what those plans are investing in? It’s never in their news letter. It’s not directly on their main website pages. You have to dig a little, and even then, it’s somewhat murky.

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Riding It To The Bottom

Bear Market Edition

Do You Like Slides?!?!

When that bear came after you, and you saw your investments drop thousands of dollars in a matter of weeks, or even days, what choice did you make? Did you decide to sell before the storm got worse, and try to preserve what you had left? Then maybe you bought back in at some future time when the market had finally recovered? Or did you ride that sucker all the way to the bottom, buying as you go, hanging on for dear life and locking in stocks on sale! Only to grab the reigns, then ride that beast of a bull all the way back up to the top* again, profiting from the gains of cheaply gotten stocks?

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