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Retirement Nestegg Report – December 2010

Retirement Nestegg Report – December 2010

Well the end to another exciting year for my retirement nestegg. I don’t listen very often, but whenever I do turn on a tv or a radio I hear about how horrible the economy is and how bad the stock market is doing and how investors are so nervous and many of them are not putting money into the stock market because of the horrible returns and as I listen I think to myself are these people nuts?!?

This year the SP500 returned 12.84% and last year it returned 26.46% and thats just the average of the large companies in the stock market. Many other areas are doing even better (Russell small cap index has returned 31% and 25% the last two years). My retirement nestegg grew by 54.34% and most of that was due strictly to investment gains.

Now certainly this can’t and won’t go on forever, but it just shows that all of those people who told you to take all of your money out of the stock market when things were ugly in 2008 were basically telling you to destroy any chance you had at gaining a respectable return on your investment. Sell low and stay out of the market and wait to get back into the market until after all of the gains have been made back. Absolustely horrible investment advice but you hear it absolutely everywhere.

Warrent Buffett is famous for saying

Be fearful when other people are greedy and greedy when other people are fearful

which is great advice if you are actually trying to time the market, but my advice would be to consistently and regularly invest in the market regardless of whatever is going on and do your absolute best to ignore any advice anyone is trying to give you with regard to short term market fluctuations (anything less than 5-10 years)

I do find it funny though as I looked back at last year’s year end summary and how completely laid back and nonchalant I was about my retirement plan and my investments. I was probably overselling it in that post but I really am completely in cruise control and planning for and saving for my retirement really does take so little effort on my part now days that I really could disappear for a year or two at a time and things would keep on chugging along without me.

Where I turned out to be a little off base from where I stand today is when it comes to individual investments (namely stocks). I made this quote

“From now on I will check my investments maybe once or twice a year and then pretty much forget about them and live my life – which in the end is the whole purpose of this investing game.”

While that still can be very much true and I don’t spend a lot of time on my individual stocks (I can go 6 months or more without checking up on an individual stock) I do spend a couple hours a month looking at my stocks and looking for new stocks and do really actually enjoy it. What really perked my interest early on this year is I took the time to go back and calculate my individual stock picks performance vs the market to see if it was worth my while and turns out I have been actually really good/lucky at picking winning stocks thus far in my investing career and made me realize those extra couple hours are really worth the effort.

My individual stocks beat the SP500 24.1% this year, 9.32% last year, 1.42% in 2008, and 1.76% in 2007. The only year I didn’t beat the market was in 2006 and that was really my first year investing and I made some really bad decisions – yet still only lost out by 1.59%. Does this mean I am an investing genious – probably not but it does give me some confidence to keep roughly half of my retirement nestegg in individual stocks (ironically it should be much lower than that as I haven’t contributed to my individual stock accounts in over two years due to us saving for a house but it is growing at such a fast pace that it keeps ahead of the 401k account where I contribute money every paycheck).

Anyway this was a really great year for my retirement nestegg as it grew by 54% and my individual stock performance just crushed the market (thank you Netflix and Chipotle Mexican Grill)

Anyway here is my year December year end report.

Traditional Rollover IRA – $12,763.45 (+2.53%)
My Roth IRA – $44,872.34 (+2.09%)
Wife Roth IRA – $26,105.90 (+5.16%)
Current Traditional 401k – $78,953.21 (+6.00%)

Roth/Traditional % = 43.62 % (tax free)

Total Retirement Nest Egg $162,694.90 (+4.49% 1 month) (+54.34% 1 year)

Monthly Contributions $605.84 (401k)
SPY Performance +6.13%
My Monthly Investment Performance +4.10% (-2.03%)
My Monthly Individual Stocks Performance +3.10% (-3.03%)

My Contributions for 2010 $25,152.01
SPY Performance for 2010 +12.84%
Investment Performance for 2010 +24.60% (+11.76%) ** see below
Individual Stock Performance for 2010 +36.94% (+24.10%)
Total Investment Return +$32,127.00

2010 Retirement Nestegg Growth

** This figure is not exact because I don’t want to do the math to figure out returns from each and every paycheck contribution so I took the entire YTD contribution of $25k and added it to the total of the previous years nestegg – effectively making it seem like I made all of my contributions Jan 1 – when in fact they were made throughout the entire year which greatly lowers my investment return – if I moved them to the end my return would have been 42% which obviously is overstated so I played it safe and took worst case scenario – even under worst case scenario I beat the market handily in my 401k.

My Financial Journey – 5 year anniversary

My Financial Journey – 5 year anniversary

Wow – I can’t believe its already been five years since I started this blog. It really seems like its only been a year or two but looking back at where I started and where I am today its pretty obvious that some time has passed.

