Everyone always asks how I invest my own money. Some have basically pieced it together from various mentions across the blog, but I finally got around to laying it out in detail. I've named it the Ginger Ale Portfolio.
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Contents
Foreword – A Brief History of My Investing Journey
I hate when recipe websites tell an unnecessary, long-winded story before getting to the recipe, so feel free to skip straight to the portfolio by clicking here.
Starting around age 18, I spun my wheels for nearly a decade stock picking and trading options on TradeKing (which Ally later acquired), usually underperforming the market. I was naive and egotistical enough to think that I could outsmart and out-analyze other traders, at least on average.
Unfortunately, a math degree with a focus in statistics strengthened my faulty conviction for a few more years before I finally converted to index investing. Thinking back on that time and the way I traded (I don't think I can even call it investing) makes me cringe now, so these days I try to do whatever I can to help others – particularly new, young investors – avoid those same pitfalls I succumbed to. I'd be much further ahead now had I just indexed from the start.
Since I had previously only traded U.S. securities and entirely ignored international assets, when I converted to index investing, I went 100% VTI for the total U.S. stock market (U.S. companies do business overseas, right?) and wrote myself an Investment Policy Statement (IPS) to avoid stock picking as a hard rule going forward. I was also still tempted to try to time the market using macroeconomic indicators and by selectively overweighting sectors around this time before realizing that sector bets are just stock picking lite, market timing tends to be more harmful than helpful, and the broad index fund does the self-cleansing and sector rearranging for me.
Then I dug deeper into the Bogleheads philosophy and realized I was still being ignorant by avoiding international stocks (more on this below), so I decided to throw in some VXUS at about 80/20 U.S. to international. I kept reading and researching and digging and concluded that I still had way too much home country bias. The U.S. is only one country out of many around the world! So I switched to 100% VT. Global stock market, market cap weighted. Can't go wrong. And “100% VT” would still be my elevator answer for a young investor just starting out.
Then I got further into the nuances of evidence-based investing as well as the important behavioral aspects of investing and what the research had to say about these things – Fama and French, Markowitz and MPT, efficient markets, leverage, Black and Scholes, Merton Miller, asset allocation, risk tolerance, sequence risk, factors, dividend irrelevance, asset correlations, risk management, etc.
I started realizing that, in short, 100% VT is objectively suboptimal in terms of both expected returns and portfolio risk. Emerging Markets only comprise 11% of the global market. Small cap stocks make up an even smaller fraction. And we should probably avoid small cap growth stocks. And certain funds have superior exposure to Value than others based on their underlying index's selection methodology. And can I stomach the drawdowns that accompany a 100% cap weighted stocks position during a crash? This line of thinking led me to books and lazy portfolios from present-day advisors like William Bernstein, Larry Swedroe, Ray Dalio, Paul Merriman, and Rick Ferri, all of whom influenced my thought process and subsequent portfolio construction.
I also realized there's an observable tradeoff between simplicity and optimization. I'm a tinkerer by nature and tend to default to the latter, probably to a fault (i.e. overfitting and data mining), which is why this blog's name is what it is, for better or for worse. People say indexing is boring, but it doesn't have to be. There's still plenty of learning to be had, and subsequent research-backed improvements to be made in the pursuit of optimization if you choose to tinker.
But don't get me wrong. Simplicity is – and probably should be – a desirable characteristic of one's portfolio for most people. Whatever allows you to sleep at night, stay the course, and not tinker during market downturns is the best strategy for you. It can take some time (and probably a market crash) to figure out what that strategy is. The portfolio below will seem “simple” to a stock picker with 100 holdings; it may seem complex to the indexer who is 100% VT.
So below I've pieced together what I think is optimal for me, based on my understanding of what the research thus far has to say about expected returns, volatility, diversification, risk, cognitive biases, and reliability of outcome, all while realizing I may get it wrong and that I may want to change it in the future.
