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Principles of Finance: Unit 6, Getting New Tires in 30 Years 2 Views
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Description:
How should you plan for retirement? Like...in terms of maximizing investment returns, not improving your short game.
Transcript
- 00:00
Principles of finance a la shmoop getting new tires in 30 years
- 00:06
yeah retiring you knew we'd go there right all right so you're 42 years old [Man discussing retirement]
- 00:11
and you want to retire in 30 years luckily you decided to watch this video
- 00:15
so you are properly cynical about your alternatives your goal A) maximize
- 00:21
investment returns yeah yeah B) minimize investment risk and volatility C) learn [Goals for retirement appear]
Full Transcript
- 00:28
golf ooh there's a gnarly dance oil-water yeah high returns would
- 00:33
usually imply high risk right well so how do you get high returns without
- 00:37
taking a lot of risk well you don't you have to take some
- 00:41
risk and risk comes in many flavors some of which may be digestible to you and [Man eats spoonful of ice cream]
- 00:46
some of which may not be yeah arguably the biggest delimiter in the
- 00:50
way you think about retirement investing is the lifestyle you want to lead when
- 00:55
you no longer work want to live in a trailer in central Mississippi and just [A trailer in the woods appears]
- 01:00
to you know watch HBO all day alone on the couch well then you don't need a
- 01:04
whole lot in savings to do that want multiple homes world travel your own jet
- 01:09
well then yeah you need bank so let's dive into the flavors of risk here in [Flavors of risk appear]
- 01:13
this video they divide into two pieces there's market risk which is non
- 01:18
diversifiable like you can't get away from it and then there's company risk
- 01:22
which you can diversify away from like by not putting all your eggs in one [Eggs appear in a basket]
- 01:26
basket or one stock all right first market risk well simply put over time
- 01:30
you want to be long equities that is just like Warren Buffett you want a bet
- 01:36
on America and invest in the stock market yeah he said that that you know
- 01:40
betting against capitalism has been a really bad bet for the Russians the
- 01:45
Chinese who are now the dominant capitalists in the world ironically as
- 01:48
they embraced capitalism finally and a whole bunch of smaller fails along the
- 01:53
way, hi Cuba but we're looking at you over decades or even centuries the common
- 01:58
stock market has compounded at around 10% a year give or take depending on the
- 02:03
era that you're inspecting and that means that the well your investment in
- 02:07
it should double about every seven or eight years if you start investing early
- 02:12
well you're time horizon is decades long and even the [Man discussing time horizon]
- 02:15
worst decades in modern history still have had positive returns if you include
- 02:20
dividends in your calculations which you should however yeah always a however
- 02:25
there in investing if you are structurally long equities meaning you
- 02:30
own them you will suffer when the overall market goes down question is
- 02:35
whether you'll care cuz when you're 58 you're not selling anything you just got
- 02:39
to keep working and paying for your kids to go through college oh I know how that
- 02:42
is alright and this happens a lot stock markets go down about one in every four [Stock market drops highlighted on chart]
- 02:47
or five or six years the markets down for the year
- 02:50
tons of whiny uneducated journalists decry the lost year because you're [Journalist crying at his desk]
- 02:55
invested money didn't go up in value that year or two those journalists prey
- 03:00
on nervous Nellie's who did not watch this video hoping they will click on
- 03:05
sensationalist headlines and if god forbid there are two years in a row when [God appears in the clouds of light]
- 03:10
the market doesn't go up oh the same journalists will put on the cover of
- 03:15
their newspaper or blog or whatever that the markets are dead don't invest in the
- 03:20
stock market anymore you can't make money in it they will exhort you to take
- 03:23
your money out of the stock market and put it in your mattress because
- 03:26
investing is dead America is dead capitalism is dead... well the bad
- 03:31
journalists who never took this course will say you should be as socialist just [Journalist discussing socialism]
- 03:36
like me let the government invest your money and handle your retirement because
- 03:40
you know when you think of the best and brightest in America you think of
- 03:45
bureaucrats in Washington playing poker on your behalf
- 03:49
yeah you don't want to do that you don't want to let them invest your money all
- 03:52
right well when the journalists decry that the investing world is dead and [Gravestone of investing world appears]
- 03:56
over and no longer an opportunity this is usually exactly when you want to do
- 04:01
the opposite and get fully long equities get fully invested bet on America
- 04:07
against the journalists when the market goes down your investments will be [Market rocket flying through the air]
- 04:11
dragged down with it yes that's called market risk and well really nothing you
- 04:16
can do about it unless you want to try to be clever and trade around the market
- 04:20