As I look back to those first couple posts back in December of 2005 – it amazes me how far I’ve come and how a few simple blog posts five years ago greatly affected the financial success I have achieved so far. In my 1st Retirement Nestegg Report I reported a total value of $24,616 and just 7 days ago I reported my November 2010 Nestegg report with a value of $155,708. Such tremendous progress, yet it happened step by step with lots of small mundane actions over the last 5 years that resulted in nestegg growing by 732%.

Five years ago today I knocked out four blog posts that set the foundation for this blog and my financial planning. I can’t emphasize how important it is to get your thoughts and goals written down somwhere – there is some magical power that comes from actually taking thoughts from your head and getting them down on paper/computer that drives you towards achieving whatever you wrote down. Do it!

Two posts from five years ago that really laid out my financial future were the blog posts “What are My Goals” and “Goals Rough Draft” In these posts I talked about the following goals for myself.

  • Make $100,000 a year by the time I turned 30.
  • Save $100,000 for retirement by time I turn 30.
  • Have $1,000,000 saved for retirement by time oldest kid starts college
  • Become financially independent early in life so that I can spend time doing whatever I want
  • Help family and friends learn about money
  • Save some money for my kids college education
  • Have $10,000,000 put away for my retirement

Make $100,000 a year by the time I turned 30.
This was a goal I almost forgot about and really didn’t know if it was realistic and while I didn’t quite achieve it I came close enough to call it a victory.

Save $100,000 for retirement by time I turn 30.
This was probably my most open and visible goal and that one that seemed to get the most attention on this blog – see the status meter on the side bar. While in my final writeup I did admit to falling just a tad short of my goal – it is another goal that when I set it didn’t think was going to be possible, but in the end I was successful.

Have $1,000,000 saved for retirement by time oldest kid starts college
This one again I can’t believe I had as much foresight in 2005 as I did. I have been thinking of how to set my next financial goal for myself and turns out I already took care of it in 2005. I will be writing up a full post on this goal and this will start tracking it just like I did my $100,000 by age 30 goal.

Become financially independent early in life so that I can spend time doing whatever I want
The previous goal and this goal sort of go hand in hand and at same time they could be sort of contradictory. Having $1,000,000 saved for retirement is great, but at the time I will only be 43/44 years old and I can’t touch any of that money for another 15 years because its all in retirement accounts, so that means I won’t exactly be able to quit my job or take a low paying flexible job. This one needs more thought and I really need to decide what I really want from this goal.

Help family and friends learn about money
Regarding this goal I think I’ve done an OK job. I am certainly a person that a lot of my friends and family look to when it comes to money questions, but in the original goal I sounded a lot more ambitious about getting my younger family members into investing which I don’t think I’ve successfully done.

Save some money for my kids college education
Check – I have 529 College savings plans that I setup up for all 3 of my kids as soon as I got their social security number. I don’t contribute much to them ($15 per kid per month), but honestly at this point I’m not too worried about paying for their college education. My retirement takes priority and if my kids had to take on some college loans or work to pay off their own college it wouldn’t be the worse thing in the world. Besides by then I will be a millionaire (har har har) and could just turn my income spigot at their college education if I so chose.

Have $10,000,000 put away for my retirement
Well this was the pie in the sky end game goal and is something I think is feasible – its currently not date bound, but by my original projections I had created back in 2005 I had anticipated hitting $10M at about age 65. Now granted that assumed I would put away about $23k a year in my retirement accounts which I have not done the last two years as I have instead saved $70k for a new house we might build. It also assumed I would make 10% a year on my investments each year which is a pretty lofty task – though I have been pretty successful with my investments so far (I need to calculate my overall annualized return these last 5 years so see if its a realistic number)

Well its been a great five years for me and this blog has been so invaluable to me to be able to set goals for myself, track my thinking and decisions throughout time, get great feedback from other people in the personal finance community as well as those kind enough to leave me comments for me. I’m amazed at how often I refer back to my own blog when trying to figure out if I am on track for retirement or to send a link to a friend who asked me a financial question that I just happened to have a blog post about (all without them knowing I am the actual author of the post). This blog to me is clearly the single best financial decision I ever made and even if you don’t want to make your goals and financial status/decisions public like I have – I can’t urge you enough to write them down and keep track of your plans and thoughts over time. It is so valuable to be able to go back and re-read what you were thinking 5 years ago and what you had hoped to accomplish.

To those of you that have been kind enough to leave me comments and stay up to date with my blog over these years I want to say thank you. The readers and comments were an unexpected bonus of this whole blog experiment and have really helped me grow over these last five years. It has been a great give years and I hope the next five will be even better!

Retirement Nestegg Report – November 2010 (My First Ten Bagger)

Retirement Nestegg Report – November 2010 (My First Ten Bagger)

Well another really good month for my Retirement Nestegg – my investments crushed the market again and I got to celebrate my first 10 bagger with Netflix. I purchased Netflix at 19.72 on June 22, 2007 and as of today the stock sits at $205.90 for a total gain of 944%.

