Showing posts with label value. Show all posts
Showing posts with label value. Show all posts

Sunday, June 5, 2022

May 2022 Update: Net Worth, Pension Valuation, Crypto, ETFs

In May, our month over month net worth declined by .73% in USD and 2.31% in EUR to $122,613 and €114,165 respectively. Our liquid net worth was $89,945/€83,747 after closing on the last day of May.

May was a surprisingly busy month. Some major changes:

  • I've valued my defined benefit pension and added that to the illiquid part of our net worth.
  • I've exited all cryptocurrency positions.
  • I've transferred a sizable amount of money away from individual stocks to my so-called Wiseguy Portfolio.

Valuing a Pension

Defined benefit pensions are still a thing in Germany, and since I've been working here, I've been steadily adding value to mine. My employer has never mentioned my pension to me (which is just baffling), but I can see the withdrawals from my paycheck every month, and the pension plan custodian contacted me shortly after moving here. I knew it existed, but it's only been the past few years that I've paid much mind to it.

The pension works like an annuity:

  • My employer and I both pay 50/50 into the plan.
  • The contributions are payments for promised future income streams.
  • The income I can expect from each contribution is the contribution amount multiplied by an annuity rate, which is - I believe - calculated by combining my expected retirement date, current expected returns, and life expectancy. This exact formula is opaque, but they publish their annuity rates regularly.
  • If I die before my wife, she's entitled to half the annuity stream until her death.
  • The payouts are adjusted by cost of living changes. Theoretically, there's not much risk from inflation.
  • I am required to pay into this plan as long as I'm working within this career.

Every year, the pension provider sends me a letter telling me the previous year's contributions and my expected yearly pension. From that I can divine a value of this income stream.

To do that, I first value the income stream as if I were about to enter retirement. That's done by using a present value calculation, which discounts future cashflows to a start date. My assumptions are a 2% discount rate (debatable), and my life expectancy limits the years of payments (also debatable).

That value then gets discounted to today. For that I'm using the years until my legal retirement age as the number of periods, and I'm using the 10-year Treasury bill as the discount rate.

All this adds up to a value that is much less than the value of the contributions that my employer and I have spent on this plan. Since I can't touch that money no matter what, it's only a minor intellectual annoyance. But the value of this annuity only really makes sense if my wife and I live well beyond our life expectancies.

Since I'm using fluctuating Treasury rates as my discount rate, and since that discounting process has an outsized impact on the value of the pension today, our net worth has been negatively impacted by the upward movement of interest rates. Had I been factoring in the pension all along, its value would have cratered these past few months.

This is purely a "time value of money" phenomenon and doesn't mean a loss of current purchasing power. However, I want the net worth calculation to accurately reflect how assets and cash flows sources are accruing over time, and similar to valuing a home - the value of which is at least somewhat fictive - this pension should be included. Otherwise it means that the money spent on it is basically lost, which is not the case.

Leaving Crypto

Image: the collapse of Terra was a scary event for anyone in the vicinity of crypto. I feel bad for all the people who've lost money in that scheme.

Crypto is in a world of pain right now, and since it's so speculative, I didn't want to stick around. It's as simple as that. I took a small loss, and the cash helped me buy a present for my wife.

Using ETFs

As I've written about extensively, I'm going to be adding most of my savings to a basket of ETFs that I'm calling the Wiseguy Portfolio. I sold off some of my stocks to get started on this. Some positions were closed entirely, and some others were merely trimmed since they were outsized positions that were larger than I could actually handle when the going got rough.

It's easy to think you can handle a bunch of risk, but it's harder to actually live with the consequences of taking on too much risk. It's better to underestimate what you can handle. Additionally, is extra risk necessary for your goals? Do you need to hit a home run with a specific investment or are steady gains enough?

Increasingly, I also feel like the time spent analyzing stocks is mostly a waste of time. I've been asking myself a lot recently whether I'm getting much value from it. Does the worry pay for itself? Could my ears be doing something more productive than listening to earnings calls? In my daily/weekly/monthly stress allotment, should I be using so much on this one activity?