About the Ginger Ale Portfolio
Update July 2021: Got way too many emails from people using this portfolio and then asking me about TIPS and Emerging Markets gov't bonds (what they are, what they're for, etc.). They clearly didn't understand what they were buying. That's not good. So I removed those pieces.
I'm bad at thinking of clever names for things. When writing posts, I usually sip on a can of ginger ale, so the Ginger Ale Portfolio seemed like an appropriate name.
Aside from “lottery ticket” fun money in the Hedgefundie Adventure and my taxable account in NTSX, this portfolio is basically how my “safe” money is invested. Leverage, while perhaps useful on paper for any investor, is probably not appropriate for most investors purely because of the emotional and psychological fortitude its usage requires during market turmoil.
Thus, for a one-size-fits-most portfolio, I can't in good conscience just recommend a leveraged fund. Moreover, whatever I put below will likely just be blindly copied by many novice investors who won't even bother reading or understanding the details, so I have to take that fact into consideration and be at least somewhat responsible.
This portfolio is 90/10 stocks to fixed income using a long duration bond fund to, again, accommodate sort of a one-size-fits-most asset allocation for multiple time horizons and risk tolerances. I'd call it medium risk simply because it has some allocation to fixed income. It is a lazy portfolio designed to match or beat the market return with lower volatility and risk.
It heavily tilts toward small cap value to diversify the portfolio's factor exposure. It is also diversified across geographies and asset classes. Specifically, this portfolio is roughly 1:1 large caps to small caps and for U.S. investors, it has a slight home country bias of 5:4 U.S. to international, nearly matching global market weights.
In selecting specific funds, I looked for sufficient liquidity, appreciable factor loading (where the expected premium would outweigh the fee), low tracking error, and low fees.
Here's what it looks like:
Ginger Ale Portfolio Allocations:
- 25% U.S. Large Cap Stocks
- 25% U.S. Small Cap Value
- 10% Developed Markets (ex-US)
- 10% Developed Markets (ex-US) Small Cap Value
- 10% Emerging Markets
- 10% Emerging Markets Small Cap Value
- 10% U.S. Treasury STRIPS
Below I'll explain the reasoning behind each asset in detail.
U.S. Large Cap Stocks – 25%
Most lazy portfolios use U.S. stocks – and specifically large-cap U.S. stocks – as a “base.” This one is no different, but they're still only at 25%. You'll see why later.
Not much to explain here. The U.S. stock market comprises a little over half of the global stock market and has outperformed foreign stocks historically. I don't feel comfortable going completely small caps for the equities side so we're keeping large caps here to diversify across cap sizes, as large stocks beat small stocks during certain periods, while small stocks beat large stocks over other periods.
This segment captures household names like Amazon, Apple, Google, Johnson & Johnson, Microsoft, etc. Specifically, we're using the S&P 500 Index – considered a sufficient barometer for “the market” – via Vanguard's VOO.
Why not use VTI to capture the entire U.S. stock market including some small- and mid-caps? I'll answer that in the next section.
U.S. Small Cap Value – 25%
I don't use VTI (total U.S. stock market) because I want to avoid those pesky small-cap growth stocks which don't tend to pay a risk premium. Even mid-cap growth hasn't beaten large cap blend on a risk-adjusted basis. Using VTI would also dilute my target large cap exposure.
Specifically, small cap growth stocks are the worst-performing segment of the market and are considered a “black hole” in investing. The Size factor premium – small stocks beat large stocks – seems to only apply in small cap value. As Cliff Asness from AQR says, “Size matters, if you control your junk.” Basically, if you want to bet on small caps, the evidence suggests you want to do so in small cap value, preferably while also screening for profitability.
