investing

  1. 2 April 2023

    My crystal ball is on the fritz (#AI)

    I've always said my crystal ball broke sometime in my late teens or early twenties. But right now, that feels more true than usual. The emergence of AI has me genuinely uncertain about what comes next…

  2. 16 September 2022

    How I money (2022)

    A follow-up to my 2019 “How I money”, showing how my wife and I actually structure our savings, investments, insurance, and spending three years on. Don’t treat this as a guide — it’s illustrative onl…

  3. 15 July 2022

    “Market cap” can be misleading

    In late 2021 Tesla peaked at a $1.23 trillion market cap; Bitcoin at $1.26 trillion. From a narrow view their subsequent drops "destroyed" hundreds of billions in wealth. I think that framing misses s…

  4. 8 July 2022

    Shares and hurricanes

    Hurricane Camille hit in 1969 and narrowly missed New Orleans. When Katrina came in 2005, many who had lived through Camille didn't evacuate — and died. They'd learned the wrong lesson. I worry the qu…

  5. 3 June 2022

    Every asset class has bad years, even bonds

    Bonds have been performing terribly, yet I still call them defensive assets. Every asset class has bad years; regression to the mean is real; bond losses remain smaller than share losses; and your cap…

  6. 17 September 2021

    High guaranteed returns? 🤮

    When it comes to investing, I have a personal rule of thumb: if someone offers a high guaranteed return on an investment, I walk in the other direction. Bonds issued by Governments or reputable instit…

  7. 30 July 2021

    Return OF capital versus return ON capital

    Term deposit returns can look dismal next to inflation — but that might still be the best place for your money. It depends on when you'll use it. If you need the money soon, prioritise return OF capit…

  8. 18 June 2021

    Are you spending or investing? It’s not always black and white

    It's easy to think you're either spending money or saving it. In reality, financial decisions rarely fall cleanly into one bucket. Businesses "spend" on wages and tools that are really investments in…

  9. 4 June 2021

    Volatility is inevitable

    Every time I work with a client, I make a bald statement of fact. If you invest in growth-oriented investments, there WILL be times when the value of those investments drops. Sometimes significantly.…

  10. 28 May 2021

    Active investment is great! Just pick the right domain

    Investing actively is great. By this, I'm talking about putting your time, energy, talents, knowledge, and expertise into how you invest. On the other hand, investing passively is great too. It really…

  11. 12 March 2021

    Shades of right – avoiding black & white thinking and “musturbation” when it comes to your finances

    The idea that there's one specific right way to invest, or manage your financial affairs, is kind of weird. Yes, I give clients specific recommendations — but that's what I'd do in their shoes. In rea…

  12. 22 January 2021

    What is your asset allocation?

    Asset allocation — how your investments are split up — is really, really, really important. Get it right and you can make plenty of other mistakes and still be fine. Get it wrong and you're choosing b…

  13. 18 September 2020

    Investment and contribution

    Finance is important — it wins wars, and it helps allocate capital to where it's most valuable. There are two broad forms of investing: putting money into creating new capability (think Paypal, Tesla,…

  14. 14 August 2020

    Knife skills and investing

    I've watched loads of videos on knife skills. Turns out, advanced knife skills only really matter if you're a professional chopping the same things over and over. For the rest of us, paying attention…

  15. 10 July 2020

    Money and time travel

    What is money? Textbooks call it a medium of exchange and a store of value. Both are true — but money is also a time travel device. Borrowing brings future income into the present. Investing and savin…

  16. 7 May 2020

    April 2020 was the S&P 500’s best month in over 30 years. Huh?! How is that possible?

    April 2020 was the S&P 500's best month in over 30 years — the same month tens of millions of Americans claimed unemployment. How? The sharemarket isn't the economy, and more importantly it's a predic…

  17. 24 April 2020

    What are your shadow assets worth?

    A typical balance sheet misses something important. Most households have "shadow assets" — things that can't really be liquidated but have the potential to be valuable. Speculative investments, antici…

  18. 17 April 2020

    Investing in a business can make you rich. It can also make you poor.