and that is sell your stocks when you think the markets overvalued
- 04:24
hefty taxes on your gains and then be smarter than the market by getting
- 04:28
invested in just the right time so good luck with that the guy who can do that
- 04:33
is called the yutz like you know the golfer who sinks 8, 40 footers in a round [golf balls lands in golfer hole]
- 04:38
and shoots a 61 are you the yutz? we doubt it what we're getting at is that
- 04:43
the market risk lives with you there's only modest math that can be
- 04:47
applied to it to reduce risk in your investment grid and that's why market
- 04:52
risk is often referred to as non diversifiable risk or systemic risk like
- 04:58
there's just risk in the system don't worry about it the risk of the market [Up and down arrows appear]
- 05:01
going down and up it's just part of being in the dance of capitalism and
- 05:06
investing it's a natural part of the system so while there's not much you
- 05:10
could really or should really do about market risk there was a whole lot you
- 05:13
can do about company's specific risk that is the baskets you choose in which
- 05:18
to house your eggs have a lot more to do with your investing for retirement
- 05:21
success than the conditions of the overall market at any given time you can
- 05:26
relatively easily do something about company risk when it comes to [Diversification meaning appears]
- 05:29
diversifying your portfolio here's an idea for starters don't put all your
- 05:34
savings in one company...wow what a concept right yeah again go back to the
- 05:40
yutz are you the magic lottery ticket winner the yutz the one who will pick [Person holding lottery ticket]
- 05:44
that one stock that's the lottery ticket winner of its day all right well Warren
- 05:49
Buffett yeah he's a yutz.. Berkshire Hathaway go look at the stock oh yeah
- 05:52
and then there's Zuck, Mark Zuckerberg a Facebook and Bill Gates
- 05:56
Microsoft and Larry Page, Sergey Brin their yutz's, yeah Google Google... Jeff
- 06:01
Bezos he's the biggest yutz of all Amazon they picked one stock they were [Person picks up amazon stock]
- 06:05
the yutz and it went up well a lot... you think you're one of them well guess
- 06:09
what you're not if you were you wouldn't be watching this stupid video they were
- 06:14
born knowing all of this financial crapola and while they just did it and
- 06:18
they got lucky and I'm pretty sure they would tell you that luck and timing
- 06:22
beats a whole lot of smarts almost any day oh and Phil Knight yeah Nike yeah
- 06:27
he's a yutz too - and think about it when it came to career choices we bet Tiger
- 06:31
Woods never looked into the merits of being an orthodontist versus being a [Tiger Woods working as an orthodontist]
- 06:36
truck dispatcher yeah some people are just born to be a
- 06:39
yutz go with it anyway to optimize risk reduction while maintaining good growth
- 06:43
prospects in your investments titrating individual company investments levels of
- 06:48
exposure to them and other liquidity constraints well all that matters a lot
- 06:52
when it comes to that optimization what did we just say there well it just means
- 06:56
that one pattern to mitigate risk at an individual company level revolves around
- 07:01
choosing your portfolio so that you don't put more than say 10 percent of
- 07:06
your portfolio into any one stock like you're choosing at least 10 different
- 07:10
stocks if you choose 10 only you're pretty well diversified right there and
- 07:15
that way if any one stock blows up well the rest of your portfolio mollify is [One stock explodes]
- 07:19
the disaster if you think about the math if one of your 10 stocks literally went
- 07:24
to zero which would be awfully rare in a public company and the market goes up
- 07:28
about 10 percent a year on average and take a year or so to catch up not that
- 07:32
big a deal not the end of life right you like investing in tech great want to
- 07:36
put all your eggs there well probably not but well maybe here's a radical idea [Man discussing portfolios]
- 07:41
for you courtesy of shmoop at no extra charge if you step back to the outer
- 07:45
atmosphere of Earth at about 50,000 feet and you look down at all of the sub
- 07:50
industries in which you can invest with a 30 year time horizon doesn't tech look
- 07:55
relatively good like could tech broadly compound at maybe 12% a year instead of a
- 08:00
more mixed bag market which included oil and paper and pulp and a bunch of
- 08:05
commodity chemicals which may or may not be valuable in the future well sure [Bottled chemicals in a factory]
- 08:09
well the price you'd pay if you put all your eggs in one techy basket volatility
- 08:14
yeah your bad years would really suck and well think about the other big
- 08:19
industries as we zag with our pro investor hat on instead of zigging like [Man wearing pro investor hat]
- 08:24
everyone else is doing on the diversification is always good bandwagon
- 08:28
all right well think about oil may be good tons of climate change regulations
- 08:32
coming electric cars are now a thing nuclear power outside of the US is the [A nuclear power plant appears]
- 08:37
it thing today don't you think that in 30 years a very large percentage of cars
- 08:42
will be powered by alternative energy and there's uber and lyft as well hmm
- 08:47
and if demand for oil drops even 5% well pricing plummets so it's hard at least [Oil industry price drops 5% on chart]