By “risk premium,” I'm referring to the independent sources of risk identified by Fama and French (and others) that we colloquially call “factors.” Examples include Beta, Size, Value, Profitability, Investment, and Momentum. I delved into those details in a separate post that I won't repeat here, but I'll be referring to these factors and their benefits quite a few times below. Though it may sound like magic, the evidence suggests that overweighting these independent risk factors both increases expected returns over the long term and decreases portfolio risk by diversifying the specific sources of that risk, as the factors are lowly correlated to each other and thus show up at different times. The reason I don't want to go 100% factors like Larry Swedroe is because A) I don't have the stomach and conviction he has, and B) there's always the possibility of being wrong.
I know the exclusion of mid-caps entirely seems bizarre at first glance too. Factor premia tend to get larger and more statistically significant as you go smaller. That is, ideally you want to factor tilt within the small cap universe. That's exactly what we're doing here by basically taking a barbell approach in U.S. equities: using large caps and small caps to put the risk targeting exactly where we want it while still diversifying across cap sizes and equity styles. Essentially, we're letting large caps be our Growth exposure in the U.S. and consciously avoiding small- and mid-cap growth stocks.
In short, small cap value stocks have smoked every other segment of the market historically thanks to the Size and Value factor premiums. “Value” refers to underpriced stocks relative to their book value. Basically, cheaper, sometimes crappier, downtrodden stocks have greater expected returns. Small cap value stocks are smaller and more value-y than mid-cap value stocks. Thus, no mid-caps. (As an aside, Alpha Architect basically takes this idea to the extreme – finding the absolute smallest, cheapest stocks and concentrating in only 50 of them; talk about a wild ride.)
I don't want it to seem like I think this is some profound, contrarian approach. Using VTI (total stock market) instead of VOO (S&P 500) would be perfectly fine, and at only 25% of the portfolio, the difference is admittedly probably negligible. The simple point is that I've already decided on a specific small cap allocation, and I'm choosing to get that exposure through a dedicated small cap value fund rather than through VTI. Similarly, I've also already decided on a specific “pure,” undiluted large cap allocation, and I'm choosing to get that exposure through the S&P 500 Index.
Previously, the S&P Small Cap 600 Value index (VIOV, SLYV, IJS) was basically the gold standard for the U.S. small cap value segment. AVUV, the new kid on the block from Avantis, has provided some extremely impressive exposure – superior to that of those funds – in its relatively short lifespan thus far, so much so that it recently replaced VIOV in my own portfolio. I went into detail about this in a separate “small value showdown” post here. In a nutshell, it has been able to capture smaller, cheaper stocks than its competitors, with convenient exposure to the Profitability factor, all while considering Momentum in its trades, and we would expect the premium to more than make up for its slightly higher fee.
Including small caps also took the famous 4% Rule up to 4.5% historically.
Developed Markets – 10%
Developed Markets refer to developed countries outside the U.S. – Australia, Canada, Germany, the UK, France, Japan, etc.
At its global weight, the U.S. only comprises about half of the global stock market. Most U.S. investors severely overweight U.S. stocks (called home country bias) and have an irrational fear of international stocks.
If you're reading this, chances are you're in the U.S. As I just pointed out, odds are favorable that you also overweight – or only have exposure to – U.S. stocks in your portfolio. The U.S. is one single country out of many in the world. By solely investing in one country's stocks, the portfolio becomes dangerously exposed to the potential detrimental impact of that country's political and economic risks. If you are employed in the U.S., it's likely that your human capital is highly correlated with the latter. Holding stocks globally diversifies these risks and thus mitigates their potential impact.
Moreover, no single country consistently outperforms all the others in the world. If one did, that outperformance would also lead to relative overvaluation and a subsequent reversal. During the period 1970 to 2008, an equity portfolio of 80% U.S. stocks and 20% international stocks had higher general and risk-adjusted returns than a 100% U.S. stock portfolio. Specifically, international stocks outperformed the U.S. in the years 1986-1988, 1993, 1999, 2002-2007, 2012, and 2017. For the famous “lost decade” of 2000-2009 when U.S. stocks were down 10% for the period, international Developed Markets were up 13%.
