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Retirement Nestegg Report – February 2013

Retirement Nestegg Report – February 2013

Well another month another all-time high and another milestone reached. My retirement nestegg is now worth over a quarter of a million dollars. It’s great to see the power of compound interest and the increased frequency of hitting new milestones. I remember starting out and seeing fellow financial bloggers having nesteggs well into the 6 figures and thinking man I can’t imagine how long it would take to save up that much money or build a nestegg that large and now I have reached that level and now those people are approaching or surpassing 7 figures. Once you get the snowball rolling it’s a powerful thing.

Of note this month I had a very large 401k contribution which is half of my company’s matching program that hits each year around this time. My company has an extremely generous 401k matching program and it has been very helpful in building my nestegg. I also maxed out my wife’s Roth IRA for 2012 and now will start working on our 2013 contributions as I have a surplus of cash heading our way with our company bonus that will be paid out in a week or so. All in all things are looking good and $300k doesn’t look too far off.

Traditional Rollover IRA – $17,394.75 (+4.93%)
My Roth IRA – $65,504.79(+1.44%)
Wife Roth IRA – $35,916.69 (+8.31%)
Traditional 401k – $134,516.17 (+5.69%)

Roth/Traditional % = 40.03% (tax free)

Total Retirement Nest Egg $253,332.40 (+4.86%)

Monthly Contributions $6,400.69 (401k) $2500 (Wife Roth IRA)
SPY Performance +1.11%
My Monthly Investment Performance +1.18% (+0.07%)
My Monthly Individual Stocks Performance +1.75% (+0.64%)

Retirement Nestegg Report – January 2013

Retirement Nestegg Report – January 2013

Well 2013 is off with a bang. The SP 500 gained over 5% this month alone and my investments actually did a little bit better than that (thank you Netflix). My retirement nestegg also hit an all-time high and I’m starting to creep up on the 1/4 million dollar mark which is exciting. I also maxed out my Roth IRA this month for 2012 and today will be making a contribution to max out my wife’s Roth IRA for 2012 so things are good on the contribution front again after lapsing for a stretch while saving for land/house I have yet to buy.

No real big changes expected going forward but I am once again considering opening a taxeable account since 100% of my investments are in tax-deferred retirement accounts and I will not have access to them until I am 59.5 which would make retiring early a challenge so I think eventually I will also add a taxable account to the mix so that I have more options.

Traditional Rollover IRA – $16,577.37 (+2.82%)
My Roth IRA – $64,575.52(+10.71%)
Wife Roth IRA – $33,161.63 (+7.81%)
Traditional 401k – $127,272.89 (+4.96%)

Roth/Traditional % = 38.88% (tax free)

Total Retirement Nest Egg $241,587.41 (+6.67%)

Monthly Contributions $715.28 (401k) $2500 (My Roth IRA)
SPY Performance +5.04%
My Monthly Investment Performance +5.25% (+0.21%)
My Monthly Individual Stocks Performance +6.27% (+1.23%)

My best and worst stocks in 2012

My best and worst stocks in 2012

Here are my top 10 stocks for 2012

IPG Photonics (IPGP) +96.78%
3D Systems (DDD) +90.40% (bought in April)
Lululemon Athletica (LULU) +63.37%
Stratasys (SSYS) +62.94% (bought in April)
Amazon (AMZN) +44.93%
Middleby (MIDD) +36.34%
Under Armour (UA) +35.18%
Brookfield Assett Management (BAM) +33.73%
Netflix (NFLX) +33.63%
Apple (AAPL) +31.40%

Well certainly an interesting list for 2012 and not a large trend like there are some years. Came pretty close to having IPGP become a 2 bagger for me in a year and my #2 and #4 best stocks this year I only purchased at the end of April. I guess its nice to see some validation from Amazon with a nearly 45% return in 2012 after I made this statement in last years analysis of my individual stocks

“If there was one stock that I felt the absolute best about going forward it would definitely be Amazon which is currently my 7th largest position. I just feel that they do so many things right, have so many long term trends going their way, have a visionary leader, and innovative company spirit, and an absolute focus on making their customers happy. I think they will one day dwarf competitors such as Walmart and Apple.”

