In the previous post, we covered about half of the gem that is The Simple Path To Wealth by JL Collins.

Here, we continue from where we left off.

Asset Allocation

“Wealth Accumulation Phase”

The author is a proponent of simplicity.

He recommends sticking to the Total Stock Market Index Fund, preferably at Vanguard (VTSAX), for the entirety of your “Wealth Accumulation Phase”- that is, your working, saving and investing years. The implications of this are:

Though Collins recommends the 100% VTSAX portfolio, he acknowledges that a small fraction of bonds, 10-25% of the portfolio- actually has a slightly improved performance over time, in addition to the decrease in volatility. And hence, it is a perfectly reasonable alternative to the 100% stock allocation.

“Wealth Preservation Phase”

As one is nearing retirement, smoothening out the ride becomes more vital. The time horizon is shorter, no new money is being added and big dips in portfolio value affect the retiree’s income derived from it.

At this stage, adding in some fixed income- both via bonds and liquid cash, is usual. The author shares his own portfolio: 75% Stocks, 20% Bonds and 5% cash. (Ed: Note that the Trinity Study found a 75% equity allocation to be very safe with regard to portfolio longevity and usually ended up with many multiples of the initial portfolio value at the end of retirement).

The exact asset allocation can be tweaked based on individual risk tolerance as well as flexibility. If you need every penny of your 4% Safe Withdrawal Rate, you may have to be more cautious than if you have a more of a cushion.

Transitioning To Bonds

If you’ve been in 100% VTSAX through your “Wealth Accumulation phase”, you may slowly transition to bonds 5-10 years prior to your retirement date.

Or stay in VTSAX all the way up until you’re ready to retire. This might increase your accumulated wealth, at the expense of higher risk. If the market is down when you plan to retire, you may have to keep working till your investments make up some of their losses.

Rebalancing

Anytime you have greater than one asset class, you may choose to rebalance once in a while to maintain the asset allocation at the same percentages you initially allocated.

Vanguard studied the effect of rebalancing and found that any supposed benefit may just be statistical error. Hence, it remains optional.

Rebalancing means selling the higher-performing asset and using those proceeds to buy more of the underperforming asset. This keeps your proposed asset allocation intact. In a regular brokerage account, selling an asset that’s doing well often implies paying capital gains tax- which might negate the benefit of rebalancing. Hence, it is best done in tax advantaged retirement accounts. (Ed: One way to avoid capital gains tax while rebalancing in a taxable account- and what I employ to rebalance- is adding new cash towards the underperforming asset- rather than selling anything).

Target Retirement Funds

One way to avoid having to rebalance is to use Target Retirement Funds (TRF). They automatically rebalance for you. Of course, you pay a bit more in Expense Ratios for this service.

Target Retirement Funds hold both stock and bond mutual funds in a set allocation that progressively becomes more conservative as retirement approaches.

If you desire a more aggressive allocation than the TRF gives you, choose a TRF for a later date than your own retirement date.

TRFs include bonds. And bond interests are subject to ordinary income tax rates. This is a bit of a problem holding them in taxable accounts. (Ed: With today’s low bond interest rates, this is less of a problem). However, plenty of 401(k)’s have TRF as options- where this problem does not exist.

How About International Stocks?

In recommending VTSAX, Collins often gets asked about international exposure. This is his take:

However, if you choose, you can have some international holdings. The options at Vanguard are:

  1. VFWAX: FTSE all-World ex-U.S. Index fund
  2. VTIAX: Total International Stock Index Fund
  3. VTWSX: Total World Stock Index Fund (includes U.S. Stocks)

What’s So Great About Vanguard?

Investing in Retirement Accounts

When you have both tax-advantaged retirement accounts as well as ordinary taxable brokerage account, you need to focus on tax-efficient placement of assets. This implies preferably placing tax inefficient investments into Roth or pre-tax accounts.

But not at the cost of asset allocation. That still trumps all.

When you are closer to retirement, there are several strategies, including Roth Conversion Ladder, to minimize tax burden during the distribution phase (retirement).

Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) are a consideration once you turn 72 years of age (used to be 70.5 yrs). If you have a large pre-tax retirement account, your RMDs will be high. This will push you into a higher tax bracket. Roth conversion of your pre-tax accounts in years prior will help to reduce them enough to let you stay in lower brackets when you need to take RMDs.

Funding Hierarchy

What order should you put money into your accounts? It depends on your earnings, and therefore your tax bracket:

Fund your 401(k)/ other Employer-sponsored Retirement Plan up to the match→ Roth IRA, if in low/no income tax bracket→ Deductible IRA at higher tax bracket → Max out 401(k) → Non-deductible IRA → Taxable Account. (Ed: though the author doesn’t mention it, I would add converting the Non-deductible IRA into a Backdoor Roth IRA).

HSA

The Problem With Financial Advisors

The author pens a very provoking thought next: “As a novice investor, you have two choices: learn how to pick an advisor or how to pick investments”. Which do you think reaps higher dividends for you?

Why Dollar Cost Averaging Is Less Than Ideal

When you have a lump sum to invest, it is ideal to put it all in at once.

Retirement Spending:The 4% Rule

The Logistics of Withdrawals

Social Security

Money for Good: Charitable Giving

Risk is Unavoidable

With this, we come to the end of the book. I hope this summary gave you a glimpse into some of the pearls The Simple Path To Wealth contains.

If you read the book, your time will be well spent. To purchase, consider the affiliate link at the top of the post, at no extra cost to you. And thank you for supporting this site.

Questions or comments? Pen them down here! What is your biggest takeaway from this exceptional book?

One Response

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.