For U.S. investors, holding international stocks is also a way to diversify currency risk and to hedge against a weakening U.S. dollar, which has been gradually declining for decades. International stocks tend to outperform U.S. stocks during periods when the value of the U.S. dollar declines sharply, and U.S. stocks tend to outperform international stocks during periods when the value of the U.S. dollar rises. Just like with the stock market, it is impossible to predict which way a particular currency will move next.
Moreover, U.S. stocks' outperformance on average over the past half-century or so has simply been due to increasing price multiples, not an improvement in business fundamentals. That is, U.S. companies did not generate more profit than international companies; their stocks just got more expensive. And remember what we know about expensiveness: cheap stocks have greater expected returns and expensive stocks have lower expected returns.
Dalio and Bridgewater maintain that global diversification in equities is going to become increasingly important given the geopolitical climate, trade and capital dynamics, and differences in monetary policy. They suggest that it is now even less prudent to assume a preconceived bet that any single country will be the clear winner in terms of stock market returns.
In short, geographic diversification in equities has huge potential upside and little downside for investors.
I went into the merits of international diversification in even more detail in a separate post here if you're interested.
Vanguard offers a low-cost fund called the Vanguard FTSE Developed Markets ETF. Its ticker is VEA.
Developed Markets (ex-US) Small Cap Value – 10%
We can also specifically target small cap value in ex-US Developed Markets stocks. It costs a bit more to do so, and some who tilt small cap value in the U.S. don't feel the need to do so in foreign stocks, but I think it's a prudent move considering the factor premia – in this case Size and Value – have shown up at different time periods across different geographies throughout history.
Remember we also get a diversification benefit here in doing so; it's not just for the greater expected returns. The earnings of large international corporations are more closely tied to global market forces, whereas smaller companies are more affected by local, idiosyncratic economic conditions. This means they are perfectly correlated with neither their large-cap counterparts nor with U.S. stocks.
Until just about a year ago, an expensive dividend fund from WisdomTree (DLS) was arguably the best way to access this segment of the global market. Now, Avantis has launched a fund available to retail investors that specifically targets international small cap value – AVDV. It is the only fund available to the public that specifically targets Size and Value (and conveniently, Profitability) in ex-US stocks. AVDV is also roughly half the cost of the former option DLS.
Emerging Markets – 10%
Emerging Markets refer to developing countries – China, Taiwan, India, Brazil, Thailand, etc.
Investors sometimes shy away from these countries due to their unfamiliarity and greater risk. I would argue that makes them more attractive. Stocks in these countries have paid a significant risk premium historically, compensating investors for taking on their greater risk.
Arguably more importantly, Emerging Markets tend to have a reliably lower correlation to U.S. stocks compared to Developed Markets, and thus are a superior diversifier. Of course, we would expect this, as these developing countries have unique risks – regulatory, liquidity, political, financial transparency, currency, etc. – that do not affect developed countries, or at least not the same extent. I delved into this in a little more detail here. For the previously mentioned “lost decade” of 2000-2009 when the S&P 500 delivered a negative 10% return, Emerging Markets stocks were up 155%.
Emerging Markets only comprise about 11% of the global stock market. This is why I don't use the popular VXUS (total international stock market) – because its ratio of Developed Markets to Emerging Markets is about 3:1. Here we're using a 1:1 ratio of Developed to Emerging Markets.
Vanguard's Emerging Markets ETF is VWO.
Emerging Markets Small Cap Value – 10%
Just like we just did with Developed Markets above, we can focus in on small cap value stocks within Emerging Markets as well.
Here we’re using a small cap dividend fund from WisdomTree as a proxy for Value within small caps in Emerging Markets. Don’t let this sound discouraging. The fund also screens for liquidity and strong financials and has appreciable loadings across Size, Value, and Profitability. Factor investors are wise to this fact, as this fund boasts nearly $3 billion in assets.