I did go ahead and trim 25% of my Netflix holdings two days ago at $200 share and did do some small trimming of positions that have had really big runups lately and have very lofty valuations.

My cash position which is almost always $0 is now at $7613 which is 9.37% of my individual stock portfolio. Normally I would never do this, but because we are no longer contributing much to our retirement accounts I would like to have some cash available to take advantage of any opportunities that might present themselves if the market were to head south.

Traditional Rollover IRA – $12,447.82 (+2.65%)
My Roth IRA – $43,955.02 (+7.55%)
Wife Roth IRA – $24,824.93 (+3.70%)
Current Traditional 401k – $74,480.55 (+0.42%)

Roth/Traditional % = 44.17 % (tax free)

Total Retirement Nest Egg $155,708.32 (+3.05%)

Monthly Contributions $605.84 (401k)
SPY Performance +0.00%
My Monthly Investment Performance +2.64% (+2.64%)
My Monthly Individual Stocks Performance +5.58% (+5.58%)

Retirement Nestegg Report – October 2010

Retirement Nestegg Report – October 2010

Just a quick update this month. Highlights are that I broke $150,000 for the first time and my investment performance trailed the SP500 this month – but I’m cool with that as last month I crushed it so I was due to not beat it again – for the year though I am still considerably ahead of the SP500.

Traditional Rollover IRA – $12,126.26 (-0.70%)
My Roth IRA – $40,869.11 (+3.03%)
Wife Roth IRA – $23,939.76 (+5.22%)
Current Traditional 401k – $74,171.88 (+5.13%)

Roth/Traditional % = 42.89 % (tax free)

Total Retirement Nest Egg $151,107.01 (+4.08%)

Monthly Contributions $908.76 (401k)
SPY Performance +3.82%
My Monthly Investment Performance +3.45% (-0.37%)
My Monthly Individual Stocks Performance +3.09% (-0.73%)

Ten Baggers and Spiffy Pops

Ten Baggers and Spiffy Pops

The investing great Peter Lynch in his book One up on Wallstreet tried to correlate investing success to baseball by referring to successful stocks as “baggers”

Here is the definition of a Ten Bagger from Wikipedia

Ten bagger is an investment term coined by Peter Lynch in his book One Up On Wall Street. This refers to an investment which is worth ten times its original purchase price, and was adapted from baseball where “bag” is a casual term for “base”, and extra-base hits like doubles, triples, and home runs are colloquially called two-, three-, or four-baggers.

So in other words everytime a stock appreciates in value 100% from its original purchase price it is considered a bag. So a home run (4 bagger) in this analogy is a stock that has gone up 300% and the infamous ten bagger that Peter Lynch was shooting for was a stock that appreciated 900% or more in value from the initial purchase price.

Now you might be thinking what the heck 300% sholdn’t that be only a triple? Well this is a common mistake that many people make when thinking about stock performance – remember a 100% increase means your stock doubled. So a 200% increase means your stock tripled and so on. A 1000% increase is actually an 11 bagger. Basically subtract one from my stock went up X times and you have the percentage.

Anyway the whole goal of investing to achieve that infamous ten bagger that Peter Lynch referred to is all about having the correct long term mindset when it comes to stocks. If you are an investor who is constantly churning your portfolio over and buying and selling as the stocks move up and down – you will likely never achieve a “ten bagger” Very few stocks appreciate 900% in a short period of time so this means that you would have to purchase your investment and hang onto it for a sufficiently long period of time and resist the urge to cash out or “lock in profits” after your stock had double, tripled, etc.

Well I recently realized I was getting pretty close to having my own ten bagger in Netflix so I decided to take a look at my portfolio and analyze how many “baggers” I had sitting in my portfolio. Here is the list

8 baggers
NFLX (764%)
6 baggers
NFLX (556%)
5 baggers
CSE (480%)
4 baggers
CMG (378, 306%) BH (305%)
3 baggers
DLB (212%) BH (207%)
2 baggers
DLB (190%,112%) BH (154%) BWLD(113%) DWSN (100%) IPGP (112%) QSII (141%,100%) SINA (115%)
1 baggers
DLB (78%) MIDD (75%) PCAR (77%) QSII (89%,75%,57%) UA (82%) ATVI 84% UNH (82%,70%) BWLD (52%) DWSN (60%) EBIX(62%,50%) GWR (60%) MORN (60%) MR (71%) SBUX (62%) VLCM (77%)

So a total of 74 bags if you add them all up. While its nice to be able to grab 14 bags with just 1 stock (somewhat luck) it is also nice to see that 20 other stocks that have become baggers for me.

