Building Wealth

For the first 30 or so years of working, saving and investing, you’ll be first in the mode of getting out of the hole (paying down debt), and then building your net worth (that’s wealth accumulation.). But don’t forget, wealth accumulation isn’t the ultimate goal. Decumulation is! (a separate category here at the Hub).

Preparing to pay Taxes on Cryptocurrency

By Sia Hasan

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

Taxes are essential for the government to continue operating smoothly. Without the payment of taxes, programs such as school lunches, Social Security and health services cannot function. Even though no one really enjoys paying taxes, everyone has to fill out their tax forms. These taxes apply not only to traditional forms of currency such as wages received for a job but also to cryptocurrency. Follow these tips to make sure you are prepared to pay taxes on your cryptocurrency.

Know what you have

Log in to all of your accounts associated with cryptocurrency and find out how much money you have in each system. Then, check how much you invested into the currency, how much you have spent and how much money you have earned. You also need to know how much money each of the amounts is worth in US dollars, because that is how the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) calculates taxes in the United States. Keep in mind the fact that the amount of taxes you pay is based on the worth of your cryptocurrency when you made it, not its current worth, as long as you can prove the date of acquisition. If you do not keep track of this information, it may be stored with your account data, but you should also keep a record so you can double-check the company’s calculations. Once you have an understanding of your finances, you can begin preparation of your taxes.

Know what’s required

Just because your income is in the form of cryptocurrency does not mean that you are not responsible for taxes. The IRS has recently released new guidelines about the payment of taxes and will be holding people accountable for not reporting cryptocurrency in the past. To avoid fines or even imprisonment for tax fraud, you need to understand the tax laws and how they apply specifically to the kinds of cryptocurrency you use. Continue Reading…

Can Private Equity’s stellar run continue?

By Noah Solomon

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

While Outcome is not a private equity (PE) firm, we are humble students of markets. As such, we feel compelled to write about the explosive growth in PE investments over the past several years and what this growth implies for the future.

Flavour of the Month

 Private equity has certainly had a good run. From 1990 to 2010, PE firms produced an annualized return of 14.4%, compared to 8.1% for the S&P 500 Index. Unsurprisingly, this strong performance has been a lightning rod for inflows. According to Prequin, a leading data provider for alternative investments, global fundraising for PE totaled an unprecedented $453 billion in 2017, topping 2007’s previous record of $414 billion. This avalanche of money has pushed the industry’s dry powder (capital committed that has yet to be deployed) to a record $1 trillion.

Victims of their own success

Owing to unprecedented inflows and low interest rates, there have been large shifts in the financial metrics of the PE industry. According to S&P Global Market Intelligence, average buyout multiples in 2018 climbed to a record 10.2x EBITDA, a level surpassing 2007’s pre-crisis peak.

The potentially ominous implications of huge inflows and increased competition for future returns is well illustrated by the experience of the hedge fund industry. At the beginning of 2000, there were relatively few hedge funds, and the global hedge fund industry had roughly $300 billion under management. Between 2000 and 2007, the HFRX Global Hedge Fund Index produced annualized returns of 9.75%. Even during the “tech wreck” of 2001-2, when the MSCI All Country World Index of stocks fell 33.1%, hedge funds rose an impressive 13.8%. This stellar performance attracted a massive influx of assets from investors and prompted the launch of countless new funds. The resulting increase in competition has had a dramatic impact on results. From the beginning of 2008 through the end of last August, the HFRX Index declined at an annualized rate of -0.5% and has fallen 5.7% on a cumulative basis.

Massive inflows and low rates have also encouraged a dramatic increase in the use of leverage. S&P Global Market Intelligence estimates that buyout debt levels currently stand at about 5.7x EBITDA, up from 3.7x for deals done in 2009 and not far from the 6.05x peak at the height of the buyout boom which preceded the financial crisis.

Stephen Schwarzman, chairman and CEO of the Blackstone Group, recently acknowledged the challenges facing PE firms, stating,” If we were a hockey team, then in the past, with less competition, we used to get 30 shots at the net,” Mr. Schwarzman said in an interview. “Today, we might only get five shots. But most of the time, we are shooting at an open net. We still score, we still win.” In contrast, Mr. Schwarzman predicted thousands of smaller private equity and real estate funds are facing declining returns on their investments, partly because of increased competition for deals.

The history of financial markets echoes with a warning: beware markets where investors are not only bullish but also borrowers.

The Stability illusion

PE funds have exhibited far less volatility than stocks. However, valuations of public equities are determined by transparent, liquid markets, while those of PE-owned companies are typically based on managements’ forecasts of long-term value.

