Saturday, July 02, 2022

Spending 2021-22

For the last five years I've been putting together reports on our spending over the Australian financial year, which runs from 1 July to 30 June. This makes it easy to do a break down of gross income including taxes that's comparable to many you'll see online, though all our numbers are in Australian Dollars. At the top level we can break down total income (as reported in our tax returns plus superannuation contributions):

The gross income for this year (bottom line) is just an estimate. It looks like falling quite significantly. Tax includes local property tax as well as income tax and tax on superannuation contributions. Investing costs include margin interest. Mortgage interest is included in spending, while mortgage principal payments are considered as saving. Spending also includes the insurance premia paid through our superannuation. Current saving is then what is left over. This is much bigger than saving out of salaries because gross income includes investment returns reported in our tax returns. The latter number depends on capital gains reported for tax purposes, so is fairly arbitrary. Spending also recommenced its increase this year. Graphically, it looks like this:

We break down spending into quite detailed categories. Some of these are then aggregated up into broader categories:


Our biggest spending category, if we don't count tax, is now childcare and education, which has again risen steeply. As mentioned above, the income and tax numbers are all estimates. Commentary on each category follows:

Employer superannuation contributions: These include employer contributions and salary sacrificed contributions but not concessional contributions we paid to the SMSF this year.

Superannuation contributions tax: The 15% tax on concessional superannuation contributions. This year it includes tax on our concessional contributions to the SMSF.

Franking credits: Income reported on our tax returns includes franking credits (tax paid by companies we invest in). We need to deduct this money which we don't receive as cash but is included in gross income. Foreign tax paid is the same story.

Life and disability insurance: I have been trying to bring this under control and the amount paid has fallen as a result.

Health: Includes health insurance and direct spending. Spending peaked with the birth of our second child and continues to decline.

Housing: Includes mortgage interest, maintenance, and body corporate fees (condo association). We haven't spent much on maintenance this year, so spending is down.

Transport: About 2/3 is spending on our car and 1/3 my spending on Uber, e-scooters, buses etc.

Utilities: This includes spending on online subscriptions etc as well as more conventional utilities. I need to cut back on spending on video games as this category continued to climb strongly.

Supermarkets: Includes convenience stores, liquor stores etc as well as supermarkets. Seems crazy that it has almost doubled in five years and become our second biggest spending category.

Restaurants: This was low in 2017-18 because we spent a lot of cash at restaurants. It was low last year because of the pandemic and this year because of a seeming permanent behavior change.

Cash spending: This has collapsed to zero. I mainly use cash to pay Moomin pocket money and he pays me back if we buy stuff online for him. That's how it ended up negative for the year. Moominmama also gets some cash out at supermarkets that is included in that category.

Department stores: All other stores selling goods that aren't supermarkets. No real trend here.

Mail order: This seems to have leveled out in the last three years/

Childcare and education: We are paying for private school for one child, full time daycare for the other, plus music classes, swimming classes...

Travel: This includes flights, hotels etc. It was very high in 2017-18 when we went to Europe and Japan. Last year it was down to zero due to the pandemic and having a small child. This year we went to the nearby coast for a week and this is mostly how much the accommodation, booked at the last minute, cost.

Charity: Not sure why it's down this year.

Other: This is mostly other services. It includes everything from haircuts to professional photography.

This year's increased spending was mainly driven by increased childcare and education costs. I expect these to be about the same next year and then fall for a while in subsequent years - private primary school is cheaper than daycare with the low level of subsidy we get - before beginning to rise again.




Monday, June 06, 2022

New Investment: Regal Partners

Regal Partners just merged with VGI to create a new larger alternative fund manager that will be known by the former name. The company still trades under the VGI.AX ticker but is expected to switch to RPL.AX. It seems undervalued to me at a PE of 6 and so I bought some shares. Especially, as that is based on VGI's inferior track record to date.

Thursday, June 02, 2022

May 2022 Report

World markets stabilized with the MSCI World Index (USD gross) rising by 0.19% and the S&P 500 by 0.18%. On the other hand, the ASX 200 fell 2.43%. All these are total returns including dividends. The Australian Dollar rose from USD 0.7114 to USD 0.7177 increasing Australian Dollar returns and reducing USD returns. Our luck ended this month, and we lost 3.10% in Australian Dollar terms or 2.24% in US Dollar terms. The target portfolio lost 1.05% in Australian Dollar terms and the HFRI hedge fund index is expected to gain 0.21% in US Dollar terms. So, we under-performed all benchmarks.

