Retirement Nestegg Report – October 2011

Retirement Nestegg Report – October 2011

Well for the second month in a row my investments have lost out to the SP 500 index and for the second month in a row I am going to blame Reed Hastings 🙂

Traditional Rollover IRA – $15,201.22 (+15.08%)
My Roth IRA – $47,947.32 (+6.71%)
Wife Roth IRA – $21,609.15 (+11.21%)
Current Traditional 401k – $89,233.16 (+11.13%)

Roth/Traditional % = 39.98 % (tax free)

Total Retirement Nest Egg $173,980.85 (+10.21%)

Monthly Contributions $693.10 (401k)
SPY Performance +10.92%
My Monthly Investment Performance +9.77% (-1.15%)
My Monthly Individual Stocks Performance +9.25% (-1.67%)

Retirement Nestegg Report – September 2011

Retirement Nestegg Report – September 2011

Well I had a hunch this month was going to be ugly and well I was right. Overall the market fell 7.42% on top of the 7.79% that it fell last month so things are getting pretty exciting as far as being able to invest money at lower cost basis, but the bad news is this month I broke my streak of of seven straight months of besting the SP500 index and well I broke it in stunning fashion losing by 3.48% overall this month and my stock portfolio losing by 5.60% just this month. There is a pretty logical explanation for all of this and his name is Reed Hastings 🙂 My best performing stock and also my largest individual stock holding Netflix fell about 50% just in the last month which has has a significant impact on my portfolio’s performance this month.

The good news I think is that I believe I have come a somewhat seasoned investor and having my largest single stock investment fall by 62% in a few short months and my overall retirement nestegg fall by nearly 20% from its all time high in April really gets no other reaction out of me other than a slight chuckle and some excitement that I might get the chance to make some very attractive investments in the next few months. I still very much feel like I am on the exact right track and I have kind of dealt with a somewhat worst case scenario (not saying thing won’t go lower), but things are sort of hitting the fan again in the market, my largest stock holding by far gets cut in half in a single month, and my retirement nestegg is still $100k larger than it was the last time things went to pot just a little over two years ago.

Also while Netflix was my largest stock holding it never really accounted for much more than 10% of my individual stock portfolio and maybe roughly 5-6% of my overall retirement nestegg so while I certainly felt things it didn’t permanently wreck my portfolio which I think is a good experience to go through and now going forward I will have a better understanding of how to handle diversification. And while it sucks to be down 60%+ on a stock in just 2 months its hard to get too upset when I’m still up nearly 450% on all of my Netflix investments and I personally feel the sky is not falling and Netflix still has a lot going for it and will very likely be a good performer moving forward.

So as to what I am going to do – I will probably follow the market a little closer than I did when it was constantly going up and will look to contribute more funds as the market is falling. I do have a stash of about $10k in cash in my 401k account kind of waiting for an opportunity like this and well I may put my house/land savings on hold if the market presents me with some attractive prices as I currently have $112k saved up for our next house so feel I can probably start diverting more money back towards our retirement nestegg going forward and still have the flexibility to jump on a land purchase if it presents itself. Overall with the worsening stock market and worsening real estate market I feel like I have put myself in real good shape over the last 5+ years to put myself in an even better position 5+ years from now.

Traditional Rollover IRA – $13,209.23 (-8.80%)
My Roth IRA – $44,930.66 (-10.54%)
Wife Roth IRA – $19,431.03 (-20.60%)
Current Traditional 401k – $80,286.67 (7.93%)

Roth/Traditional % = 40.77 % (tax free)

Total Retirement Nest Egg $157,857.59 (-10.50%)

Monthly Contributions $693.10 (401k)
SPY Performance -7.42%
My Monthly Investment Performance -10.90% (-3.48%)
My Monthly Individual Stocks Performance -13.02% (-5.60%)

Retirement Nestegg Report – August 2011

Retirement Nestegg Report – August 2011

Well a pretty exciting month for my retirement nestegg – though it ended up not finishing up quite as exciting as it looked like it might. I think at one point this month my retirement nestegg was down almost $40,000 from its overall high, but ended up making most of it back as stocks rallied the second half of the month. What does this mean for me? Well nothing really – other than I thought I might have some magical power over the stock market as the last time I mentioned about wanting to stocks to fall we had the crash of 08/09 and two months ago I wrote something similar and down we headed.

But anyway I will say it again I’m very glad I started tracking my performance against the SP500 as even in a down month like this where most people would be like oh crap my accounts shrunk by $11,000 – life sucks. I can be like awesome I beat the market by well over 1% again just this month. Certainly gives you a different perspective on things even though you shouldn’t even be looking at things in such a short period of time – it makes me feel good and makes me feel like I’m making progress and is 7 months in a row my performance has bested the SP500.

Here is my report

Traditional Rollover IRA – $14,485.30 (-4.44%)
My Roth IRA – $50,224.67 (-4.80%)
Wife Roth IRA – $24,469.87 (-9.48%)
Current Traditional 401k – $87,206.08 (-6.48%)

Roth/Traditional % = 42.47 % (tax free)

Total Retirement Nest Egg $176,385.92 (-6.27%)

Monthly Contributions $693.10 (401k)
SPY Performance -7.79%
My Monthly Investment Performance -6.64% (+1.15%)
My Monthly Individual Stocks Performance -6.08% (+1.71%)

Retirement Nestegg Report – July 2011

Retirement Nestegg Report – July 2011

Well another negative month for my retirement nestegg total, but again another month where my investment performance easily outpaced the SP500. These month to month results really mean nothing but all of these individual monthly one ups on the SP500 are really starting to translate into long term outperformance of the SP500 which is every investors benchmark and one that most investors fail to beat so I feel pretty good about that and makes me kind of glad that I didn’t follow my own advice by investing strictly in index funds (which is the smart thing that essentially everyone should do).