EDIT: I am starting to question whether there is such a thing as a 1 bagger when it comes to this methodology

You’ll also notice that many of the same stocks have become baggers for me multiple times through multiple purchases. This is because I don’t invest all of my money in a stock at one point in time at one value point. I tend to invest in stocks over time and see if my original thesis is panning out. Sometimes I add more to a stock after it has already run up and in many cases I add to a stock after it has taken a big tumble. This is sort of the opposite of what many people do who throw all of their money in at one point in time and hedge their losses with a stop loss.

I never invest a 1/4th of what I would consider a full investment in a stock at once. This allows me to make my initial purchase right away without waiting for that magical price point. If its a great company and I think has good long term prospects I will buy it. Then I will study the company, follow it and learn more about it. I also greatly leverage the other people doing this same studying at the Motley Fool.

Prime example is Netflix – I originally bought Netflix on Dec 9th, 2005 for $25.94. I then held the stock for about 18 months and was down nearly 30% on the stock before I purchased again at $19.72 on Jun 22, 2007. My only regret is I didn’t stick with the stock on the way up and keep buying it – I always seem to find something else I thought was a better deal and never got back to purchasing the rest of my full position in Netflix – oh well I’m not going to complain too much 🙂

Spiffy Pops
Another interesting investor lingo thing almost happened to me yesterday – something called a Spiffy Pop. Spiffy Pop was coined by David Gardner of the Motley Fool as a stock that doubles in value from your initial purchase price in one trading day.

I bought Netflix for $19.72 on June 22, 2007 and on October 21st Netflix gained $19.54 in that one trading session.

So my stock gained 99.1% in one day from my initial purchase price – had it closed above that magical 100% that would have been considered a Spiffy Pop. It was up as high as $21.79 but ended up closing lower. Again a spiffy pop likely isn’t going to happen for an investor unless he is patient and lets his winners run.

What about you – do you have any ten baggers or spiffy pops?

Retirement Nestegg Report – September 2010

Retirement Nestegg Report – September 2010

Well another really good month for both my retirement nestegg and for my individual investment performance. My individual stock portfolio outperformed the SP500 by over 5.5% this month. It’s almost scary how much many of my stocks have gone up recently and I keep thinking to myself that something has to give as I have quite a few stocks that are up 50%,100% or more just this year. Netflix and Chipotle being two stocks that just don’t seem to want to stop. I am up over 700% on my first purchase of Netflix and my entire position is up over 600% in a relatively short period of time.

Obviously things can’t go like this forever and I expect that quite a few of my stocks are due for a major pullback, but you could have made a really good argument when Netflix jumped from the $20s to $70 in such a short period of time – now it was over $170 just yesterday. I guess I am more of a buy and hold type of investor and so far it surely has been paying off for me as I’ve easily beaten the SP500 the last few years. Much of that credit should go to the Motley Fool and the newsletters I subscribe to and the excellent community members that have helped me learn along the way – especially Tom Engle (TMF1000)

Anyway back to the monthly report – see below as I’m edging closer to $150k and to think less than a year ago I was celebrating breaking $100k for the first time….

Traditional Rollover IRA – $12,212.25 (+11.01%)
My Roth IRA – $39,668.17 (+13.91%)
Wife Roth IRA – $22,752.34 (+15.43%)
Current Traditional 401k – $70,550.00 (+11.32%)

Roth/Traditional % = 42.99 % (tax free)

Total Retirement Nest Egg $145,182.76 (+12.62%)

Monthly Contributions $605.84 (401k)
SPY Performance +8.38%
My Monthly Investment Performance +12.15% (+3.77%)
My Monthly Individual Stocks Performance +13.89% (+5.51%)

Retirement Nestegg Report – August 2010

Retirement Nestegg Report – August 2010

Well the market was down 4.5% this month and while I don’t really care about month to month fluctuations it was very nice to see that my nestegg was only down 2% this month. I am very glad I took the time to break out my performance of my investments and compare it to the market in general because I’m finding out that whatever system I have with regard to individual stocks is actually paying off for me with regard to the extra time and risk put into it. Also by always comparing my performance to a relative benchmark I can take a look at a relatively bad month overall for the market that probably would make a lot of people upset and feel very happy that I handily beat the market this month.

Anyway here is my report.

Traditional Rollover IRA – $11,000.91 (-3.31%)
My Roth IRA – $34,823.83 (-0.77%)
Wife Roth IRA – $19,711.32 (-0.27%)
Current Traditional 401k – $63,378.18 (-2.83%)

Roth/Traditional % = 42.81 % (tax free)

Total Retirement Nest Egg $128,914.24 (-1.93%)

Monthly Contributions $605.84 (401k)
SPY Performance -4.50%
My Monthly Investment Performance -2.40% (+2.10%)
My Monthly Individual Stocks Performance -1.06% (+3.44%)