Here is a report on the performance of investments by asset class (currency neutral returns in terms of gross assets): 

Hedge funds were the worst drag on performance followed by gold. Only futures and real assets had positive returns.

Things that worked well this month:

  • TIAA Real Estate (AUD 4k), Australian Dollar Futures (4k), and URF  (also 4k) were the best performers.

What really didn't work:

  • Tribeca Global Resources (- AUD 25k), gold (-19k), and Pershing Square Holdings (-18k) were the three worst performers...

 The investment performance statistics for the last five years are: 

The first two rows are our unadjusted performance numbers in US and Australian dollar terms. The following four lines compare performance against each of the three indices over the last 60 months. We show the desired asymmetric capture and positive alpha against the ASX200 and the MSCI but not against the hedge fund index. We are performing 1% per annum worse than the average hedge fund levered 1.67 times.

We moved a little bit nearer to our target allocation. Our actual allocation currently looks like this:

 

70% of our portfolio is in what are often considered to be alternative assets: real estate, art, hedge funds, private equity, gold, and futures. A lot of these are listed investments or investments with daily, monthly, or quarterly liquidity, so our portfolio is not as illiquid as you might think. On the other hand, around 47% of net worth (not including our house) are now in retirement accounts. Liquid investments are 57% of net worth and illiquid non-retirement investments are 13% of net worth. Because of leverage, the total is 117%. 

We receive employer contributions to superannuation every two weeks. In addition we made the following investment moves this month. It was a busy month.

  • I bought 1,000 shares of 3i (III.L) after its share price fell in sympathy with US retailers like Target and Costco. I figured that the problems those faced probably weren't that similar to those faced by Action – 3i's European discount retailer. 3i also posted very good results recently.
  • I sold all our shares in URF at 27 cents a share.
  • I made additional investments in APSEC and the Australian Unity Diversified Property Fund.
  • We made a small investment in a start-up via Unpopular Ventures syndicate.
  • There were a lot of small trades involved with forex, tax loss harvesting, moving positions between accounts etc...





Wednesday, May 18, 2022

Invested in Another Startup

Unpopular Ventures offered a syndicated investment in the seed round of a start-up based in Europe. I can't give any details of the investment. Based on their projections, which I think look pretty unrealistic, it would be a fantastic investment but they have been growing very rapidly so far, have a lot of experience, and the valuation doesn't seem too crazy.

The investment is basically in a separate fund, where the general partners get 20% carry. They suggested investing USD 2,500 (minimum was USD 1,000) and I did that, following Meb's advice to invest a little in lots of different start-ups. I'm used to investing 1-2% or as little as 1/4% of the portfolio in an investment and this is more like 1/16%. On the one hand, I don't want to make too many different investments because of information overload. On the other hand, I can't do anything about this investment unless there is an exit or opportunity to invest more, so I don't really need to pay much attention to its performance.

Friday, May 13, 2022

Got Out of URF

After reading the most recent quarterly report I decided to get out of URF. I'm not optimistic that even if the shareholders vote against the sale deal we will eventually realize more for the investment and there is a big risk it is approved and we get less than the current market price. I exited yesterday and today at 27 cents per share for a net loss on the investment of AUD 2,300, which isn't too bad, I guess. Obivously, there are a lot of people thinking differently to me who want to buy in.

Sunday, May 08, 2022

So Far So Good

The graph tracks the performance of our portfolio (Moom, orange) since the March 2020 low versus various benchmarks. All of these are in Australian Dollar terms. So, for example, we multiply the S&P 500 index by the Australian Dollar - USD exchange rate and track that.

 

 

Our portfolio is now a little ahead of the S&P 500 and quite a bit ahead of the MSCI but has had a smoother ride than both. The ASX 200 is ahead of us, but has also been more volatile.The target portfolio (Portfolio, black) also has lower volatility but we have beaten it by fund selection and trading.

No guarantee that this performance continues, but our goal is to achieve market like returns with lower volatility. Also, it isn't as pretty in US Dollar terms. Our strategy is designed to give low volatility in Australian Dollar terms.