Traditional Rollover IRA – $15,157.54 (-2.47%)
My Roth IRA – $52,758.36 (-0.19%)
Wife Roth IRA – $27,032.05 (-1.52%)
Current Traditional 401k – $93,247.13 (-1.46%)

Roth/Traditional % = 42.40 % (tax free)

Total Retirement Nest Egg $188,195.08 (-1.09%)

Monthly Contributions $693.10 (401k)
SPY Performance -2.00%
My Monthly Investment Performance -1.46% (+0.54%)
My Monthly Individual Stocks Performance -0.73% (+1.27%)

Retirement Nestegg Report – June 2011

Retirement Nestegg Report – June 2011

Another negative month for my retirement nestegg report, but my investments beat the market pretty handily again this month. Heading the wrong direction from the $200,000 milestone but like I said last month I really don’t mind that at all as long as it means the market as a whole is headed south it will give me an opportunity to pick up some additional investments at less expensive values, but doubt we will get an opportunity like the crash of 2007-2009 anytime soon – though one can only hope. Here is my monthly report.

Traditional Rollover IRA – $15,541.70 (-0.46%)
My Roth IRA – $52,657.43 (-0.21%)
Wife Roth IRA – $27,449.60 (-2.97%)
Current Traditional 401k – $94,629.51 (-1.06%)

Roth/Traditional % = 42.10 % (tax free)

Total Retirement Nest Egg $190,278.24 (-1.06%)

Monthly Contributions $693.10 (401k)
SPY Performance -2.17%
My Monthly Investment Performance -1.42% (+0.75%)
My Monthly Individual Stocks Performance -1.05% (+1.12%)

Retirement Nestegg Report – May 2011

Retirement Nestegg Report – May 2011

Well my retirement nestegg went the wrong way this month – which amazingly is the first time since August of 2010 that my retirement nestegg shrunk from month to month. To be fair though during that same period of time the SP500 only went negative twice and was flat once so it’s not like I’m necessarily an investing genius. Like I’ve always said its fun to see your accounts growing each month, but I would very much welcome my accounts getting slashed in half like they did a few years ago as it has provided me as a young buyer with lots of time on his hands an opportunity to really get some bargain deals on stocks and has really super charged the growth of my retirement nestegg. It makes it so much easier to “beat the market” when things are going down and super volatile than it is when the market is doing nothing but going up.

Traditional Rollover IRA – $15,613.08 (+1.02%)
My Roth IRA – $52,767.01 (+0.38%)
Wife Roth IRA – $28,287.66 (-2.28%)
Current Traditional 401k – $95,646.46 (-0.72%)

Roth/Traditional % = 42.15 % (tax free)

Total Retirement Nest Egg $192,314.21 (-0.50%)

Monthly Contributions $693.10 (401k)
SPY Performance -0.79%
My Monthly Investment Performance -0.86% (-0.07%)
My Monthly Individual Stocks Performance -0.28% (+0.51%)

Holy crap I’ve made a lot of money in the stock market

Holy crap I’ve made a lot of money in the stock market

I’ve started become more aware of how good my investment performance has been of late, but one thing that kind of solidified it for me was not only comparing my performance against the SP500, but then also looking at my investment returns in actual dollar figures. I don’t know why but while I think its cool to have great investment returns and see my nestegg grow by so much each month, I really wasn’t all that blown away by what was happening. Then for some reason I decided to break down my investment returns in actual dollar amounts and for whatever reason kind of blew me away.

This was money that I got and didn’t have to work for (well technically). I mean its the whole point of investing and you are probably thinking “no kidding you idiot – that’s why you invest”, but sort of like a kid who can’t understand why if they take the money they got from their grandparents for their birthday and put in the bank the bank will give them more money for what appears to be no good reason – its almost magical. Well this is sort of how I view how much money I’ve made in the market for just taking some money, not spending it, and throwing it into the stock market.

Here are my $$ returns each year I have been investing.

2006 – $3,603.49
2007 – $2,576.67
2008 – $(35,108.72)
2009 – $22,455.55
2010 – $32,127.00
2011 YTD – $20,737.30

Total money made in stock market in career – $46,391.29

Total money made in last 28 months – $75,319.85

So as you can see of my current $193,285 nestegg 24% of that has come from investment returns or basically money that just fell out of the sky and into my account.

Now granted I sort of cherry picked the dates, but I have been on an absolute tear the last 2+ years have during that time have made over $75,000 in the stock market and in just the first four months of this year I have made over $20,000 or in other words over $5,000 a month.

This to me is what really opened my eyes and was like holy crap – thats a lot of money for really no work and while its not consistent at all and I could just as easily lose $75,000 in next eight months, I’m currently making enough money in my retirement accounts that in theory I could pay my mortgage, take care of my family of five, and still have quite a bit of money left over all for doing next to nothing. The best part about all of this is I am still very young and just getting started. Again I know this is not eye opening revelation for most people and I certainly am not counting on this kind of performance going forward, but it really was eye opening for me to see the power of compounding/great investment returns/ and passive income.

Going forward I think I am actually going to keep track of that value just like I do my total nestegg, because long term thats where the majority of my money is going to come from and like I said for whatever reason it was kind of an eye opener for me.