- 08:53
at the moment to get excited about this industry as a long-term systemicly good
- 08:57
industry with your 30-plus year hat on maybe it's more cyclical tons of cash
- 09:02
dividend yield in the meantime not saying it's a bad industry to invest in
- 09:06
but 30 years maybe, maybe give it some thought it makes struggled hits 10% of [Person struggling with dumb-bells]
- 09:11
your compound numbers after the industry normalizes its growth rates and yeah
- 09:15
there are trades you can make money in it but is that what you want to spend
- 09:18
your time doing trades are for yutz the few blessed ones who can actually
- 09:22
do that for a living not for normal people like you and me [Mark Zuckerberg appears]
- 09:25
alright banks think margin compression profit margins going down the old stodgy
- 09:31
world of banking well slowly dying the price while the profit margins of
- 09:35
institutions are declining one factoid in 1970 Merrill Lynch charged about 50
- 09:41
dollars for a stock trade of about a grand today that same trade cost about
- 09:45
two bucks yeah how do you make that up meantime banks you really want to own [Man discussing banking]
- 09:49
those for 30 years all right moving on consumer discretionary it's called
- 09:53
Amazon people they're the new Walmart and they're oh so much more powerful or
- 09:57
at least destined to be just wait till they sell cars and life insurance and
- 10:01
condos how are their meaningful profits for the businesses which have to sell [Man sitting on a table and man with a chainsaw appears]
- 10:05
through the Amazon pipeline when Amazon can extract an arm a leg and a lung in
- 10:10
return for distribution and oh by the way they deliver ice cream now in these
- 10:14
really cool drone things to your driveway mmm interesting you really want [People working in a store]
- 10:18
to own retail stores yeah all right next category healthcare
- 10:21
regulations well people are getting older and poorer at least by the time
- 10:25
they finally die because we don't smoke anymore yeah
- 10:28
the government's getting deeper in that world with such friction it's hard to [Uncle Sam appears with a heart]
- 10:32
create outsized returns and okay we'll stop the unfiltered and kind of random
- 10:36
musing here but there is in fact a rational argument to have a retirement
- 10:39
portfolio highly exposed to tech or at least to growth companies it's hard to
- 10:44
imagine a world 30 years from now that isn't massively more reliant on [New York city appears]
- 10:48
technology in our daily lives than it is today you know think driverless cars and
- 10:54
airplanes and trucks think home robots factory robots, diagnostics of [Diagnostic robot approaches man in hospital bed]
- 10:59
the most invasive and personal kind, bots that manage our online presence the
- 11:04
music we learn to like and the interpersonal you know relationships we
- 11:08
choose to Kindle or punt can you handle 20% more volatility in
- 11:12
your financial life are you actually gonna look at your portfolio every day
- 11:15
as you go along the way working hard thinking about retirement well probably
- 11:19
not then maybe shooting for the 12% instead
- 11:21
of the 10% worth it if you can ignore the volatility maybe the basic idea is
- 11:25
that as you cut your own path in your financial lives you got to read
- 11:29
everything you can listen everything you can hear and then forget it [How to invest for dummies book appears]
- 11:31
make your own assumptions remember that driving by looking in the rearview
- 11:34
mirror thing yeah that's what people like us write about we can only point to
- 11:38
previous patterns that worked but they all work until they don't so previously
- 11:43
the notion had always been to be evenly exposed across a dozen core industries
- 11:48
in a portfolio that reduced the risk the most but like why would you want to be
- 11:54
at all exposed to the paper and pulp industry if you have a 30 year time
- 11:58
horizon like does anyone think we'll be using more paper in 30 years versus [Man places cynical hat on head]
- 12:02
today yeah let's put on our most cynical hats and asked why this ethos would have
- 12:07
been even marketed to the public mm-hmm well who is usually the catalyst to get
- 12:11
investors like you and me to invest and be all diversified up the yin-yang yeah
- 12:17
well stockbrokers when does a stockbroker usually get fired when [Stockbroker sleeping at his desk]
- 12:21
volatility is high in an investor who didn't take this course gets nervous
- 12:25
they sell their portfolio and then bad things happen while putting 10% of your
- 12:29
portfolio in a dead money industry like paper and pulp is a good way of
- 12:34
"stabilizing the portfolio" it's like holding 10% cash it stabilizes but cash [Man smelling stack of cash]
- 12:39
doesn't go up why is that good if you have a 30 year time horizon just sits
- 12:43
there isn't that like giving up about 1% a year in compounding in performance ie
- 12:48
if the market goes up a 10% a year and then 10%, 10% is 1% and cash is just cash
- 12:54
it just sits there pretty much doing nothing but anchoring way down your [Cash falling to the bottom of the ocean]
- 12:58
portfolio over time you know kind of like congressman yeah, hi, we're looking at you
- 13:04
we love you guys...
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