From the end of 2012 to September 30, 2015, the S&P 600 Energy Index dropped 52% as energy prices plummeted over 50%. At the end of this period, PE energy funds from the 2012 vintage were marked at a 1.0x multiple of money invested, recognizing no losses. This shocking difference implies that either (1) PE energy funds are the most astute investors on the planet, or (2) they were applying different valuation standards than the public markets. The CIO of the Public Employee Retirement System of Idaho referred to this discrepancy as the “phony happiness” of private equity.

There will always be room for best-in-class PE investments within a well-diversified portfolio. However, given massive inflows and increased competition, investors should reevaluate risks and adjust their exposures to PE accordingly. Investors should also become increasingly discriminating and target only best in class funds that are disciplined, and which have sustainable investment strategies.

The Million Dollar Question

What should investors do in a world where both private and public assets are either fairly valued or overvalued, and in which interest rates are negative in real terms?

One advantage of public over private markets is that they are highly liquid. Publicly traded assets can be sold quickly and efficiently. However, this liquidity is of no value unless one uses it. Our Global Tactical Allocation (GTAA) strategy makes full use of the liquidity advantage of public securities by tactically shifting between asset classes. When our machine learning-based models indicate that gains are more probable than losses, we shift our portfolio into more pro-cyclical assets such as equities, high yield bonds, etc. Conversely, when our models determine the opposite, we shift out of riskier assets and into safe havens such as investment grade bonds and Treasuries. These characteristics have enabled our clients to participate in rising markets and avoid large losses during significant market declines like those of late 2018.

At this stage in the economic cycle, investors should focus their equity exposure in liquid, dividend-paying, low volatility stocks. Our Enhanced Dividend mandate, which has dramatically outperformed the TSX Index, uses big data analysis and statistical modelling to achieve an attractive yield while exhibiting relatively low volatility and losses.

Noah Solomon is President and Chief Investment Officer of Outcome Wealth Management. Noah has 20 years of experience in institutional investing.From 2008 to 2016, Noah was CEO and CIO of GenFund Management Inc. (formerly Genuity Fund Management), where he designed and managed data-driven, statistically-based equity funds. Between 2002 and 2008, Noah was a proprietary trader in the equities division of Goldman Sachs, where he deployed the firm’s capital in several quantitatively-driven investment strategies. Prior to joining Goldman, Noah worked at Citibank and Lehman Brothers. Noah holds an MBA from the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania, where he graduated as a Palmer Scholar (top 5% of graduating class). He also holds a BA from McGill University (magna cum laude).

 

How do I reduce investment volatility?

Image by Unsplash

By Steve Lowrie, CFA

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

I must admit, the title of today’s post is a bit bogus.  How so?  Not to split hairs, but “volatility” is the variance above and below a long-term trend line. The thing is, nobody has ever asked me whether I can help them reduce their upside volatility.  When equity markets are returning above-average returns, everyone’s happy.

So, I believe the actual question behind the question is how to reduce downside volatility.  There are many kinds of investors, but I’ve never met anyone who enjoys seeing their investments go down, sometimes in a hurry.

From the behavioural side of things, it’s best to treat periods of downside volatility as bumps in the road, rather than turning them into permanent losses by bailing out when they occur. In that context, how do you best reduce investment volatility? There are at least two possibilities to explore.

1.)    Reducing volatility through asset allocation

Understanding the role volatility plays in efficient markets circles us back to an investment strategy I’ve suggested all along:  globally diversified asset allocation.

Instead of trying to manage volatility by trying to time markets or by selecting certain types of securities, I would suggest the better tool for the job – in fact the best one – is a healthy exposure to high-quality bonds.  A bond allocation tempers your portfolio’s overall volatility.  Once you have established that, you can then optimize your equity portfolio by tilting toward equity market factors with sources of higher expected returns (such as size, value and profitability).

2.)    Reducing volatility by selecting low-volatility/low-beta stocks 

Certainly, there are those who claim they can capture the returns of the broad equity markets while offering a smoother ride.  The vast majority of these strategies fall into the categories of “low-volatility,” “equity minimum-risk” or “minimum variance.”  They have been around for decades, and their popularity ebbs and flows with the market’s gyrations.

Gut feel would suggest that if you want to lower the volatility of your equities, it might make sense to focus on stocks that have exhibited lower volatility than the overall market (“low-beta stocks” in industry jargon).  Perhaps yes, but the practical questions are whether these strategies (a) actually work, and (b) work better than asset allocation, as described above.