    For most of my clients I recommend widely-diversified, low-fee index funds. They're steady, sensible, and almost no one gets really rich from them. Investing in a business is one of the few things tha…

  19. 31 March 2020

    Even cash can be risky

    It's not fun being asset poor and cash poor. It's rarely fun to be asset rich and cash poor either. If you've got cash on hand right now, you're probably feeling better than most. But there are real r…

  20. 27 March 2020

    Could I have picked this market crash?

    COVID-19 had me questioning a lot of things, including my long-standing devotion to index-based investing. In retrospect it felt like I could have picked the crash — so could I have? Probably not. The…

  21. 7 February 2020

    Pay less attention to historical returns

    "Past performance is no indication of future performance." If you've looked at any investment product with proper disclosure, you'd be familiar with this refrain. It's a statement that's required by l…

  22. 1 November 2019

    The minefield of ethical investing

    Ethical investing sounds simple: invest in line with your values. In practice it's a minefield. What counts as ethical varies wildly from person to person, the labels on funds often don't mean what yo…

  23. 11 October 2019

    The last safe investment is YOU

    I love books that swing for the fences. The Last Safe Investment is one — a personal development book with a strong financial focus. I disagree with chunks of it, and the authors strawman mainstream a…

  24. 16 August 2019

    Investing is personal

    How would you invest if you were 60 with $5 million and spent $100,000 a year? Some of my clients in this position sit heavily in defensive assets. Others sit 80-90% in growth assets. Both are right —…

  25. 19 July 2019

    My (in)efficient market hypothesis

    I don't think markets are efficient. Markets move up and down for all sorts of unpredictable, weird reasons. But they're inefficient in ways we can't predict — and valuing a share means betting on a f…

  26. 14 June 2019

    Stop complicating your financial affairs!

    Kiwi personal finance forums are full of smart people endlessly debating which fund or platform is "best". I get frustrated with those debates, because they're operating in shades of good. Get your as…

  27. 24 May 2019

    The myopia of compound interest

    Compound interest is magical, but there's a myopia around it. The Barefoot Investor and others lean on 10% annual returns to make the "start early or you're sunk" case — at 5% the chart looks very dif…

  28. 22 February 2019

    Warren Buffett’s most important lesson

    Warren Buffett is endlessly quoted about investing, but his most important lesson isn't about money. In a 2001 speech at the University of Georgia he said you measure success in life by how many of th…

  29. 3 December 2018

    “Past performance is no guarantee of future performance” – especially when it comes to property

    "Past performance is no guarantee of future performance" isn't just compliance-speak. It's especially true for property. A client recently asked whether there's long-run data for NZ residential proper…

  30. 16 September 2018

    How to calculate your asset allocation

    The most important thing to get right when investing in financial assets is asset allocation. It refers to how your funds are invested across different classes, such as shares and bonds. If you get th…

  31. 14 September 2018

    Should you repay your mortgage or invest?

    Paying off the mortgage ASAP is usually the smartest move — a guaranteed, tax-free, risk-free return. But I often recommend clients also put some excess income into investments: it builds liquid asset…

  32. 27 August 2018

    On Simplicity becoming cash flow positive

    Simplicity is now cash flow positive, sooner than its founder expected. Even when it wasn't, I was sanguine about recommending it. The underlying assets are highly liquid, and the Public Trust holds t…

  33. 6 August 2018

    The folly of predicting market downturns

    I'll start with a prediction. At some point in the future, the sharemarket will go down. It might go down in a big way. That's as accurate a prediction as anyone can make — timing and scale are out of…

  34. 16 July 2018

    When taking too little risk is risky

    People sometimes tell me they don't want to take any risks with their investments. I have to tell them all investments have risks — even "safe" ones like term deposits and cash under the mattress. For…

  35. 20 May 2018

    The difference between a financial adviser and an investment manager

    If the first thing you ask a financial adviser is where they get their research from, you're probably conflating two very different roles. Advisers work with clients; investment managers sit in front…

  36. 8 March 2018

    Build wealth by being lazy!

