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Everything posted by Liberty
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I think that as long as you evaluate things based on your best assessment of intrinsic value (IV) and don't listen to the forecasts (which are influenced by fear or greed), you should be able to tell when things are getting so out of whack that you shouldn't sell (f.ex. you evaluate company X to be worth around $100/share and Mr. Market is offering you $50). Maybe things will keep falling, but if that happens I still wouldn't sell.. Only if a recession lasts for 3-4 years would I have to make the choice of selling or going back to work to avoid selling, and those kind of recessions don't happen that often so there's a margin of safety there.
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What Percentage of Your Portfolio is in Fairfax?
Liberty replied to T-bone1's topic in Fairfax Financial
FFH is about 30% of my portfolio. -
The idea with the buffer is that you wouldn't be forced - or at least only very rarely - to sell at bad times. If there's a big recession, you can wait it out. Your buffer would become smaller, but at least you usually won't have to sell are really low market valuations. The thing about taxes was mostly in comparison with the general wisdom of going 50% or more in bonds. If I start with 100% stocks that have been compounding for 15 years and have to sell half of them to go in bonds, the tax bill would be enormous. My alternative of only selling enough to create a buffer would reduce these taxes and allow the money to keep compounding tax-free. But it isn't really advantageous over your approach, unless there's a recession that forces you to sell really low.
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Thanks jb85, very interesting. I think that I now see how your approach could work for you but maybe not for me. You can see my investment approach (at least at this point) here: http://cornerofberkshireandfairfax.ca/forum/index.php?topic=3762.0 I'm more of a late-Buffett/Munger than a Graham kind of guy, so I tend to hold a certain type of stocks for a very long term rather than find undervalued stuff that I sell when it becomes fairly priced and then move on to another stock. If I used that approach, I wouldn't have that much unrealized gains so the tax hit would only be marignally higher if I frequently sold stocks. Or am I overestimating the impact of the difference between our two approaches on wether it would be a good idea to have more "buffer" or keep it minimal? I think I need to think some more about this..
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BRK in India. Interesting.
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Source: http://www.cnbc.com/id/41877271/
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Indeed. I wasn't specific, but I didn't mean that the whole buffer should be in cash. The problem remains that by the time I decide to live off my investments, I might have quite big unrealized gains. If I sell those stocks to buy bond stocks or whatever, I'll pay as much in taxes as if I went straight in cash, which is why I'd like to have a "buffer" only as big as necessary and not bigger so that the rest of the money can keep compounding tax free.
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I second that. I'm a new member, but as a lurker I've read more than half of the archives of this board, and I've gotten a lot of value from a lot of different posters, even some of those that I disliked at first turned out to be knowledgeable and generous in sharing their insights.
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That's an interesting idea, jb85, so let me elaborate on my thinking and you (or someone else) can tell me if I'm off base: The idea of having the buffer is to 1) have liquidity if you need it for emergency or whatever and 2) be able to live off of it if the market does something like it did in 2008 and you don't want to have to sell parts of wonderful businesses at 50% of their IV or whatever. Obviously, if the markets stay quite depressed for more than 3-4 years, you might have to sell at low prices or get a job to get you to the end of the crisis (if you REALLY don't want to sell those businesses at those prices). If I understand your approach correctly, you would be 100% invested and just live off dividends and frequent sales of stock. Is that correct?
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You'll get no argument from me that 10 years is better than 3-4, but for me that would delay things quite a bit, unless I keep my expenses really low (which might happen anyway as I'm very frugal and tend to be happy as long as I have books and an internet connected computer). Maybe there's a way to start with 3-4 years of cushion and progressively build it up to something closer to 10 years if your equities perform well, and still have enough for most recessions in the meantime. It's not the safest thing in the world, but worse case when you retire young is you go back to working a bit until things bounce back.
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part 5 (there are 2 videos on the page, both of them pretty short) http://www.cnbc.com/id/41874506/ Update: Here's part 6 http://www.cnbc.com/id/41875747/ Part 7: http://www.cnbc.com/id/41877271/
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I'm not quite ready to live off my investments (I'm 28), but that's a question that I have been trying to answer too. The conventional wisdom is to move more heavily into bonds when you take the plunge, but I feel like there must be a way that is more tax efficient (so you don't realize too much capital gains and pay tons of taxes) and gives better return prospects over the long-term while retired, even if the ride isn't as smooth. Something like taking out enough money to live 2-4 years comfortably and leave the rest mostly into high-quality equities, so that if there's a big recession, you should have enough cushion to get through it without having to sell at the bottom. f.ex. You have 2 million in stocks. You take out 300k (after tax) because you want to live on 75k/year and leave ±1.5 million to keep compounding tax free in stocks. Sell a bit out when you feel valuations are high so that you have 3-4 years of cushion most of the time, rinse and repeat..? Is this a strategy that makes sense to the people here (even if it isn't the conventional wisdom in the mass financial media)? Or would you try to sell more, pay the taxes, and move heavily into bonds when you decide to retire?
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Part 4 http://www.cnbc.com/id/41873444/
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Thanks for posting this.
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But would they announce it? If Berkshire is their buyer of choice, wouldn't they go directly to Buffett (especially now that everybody knows he has the pile of cash)?
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Any of those sounds likely to you?
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Some speculation in the WSJ on the next elephant: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704615504576172722252292438.html Potential targets from the article:
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Bill talked about it - and other energy challenges - in this TED talk:
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Thanks for the feedback. What I'm really trying to get my hands on is Andrew Kilpatrick's Permanent Value 2010, but amazon is out. Is it a sign that the 2011 edition is coming soon? Does he release one every year in April? I emailed him, but never heard back.
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Could you elaborate on why you think so? Just curious.
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Unless I'm mistaken, BRK actually made even more than 37% because of the inherent leverage of its float. (let me know if I'm missing something here)
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How would you rate that book? Worth reading? Well written? Good story? The man's life definitely seems interesting, but that doesn't mean that a book about it will be, so I'd love your feedback (and if anyone else has read it, I'd love to hear your thoughts)...
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Just curious. Who's the #1 capital allocator in your opinion?
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I haven't followed Bilgari as closely as some here, but to me it looks like he thinks that what made Buffett so great is *what* he did rather than *why* he did it. He won't get there just by getting the right look and mechanics... He would also need the brilliance, patience, and integrity.
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WB honored at the White House with Medal of Freedom
Liberty replied to BargainValueHunter's topic in Berkshire Hathaway
I'm very happy for Buffett! He deserves it.