Before diving into the evidence, we’ve known for decades that market risks and expected rewards have been highly correlated around the world.  In other words, lower risk/lower volatility stocks tend to be the same ones that deliver the lowest expected returns.  So, just based on intuition, a “free lunch” of more market returns with less risk may not be so “free” or easy to obtain. It seems more likely lower volatility will simply lead to lower returns.

What the evidence tells us about low-volatility investing

Looking at an abundance of evidence, financial author Larry Swedroe has published several excellent, although highly technical articles about low-volatility/low-beta investing.  In this one, he explains that researchers documented a “low-beta anomaly” decades ago. But he notes: Continue Reading…

How to keep your Financial New Year’s Resolutions

By Danielle Klassen

(This article originally appeared on the WealthBar blog.)

One of the all-time most common New Year’s Resolutions is to save more and spend less. But about 80 per cent of New Year’s resolutions fail by mid-February. You’ve been there, done that.

This year, you can make it happen. The key? Make a plan and then enlist technology to help keep it on track.

Here are five things you can do today to set yourself up for the best financial year of your life:

1.) Set both short & long-term goals

Often, our long-terms savings goals may be decades out. And frankly, our brains have a hard time relating to these goals, because we tend to think about our future selves as strangers. It’s hard to get excited about saving money if you can’t visualize the reward.

Here’s a pro tip: mixing in some shorter-term goals can help you build better savings habits: and give you the incentive you need to keep going. To keep it manageable, include a target savings amount and a deadline. For example, you might decide to put away $1,000 for a long weekend out of town in three months. That might mean cutting back on day-to-day indulgences, but a weekend away is sure to be more memorable than your daily caramel macchiato.

Once you’re in the habit of spending less, put those lessons towards your long-terms savings to kick your investment contributions into high gear. After all, when you’re saving for a goal that’s decades out, the growth on that money can compound into a much greater value than it’s worth today.

2.) Build a budget

They say money can’t buy you happiness, but the feeling of financial security can positively impact your life satisfaction in a big way. And budgeting is the best way to get to that point.

Think about your money in terms of three buckets: the functional, the fun, and the future. The functional includes all of the things that you’ll need to cover: bills, a roof over your head, food on the table. The fun is everything that goes above and beyond the practical: dinners out, new jeans, etc. The future includes all of those long-term savings goals you set up in step one. Remember: every $1 you put into that bucket, can turn into $5 dollars (or more) in a few decades when invested.

Apps like Mint or You Need a Budget (YNAB) will let you visualize which buckets your money is going into, and can even help make saving feel more like a game.

3.) Give yourself a raise

Want to guarantee a raise this year? Pay yourself first. When you automatically invest a portion of your paycheque, that money can turn into a bigger payout down the road.

To start, make sure to max out any savings matching programs you’re eligible for through your employer. Typically, your employer will set up a group investment account and match your contributions dollar-for-dollar up to a certain percentage of your income. These contributions come right off your paycheque, so you’ll never be tempted to spend that money. Continue Reading…

Retired Money: David Aston’s The SleepEasy Retirement Guide

My latest MoneySense Retired Money column is one of the first review of financial writer David Aston’s first book, The SleepEasy Retirement Guide. The subtitle bills the book as answering “the 12 biggest financial questions that keep you up at night.” Click on the highlighted text to retrieve the full column: Good News — Your RRSP is probably in better shape than you think.

Aston is a long-time freelance financial writer, and is also a MoneySense writer. I got to know him when I was the editor and always enjoyed editing his popular Retirement column in the magazine. Now 63, after a corporate career spanning management consulting, corporate financial planning, and operations, Aston turned to financial journalism, which he has now been doing for 12 years.

As I note in the review, I had a small role to play in the creation of this book, since I introduced David to the publisher: Milner & Associates Inc., which is also the publisher of Victory Lap Retirement, coauthored by myself and Mike Drak.

In the case of Aston’s new book, I have to say it seems to have been a good piece of literary matchmaking. In due course, we hope to run some excerpts and/or blogs from David here on the Hub.

A nice feature of the book are the many charts and tables that spell out just how much money you need to accumulate to retire at various ages, whether a “barebones” el cheapo lifestyle, or a high-end luxury one defined as $100,000 in annual income for couples ($80,000 for singles) or the vast swath of retired lifestyles in between. Whether you’re single or half of a couple, all the numbers you need to project finances into your future golden years are there. For most of the calculations in these charts, Aston created simple Excel spreadsheets.

No need for $1 million unless you want a deluxe Retirement

Financial writer and author David Aston

And, as is often made clear at MoneySense.ca, you don’t necessarily need $1 million to retire, although you will need that much and more if you are counting on a deluxe retirement with all the bells and whistles (exotic travel once or twice a year, two cars in the garage, eating out regularly, etc.). Continue Reading…

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