The fund is DGS, the WisdomTree Emerging Markets SmallCap Dividend Fund.
Factor investors like myself thought AVES, Avantis’s newest offering for more aggressive factor tilts in Emerging Markets, might dethrone DGS when it launched in late 2021. While it’s certainly no slouch and would still be a fine choice, I still prefer the looks of DGS, even with its higher fee. I compared these specifically here.
U.S. Treasury STRIPS – 10%
No well-diversified portfolio is complete without bonds, even at low, zero, or negative interest rates.
By diversifying across uncorrelated assets, we mean holding different assets that will perform well at different times. For example, when stocks zig, bonds tend to zag. Those 2 assets are uncorrelated. Holding both provides a smoother ride, reducing portfolio volatility (variability of return) and risk. We used the same concept above in relation to risk factor exposure. Now we're talking about entirely separate asset classes, but we're also taking advantage of a risk premium in fixed income: term. I delved into the concept of asset diversification in detail in a separate post here.
STRIPS (Separate Trading of Registered Interest and Principal of Securities) are basically just bonds where the coupon payment is rolled into the price, so they are zero-coupon bonds. Here we're using a fund that is essentially just very long duration treasury bonds (25 years).
I can see the waves of comments coming in, which I see all the time on forums and Reddit threads:
- “Bonds are useless at low yields!”
- “Bonds are for old people!”
- “Long bonds are too volatile and too susceptible to interest rate risk!”
- “Corporate bonds pay more!”
- “Interest rates can only go up from here! Bonds will be toast!”
- “Bonds return less than stocks!”
So why long term treasuries? Here are my brief rebuttals to the above.
- Bond duration should be roughly matched to one's investing horizon, over which time a bond should return its par value plus interest. Betting on “safer,” shorter-term bonds with a duration shorter than your investing horizon could be described as market timing, which we know can't be done profitably on a consistent basis. This is also a potentially costlier bet, as yields tend to increase as we extend bond duration, and long bonds better counteract stock crashes. More on that in a second.
- Moreover, in regards to bond duration, we know market timing doesn't work with stocks, so why would we think it works with bonds and interest rates? Bonds have returns and interest payments. A bond's duration is the point at which price risk and reinvestment risk – the components of what we refer to as a bond's interest rate risk – are balanced. In this sense, though it may seem counterintuitive, matching bond duration to the investing horizon reduces interest rate risk and inflation risk for the investor. An increase in interest rates and subsequent drop in a bond's price is price risk. A decrease in interest rates means future coupons are reinvested at the lower rate; this is reinvestment risk. A bond's duration is an estimate of the precise point at which these two risks balance each other out to zero. If you have a long investing horizon and a short bond duration, you have more reinvestment risk and less price risk. If you have a short investing horizon and a long bond duration, you have less reinvestment risk and more price risk. Purposefully using one of these mismatches in expectation of specific interest rate behavior is intrinsically betting that your prediction of the future is better than the market's, which should strike you as unlikely.
- It is fundamentally incorrect to say that bonds must necessarily lose money in a rising rate environment. Bonds only suffer from rising interest rates when those rates are rising faster than expected. Bonds handle low and slow rate increases just fine; look at the period of rising interest rates between 1940 and about 1975, where bonds kept rolling at their par and paid that sweet, steady coupon.
- Bond pricing does not happen in a vacuum. Here are some more examples of periods of rising interest rates where long bonds delivered a positive return:
- From 1992-2000, interest rates rose by about 3% and long treasury bonds returned about 9% annualized for the period.
- From 2003-2007, interest rates rose by about 4% and long treasury bonds returned about 5% annualized for the period.
- From 2015-2019, interest rates rose by about 2% and long treasury bonds returned about 5% annualized for the period.
- New bonds bought by a bond index fund in a rising rate environment will be bought at the higher rate, while old ones at the previous lower rate are sold off. You're not stuck with the same yield for your entire investing horizon. The reinvested higher yield makes up for any initial drop in price over the duration of the bond.