And now for the biggest losers

MAKO Surgical (MAKO) -49.03%
Dawson Geophysical (DWSN) -33.27%
BJ’s Restaurants (BJRI) -27.41%
Ebix Inc (EBIX) -27.06%
Activision (ATVI) -13.8%
Chipotle (CMG) -11.93%
Qlikview (QLIK) -10.25%

What is interesting about this list is many of they stocks I view as still having great long term prospects and I have really doubled down on a couple of them. This also can explain some of my underperformance this year.

MAKO my biggest loser is actually not a huge holding for me and they are of the more speculative/risky kind of stock so seeing them down 50% doesn’t suprise or necessarily bother me – that being said it is not a stock I plan to invest more money into either.

BJ’s on the other hand I have invested in very heavily as it has continued to drop and its actually my 7th largest stock holding at year end despite the drop. This is a small restaurant stock that has a long growth story in front of it and I am happy to get the discounted price now and have the patience to let it play out.

Ebix is an interesting stock and another one of my largest holdings and has received a lot of scrutiny about their CEO and their financial statements by a bunch of short sellers who have been very successful at driving the stock down, but again long-term I think they are a well run company that is growing by leaps and bounds and throwing off lots of cash so I am not too worried here either and have bought on the the drops.

Activision I have actually trimmed back on – I think it is still a great company and is undervalued, but wanted to use the resources in some of the other stocks that looked very appealing later in the year.

Chiptole I love and think they will continue to expand their concept and just continue to be awesome. I recently added to this position as well.

Qlikview is a more speculative situation. I do own a large chunk of their stock and believe very strongly in their product. Their management hasn’t done a great job executing lately and I think they are prime for a buyout by one of the bigger players, but would have expected more out of them than I have seen in 2012.

My Investment Holdings – January 2013

My Investment Holdings – January 2013

Well not a whole lot of change since last year. I did do some reshuffling in my 401k moving most of my funds to a Vanguard target retirement fund. As far as my stocks I haven’t really made any major changes from last year. It was kind of a weak year for restaurants and I’m pretty heavy in that area so that explains some of my short-term under-performance. New guys to the list are a couple 3D printing companies DDD and SSYS. Other than that its the same old same old.

Anyway here is the list 47 total investments, 5 mutual funds, 39 stocks, and a cash position.

1VTTSX26.66%
2VEXMX10.74%
3VWESX8.12%
4VPMCX5.37%
5BWLD4.82%
6AMZN4.53%
7PNRA3.08%
8EBIX2.84%
9CMG2.75%
10REREX2.56%
11QLIK2.48%
12BJRI2.32%
13SBUX2.27%
14UA2.27%
15BIP1.94%
16NFLX1.84%
17WFM1.41%
18FOSL1.23%
19IPGP1.12%
20DDD0.94%
21AAPL0.94%
22BRK-B0.71%
23UNH0.57%
24MKL0.57%
25MIDD0.57%
26INFN0.51%
27GWR0.50%
28SINA0.49%
29ATVI0.47%
30IIVI0.47%
31EXEL0.42%
32DLB0.39%
33$$CASH0.38%
34LULU0.37%
35MAKO0.37%
36OTTR0.36%
37SAM0.36%
38SSYS0.35%
39MELI0.35%
40BAM0.34%
41SNHY0.32%
42COST0.30%
43PCLN0.27%
44DWSN0.26%
45ZIP0.07%
Retirement Nestegg Report – December 2012

Retirement Nestegg Report – December 2012

Well always fun to end the year with all-time new high for my retirement nestegg. 2012 was a big year for my retirement account. I broke 200,000 for the first time, I started contributing to my Roth IRAs again (after taking a hiatus saving for a house), and I had my 4th child. My investment performance wasn’t exactly where I’d like it to be, but I know investing lots of my money into individual stocks I will get some wild swings during shorter periods of time (1 year) and overall my confidence is growing with my ability to pick individual stocks over the long term.

