Show Us Your Portfolio | Rick Ferri | A Boglehead Shares His Index-Based Portfolio Approach
Our first few episodes of Show Us Your Portfolio looked at some thoughtful, evidence-based approaches to portfolio construction. But we also noticed after listening to them that many of the concepts we discussed might be too sophisticated for the average investor. Given that simplicity often works best in investing, we wanted to talk to someone about the benefits of using a less complex approach. And we couldn't think of anyone better to talk to about that than Rick Ferri. Rick is the President of the John C. Bogle Center for Financial Literacy, the host of the Bogleheads on Investing Podcast and a long-time advocate for low fee investing.
We discuss how Rick thinks about building his personal portfolio and his Core 4 approach to investing. We also discuss why all of us tend to overcomplicate our portfolios and what we can do to correct that.
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ABOUT THE PODCAST
Excess Returns is an investing podcast hosted by Jack Forehand (@practicalquant) and Justin Carbonneau (@jjcarbonneau), partners at Validea. Justin and Jack discuss a wide range of investing topics including factor investing, value investing, momentum investing, multi-factor investing, trend following, market valuation and more with the goal of helping those who watch and listen become better long term investors.
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Пікірлер: 28
Selling knowledge and not complexity, what a great bit
Thank you for this. We used Rick to review our Portfolio and Philosophy before we retired - do recommend ! Simplicity is best
Thank you guys for putting this up. I always listen to Rick & I'm slowly coming to the last stage of simplifying my financial affairs.
excellent interview. Thank you so much for having Rick on this show!
@ExcessReturns
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching!
Ferri's books, at least the ones I have read, are excellent. I totally recommend them to the beginning investor.
i bookmarked this video as a requisite to rewatch if I'm tempted to make any change to my simple etf portfolio... also.. he looks great for his 70s wow!
@WallaceDunn
3 ай бұрын
He’s not 70. He’s 65ish now.
Great interview! Have a great 2024!
Rick looks quite a bit wiser from what I remember him looking like, If you know what I mean. Great podcast
Fortunately I didn’t invest in a total foreign stock index fund. It has lagged the US for decades.
There are reasons I could see for an investor to have two funds that do the same thing. SPY and VOO are both S&P 500 index funds. The oldest SPY costs 0.095% in fees whereas VOO costs 0.030% in fees. So someone who has held SPY in a taxable account for years might not want to sell his SPY holdings to avoid the capital gains tax but may want to use his dividends to put it in VOO instead. Another example: QQQ and BST have similar holdings QQQ is an NASDAQ 100 ETF with low management fee and low yield 0.66% whereas BST/BSTZ are CEF with similar holdings they have a higher management fee but pays a higher yield 8%/10% either by the occasional use of leverage or the use of options. When the market is bullish, the CEF tends to trade over their NAV, it makes more sense to buy the QQQ, when there is fear in the market, then it makes sense to purchase BST because you can often get a 10% to 20% discount on the holdings. If someone is holding their QQQ/BST or even BSTZ in a tax deferred account, then the funds could be moved from QQQ to the CEF of similar holdings BST/BSTZ with the best discount. When the CEF trades at a surplus to NAV, then it could be sold and QQQ bought with the money. If the account is taxable, then the dividends could purchase the CEF when discounted and QQQ when the CEF trade over NAV. This means the taxable account could have all three.
@ExcessReturns
Жыл бұрын
Very good ideas in this comment, thank you Jacques.
If you don’t need the money, invest for your kids!
Small caps have lagged for twenty years. I do have another twenty years.
What have his returns been over 20 years?
TIPS lose value when interest rates go up. I found out the hard way. True, the interest rate increases but your principal declines like any bond or bond fund when rates go up. That’s hardly protection from higher interest rates.
Ricks misrepresentation of the equity premiums is…. Interesting.
Nice guy, but he’s not the heir apparent for Jack Bogle. Not the same horsepower. Plug his Core 4 portfolio into portfolio visualizer and it underperforms more than half the options
@Toomanydays
3 ай бұрын
🙄
@chasewnelson
27 күн бұрын
Which of the core-4 portfolios are you referring to - total economy? For whichever one you’re referring to, which equity allocation? Then, which of Bogle’s are you comparing it to - just total market, 2-fund (total stock, total bond), 3-fund (total stock, intl stock, total bond), etc., and what equity allocation?
Since you don’t need your portfolio investments as a pensioner, start giving your money to your kids now and take family vacations with them to maximize the experiences.
@mikev4373
2 ай бұрын
I completely agree with this…
Moderator talks too much
@DanFFA
Жыл бұрын
Translation: Make the questions more concise in nature while staying open-ended for the guest. Another avenue you could consider to address this, if it's semi-common feedback, is to provide more personalized responses to the guest at hand, rather than focusing on the same story of your boat as often ( just as an example).
@jamesmorris913
4 ай бұрын
I actually found his interview-style quite enjoyable and refreshing, compared to the "rat-a-tat", boiler-plate, style that many interviewers employ. This was more like two guys having a chat over a couple of beers, at a backyard barbeque. I LIKED it.
This blogger is inarticulate....
Never going to be a part of a company that blows & get a crazy return if you just go with a vanilla boring index etf portfolio.