    You're lazy sometimes. I know this because you're human. The trick is to use that laziness — or, more charitably, behavioural inertia — as a feature rather than a bug. Set things up once so wealth-bui…

  37. 8 February 2018

    Should I use my KiwiSaver funds to buy a house?

    The NZ news media keeps warning of "frightening" long-term consequences when people use KiwiSaver to buy a first home. This is a false dilemma. Owning a mortgage-free home by retirement is one of the…

  38. 29 December 2017

    Should I contribute more than the “minimum” to KiwiSaver?

    Once you've captured the employer match and the Government contribution, the tangible benefits of putting more into KiwiSaver largely stop. So why does my wife contribute 8% of her income? Behavioural…

  39. 29 October 2017

    How to get better-than-market returns

    For most people, I recommend low-cost, index-based funds — don't try to beat the market, just make sure the market doesn't beat you. But the honest answer is that you *can* get better-than-market retu…

  40. 2 October 2017

    “What investment return can I expect?”

    People often ask me what investment return they can expect. I wish I could give them a number. I can't. Nor can anyone else — historical outcomes for the exact same portfolio vary wildly depending on…

  41. 21 August 2017

    What is your investing risk profile? Answering a risk questionnaire won’t tell you.

    If you've engaged a financial adviser, you'll be familiar with risk tolerance questionnaires — and robo-advisers lean on them even harder. Here's a dirty little secret: they're not nearly as valuable…

  42. 30 July 2017

    Excessive fees – “a tax on smart people who don’t realise their propensity for doing stupid things”

    Excessive investment fees are "a tax on smart people who don't realise their propensity for doing stupid things" — a line from a Freakonomics episode that cuts close to how I think about my job as a f…

  43. 23 May 2017

    Life isn’t a game of Monopoly. There are many different ways to invest money

    My kids pulled out the Monopoly board recently and it struck me how narrow a view of commerce the game offers — buy property, collect rent, hope for capital gains, win by impoverishing everyone else.…

  44. 12 April 2017

    “Hurry up and wait” – why laziness is an investor’s best friend

    In most of life, the best things go to those who hustle. Spend more, get more. Investing is the inversion: the riches go to those who wait, and performance and fees are inversely related. You’re rewar…

  45. 4 April 2017

    “Fees never sleep.” – Warren Buffett’s bet

    For most people, I advocate investing in low-cost passive investments. Warren Buffett is probably a bigger advocate than me. He bet $500,000 that a low-cost S&P 500 index fund would beat a basket of h…

  46. 27 March 2017

    If you fancy yourself as a stock picker, think about this.

    If you pick stocks, you aren't playing in a Little League. You're playing against the best full-time professionals in the world — the equivalent of stepping onto a tennis court with Federer, or a rugb…

  47. 14 July 2016

    Why I’m keeping my Australian superannuation funds in Australia despite living in New Zealand

    After working in Australia for ten years, I have a fair amount of money locked away in an Australian superannuation fund. As a resident of New Zealand, I have the ability to transfer these funds into…

  48. 24 January 2016

    How to lose wealth (or: How do you turn a large fortune into a small fortune?)

    Paul Graham, having sold a startup and become wealthy, started paying attention to how fortunes are actually lost. Not through excessive expenditure — it’s hard to blow a fortune on luxuries without n…

  49. 24 October 2015

    Can’t afford a home in the current property market? You can still get into a good long-term financial position.

    If you can't afford to buy a home in the current property market, don't despair. You can still build wealth and end up in a good long-term financial position. Owning a home is a legitimate goal for ma…

Settings

Text size
Line spacing
Colours

About the read marker

This website records the articles you've viewed in your browser's local storage, so it can show you a small marker next to the ones you've already read.

This data is private and isn't sent anywhere — it stays in your browser, just for your own benefit.

Curious what else is stored? You can see everything this site has saved in your browser.

You can turn these markers off here, or anytime from Settings.