I was also kind of amazed that I had contributed over $25,000 to my retirement accounts this year – I didn’t even remember/notice anything special in this regard. Part of it is my employer’s very generous 401k matching program and the other is saving is so automatic for our household that you can save $25,000+ and not even realize it – which just a few years ago when I started this blog would have blown my mind.

Traditional Rollover IRA – $16,122.50 (+4.17%)
My Roth IRA – $58,330.93(+6.60%)
Wife Roth IRA – $30,760.30 (+0.83%)
Traditional 401k – $121,258.03 (+2.30%)

Roth/Traditional % = 38.88% (tax free)

Total Retirement Nest Egg $226,471.76 (+3.30% 1 month) (+32.85% 1 year)

Monthly Contributions $715.28 (401k)
SPY Performance +0.18%
My Monthly Investment Performance +2.98% (2.80%)
My Monthly Individual Stocks Performance +4.48% (+4.30%)

My Contributions for 2012 $25,099.48
SPY Performance for 2012 +13.47%
Investment Performance for 2012 +18.12% (+4.65%)
Individual Stock Performance for 2012 +10.25% (-3.22%)
Total Investment Return 2012 +$30,895.25

2012 Retirement Nestegg Growth

Retirement Nestegg Report – November 2012

Retirement Nestegg Report – November 2012

Going through a bit of a dry spell with regards to my investments. The good news is I have started contributing money to my Roth IRAs again and hopefully taking advantage of what I am considering bargains on some of my individual stock investments. Assuming I am right with some of those assumptions I will hopefully see some large increases in my retirement nestegg in the next 5-10 years as those investments play out.

Traditional Rollover IRA – $15,477.26 (+0.71%)
My Roth IRA – $54,721.91(+1.44%)
Wife Roth IRA – $30,508.07 (+4.12%)
Traditional 401k – $118,526.75 (+1.70%)

Roth/Traditional % = 38.88% (tax free)

Total Retirement Nest Egg $219,233.99 (+1.43%)

Monthly Contributions $715.28 (401k) $2000 (Wife Roth IRA) $2500 (My Roth IRA)
SPY Performance -0.53%
My Monthly Investment Performance -0.53% (0.00%)
My Monthly Individual Stocks Performance -2.44% (-1.91%)

Retirement Nestegg Report – October 2012

Retirement Nestegg Report – October 2012

Well this month was a rough one and my investment performance trailed the SP500 and my individual stocks got crushed by the market this month. Many of my large holding had rough earnings seasons and this greatly affected my performance this month. The good news is this is just a one month event and does not change my long-term outlook on my investing philosophy or any of my investments. In fact quite a bit this year and even more so this last month I have been concentrating my individual stock investments into fewer and fewer stocks and putting more and more money into what I consider my best ideas. I still own 39 individual stocks and even my largest holdings account for less than 5% of my total retirement nestegg so I do not think I am taking on any additional risk I just feel like after being in the stock market for 5-6 years now and having gone through a pretty good recession I feel much more comfortable in my allocation decisions – I guess only time will tell.

Traditional Rollover IRA – $15,368.72 (-6.23%)
My Roth IRA – $53,946.83(-5.50%)
Wife Roth IRA – $29,301.05 (-3.47%)
Traditional 401k – $116,549.06 (+0.05%)

Roth/Traditional % = 39.69% (tax free)

Total Retirement Nest Egg $215,165.66 (-2.35%)

Monthly Contributions $715.28 (401k) $500 (Wife Roth IRA)
SPY Performance -1.91%
My Monthly Investment Performance -2.90% (-0.99%)
My Monthly Individual Stocks Performance -5.03% (-3.12%)