- We know that treasury bonds are an objectively superior diversifier alongside stocks compared to corporate bonds. This is also why I don't use the popular total bond market fund BND.
- At such a low allocation of 10%, we need and want the greater volatility of long-term bonds so that they can more effectively counteract the downward movement of stocks, which are riskier and more volatile than bonds. We're using them to reduce the portfolio's volatility and risk. More volatile assets make better diversifiers. The vast majority of the portfolio's risk is still being contributed by stocks. Using long bonds also provides some exposure to the term fixed income risk factor.
- We're not talking about bonds held in isolation, which would probably be a bad investment right now. We're talking about them in the context of a diversified portfolio alongside stocks, for which they are still the usual flight-to-safety asset during stock downturns. It has been noted that this uncorrelation of treasury bonds and stocks is even amplified during times of market turmoil, which researchers referred to as crisis alpha.
- Similarly, short-term decreases in bond prices do not mean the bonds are not still doing their job of buffering stock downturns.
- Bonds still offer the lowest correlation to stocks of any asset, meaning they're still the best diversifier to hold alongside stocks. Even if rising rates mean bonds are a comparatively worse diversifier (for stocks) in terms of expected returns during that period does not mean they are not still the best diversifier to use.
- Historically, when treasury bonds moved in the same direction as stocks, it was usually up.
- Long bonds have beaten stocks over the last 20 years. We also know there have been plenty of periods where the market risk factor premium was negative, i.e. 1-month T Bills beat the stock market – the 15 years from 1929 to 1943, the 17 years from 1966-82, and the 13 years from 2000-12. Largely irrelevant, but just some fun stats for people who for some reason think stocks always outperform bonds. Also note how I've shown below that a 90/10 portfolio using STRIPS outperformed a 100% stocks portfolio on both a general and risk-adjusted basis for the period 1987-2021.
- Interest rates are likely to stay low for a while. Also, there’s no reason to expect interest rates to rise just because they are low. People have been claiming “rates can only go up” for the past 20 years or so and they haven't. They have gradually declined for the last 700 years without reversion to the mean. Negative rates aren't out of the question, and we're seeing them used in some foreign countries.
- Bond convexity means their asymmetric risk/return profile favors the upside.
- I acknowledge that post-Volcker monetary policy, resulting in falling interest rates, has driven the particularly stellar returns of the raging bond bull market since 1982, but I also think the Fed and U.S. monetary policy are fundamentally different since the Volcker era, likely allowing us to altogether avoid runaway inflation like the late 1970’s going forward. Stocks are also probably the best inflation “hedge” over the long term.
Here's that backtest mentioned above showing a 90/10 portfolio using STRIPS beating a 100% stocks portfolio for 1987-2021:
David Swensen summed it up nicely in his book Unconventional Success:
“The purity of noncallable, long-term, default-free treasury bonds provides the most powerful diversification to investor portfolios.”
Ok, bonds rant over.
For this piece, I'm using Vanguard's EDV, the Vanguard Extended Duration Treasury ETF.
Ginger Ale Portfolio – Historical Performance
Some of these funds are pretty new, so I had to use comparable mutual funds from Dimensional in some cases to extend this backtest and give us a rough idea of how this thing would have performed historically. The furthest I could get was 1998, going through June 2021:
Here are the annual returns:
Here are the rolling returns:
Keep in mind the Size and Value premia and international stocks suffered for the decade 2010-2020, otherwise I think the differences in performance metrics would have been even greater.
Ginger Ale Portfolio Pie for M1 Finance
So putting the funds together, the resulting Ginger Ale Portfolio looks like this:
- VOO – 25%
- AVUV – 25%
- VEA – 10%
- AVDV – 10%
- VWO – 10%
- DGS – 10%
- EDV – 10%
You can add this pie to your portfolio on M1 Finance by clicking this link and then clicking “Save to my account.”