I went into stock picking because Germany and the United States both had punitive tax regimes towards "foreign" funds. Germany's system has relaxed a lot, and the worst thing about using ETFs is that I need a U.S. broker to whom I'm lying about my actual residence, and I have to keep track of all tax information myself and translate it back to euros (thanks MiFID ii!). But if that's the worst thing, it sure beats the terror of wondering whether company x will ever regain some high price that I was anchored to.

Spending and EOC

Since it's summer, and since that means a lovely European summer break, we've spent some money on vacations. It hasn't been too much, but it's definitely a cost.

I've been re-listening to the Millionaire Next Door, and it's been hitting me differently this time around. I always learn something from it, and this time it has to do with Economic Outpatient Care. Am I spending more than I otherwise would because I get monetary gifts (usually small ones) from my family? Do I feel wealthier than I am thanks to subsidies from family? It's a question I have to untangle, and if I come to any conclusions, I'll share them here.

Until next time, stay healthy, and give your friends and family big hugs.

Friday, May 1, 2020

Net Worth Update: April, 2020

Our net worth increased in April to 8.68% in USD and 9.68% in EUR to $56,998 and €52,630 respectively.

After two months of declines, the numbers reversed with one of the best months for stock longs in decades. That was the primary basis for our own results because our income was definitely down. I earned less at the end of March than usual, and my wife's income was also depressed.

Because I own a mix of growth and value stocks, individual stock performance was all over the place. Some got creamed in March and barely recovered during the April rally, while others roared back to all time highs. Already, some companies are announcing cuts to their dividends, which I'm not worried about: I prefer that they cut their dividends than risk the viability of the firm.

We did pretty well with our savings, saving 35.51% of our mixed pre/post tax incomes. Our spending was drastically reduced in April, and I suspect that May will be the same. One area where spending remained high was groceries. Despite using some Payback points (a popular European loyalty program) to get about €100 in grocery store vouchers, we still we on the high end of our budgeted amount. Part of that was my elevated alcohol consumption at the beginning of April (even the cheap stuff adds up), but I'm still a bit surprised. I guess by not eating out ever we're just eating more groceries.

Re-thinking How I Calculate Net Worth

Currently, I add up the follow to come up with net worth:

  • Bank accounts
  • Investment accounts (including tax-advantaged accounts)
  • Credit cards
  • Loans (0 currently)
  • Installment plans for large purchases (0 currently)
  • Cash
  • Loyalty programs with a clear cash value
  • In both USD and EUR

However, we have other stuff that has value and should be added in, such as:

  • Defined benefit pension
  • Social security in the US and Germany
  • Physical assets with some kind of sale value
  • The remaining value of our labor

That's definitely part of our worth! If I took out a life insurance policy on myself, I'd try and value what my income means to my wife, and some kind of discount cash flow model would probably be the way to determine the value of the policy.

Plus the "stuff" we have has value. Just looking around the room where I'm sitting, I could probably get more than a few thousand for the random bits of technology that we have. Now, to be sure, those are depreciating assets - meaning they lose value over time - but they're assets and should be counted as such. And that's before we get to owning large physcial assets such as a house or car.

There are two reasons I haven't included them before:

  1. There's a certain amount of guesswork involved in valuing these things. A DCF (discount cash flow) model has some major assumptions baked in, for one, and guessing how much I could get for a computer or camera or dining room table is tricky. Unlike cars, there's no Kelly Blue Book for most depreciating assets. I'll probably use eBay averages to get a sense of what something's worth, but it's still an assumption.
  2. None of these are liquid assets. Although they might be part of my monetary worth, I can't spend this stuff. I couldn't access my pension or SS, and turning a coach into cash is hardly instantaneous. That said, my IRA accounts in the US also aren't liquid: the tax consequences are so onerous that it would be absurd to turn those into cash and spend them.

Therefore, I'll have to arrive at two numbers: a "total" net worth and a liquid net worth. I think for most people interested in FIRE (Financially Independent Retire Early), the liquid net worth is the more important number.

I think I'll have this ready to go at the end of May, but that's only a guess.

Until then.