Canadians can find the above ETFs on Questrade or Interactive Brokers. Investors outside North America can use Interactive Brokers.
Being More Aggressive with 100% Stocks
I'd like to think I made a pretty good case for why you shouldn't fear bonds, but if you're young and/or you have a very high risk tolerance, you might still be itching to ditch the bonds and go 100% stocks. Here's a more aggressive version, basically giving an extra 5% each to VOO and AVUV for more of a U.S. tilt:
- VOO – 30%
- AVUV – 30%
- VEA – 10%
- AVDV – 10%
- VWO – 10%
- DGS – 10%
Here's the pie link for that one.
Just note that historically this would have resulted in worse performance than the original 90/10:
Incorporating NTSX, NTSI, NTSE
A lot of people know I'm a huge fan of WisdomTrees line of “Efficient Core” funds like NTSX and have explicitly asked about replacing the stocks index funds from the aggressive version with these new 90/60 funds from WisdomTree, so I've added this section to briefly address that. If this idea sounds foreign to you, maybe go read this post that explains how NTSX works first and then come back here.
Making those substitutions of the WisdomTree Efficient Core Funds (NTSX, NTSI, and NTSE) for the broad index funds for the S&P 500 (VOO), ex-US Developed Markets (VEA), and Emerging Markets (VWO) is absolutely fine, but I've tried to explain to a few people in the comments that this doesn't materially change the exposure too much from the original Ginger Ale Portfolio simply because EDV packs quite a volatile punch since it's extended duration treasury bonds. That was the whole point of its inclusion.
In other words, going 6x on intermediate treasury bonds (what the WisdomTree funds do) is nearly the same exposure as what EDV provides.
This is illustrated in the backtest below that shows the original Ginger Ale Portfolio, the aggressive 100% stocks version, and a version substituting in NTSX/NTSI/NTSE that delivers effective exposure of 95/35:
Making those substitutions, that 95/30 portfolio looks like this:
NTSX – 30%
AVUV – 30%
NTSI – 10%
AVDV – 10%
NTSE – 10%
DGS – 10%
Also keep in mind this one has a much greater expense ratio. You can get this pie here.
Adjusting This Portfolio For Retirement
I've also had a lot of people ask me how I plan to adjust this portfolio as I near and enter retirement. The answer is pretty simple and straightforward. I don't care about dividends or using them as income, so I plan to simply decrease stocks, increase bonds, decrease bond duration, add some TIPS, and sell shares as needed. Factor tilts and geographical diversification would remain intact.
For example, a 40/60 version using intermediate nominal and real bonds might look something like this:
- 10% VOO – U.S. Large Caps
- 10% AVUV – U.S. Small Cap Value
- 5% VEA – Developed Markets (ex-US)
- 5% AVDV – Developed Markets (ex-US) Small Cap Value
- 5% VWO – Emerging Markets
- 5% DGS – Emerging Markets Small Cap Value
- 30% VGIT – Intermediate U.S. Treasury Bonds
- 30% SCHP – Intermediate TIPS
That pie is here if you want it for some reason.
Are you nearing or in retirement? Use my link here to get a free holistic financial plan and to take advantage of 25% exclusive savings on financial planning and wealth management services from fiduciary advisors at Retirable to manage your savings, spend smarter, and navigate key decisions.
Questions, comments, concerns, criticisms? Let me know in the comments.
Disclosure: I am long VOO, AVUV, VEA, VWO, AVDV, DGS, and EDV.
Interested in more Lazy Portfolios? See the full list here.
Disclaimer: While I love diving into investing-related data and playing around with backtests, this is not financial advice, investing advice, or tax advice. The information on this website is for informational, educational, and entertainment purposes only. Investment products discussed (ETFs, mutual funds, etc.) are for illustrative purposes only. It is not a research report. It is not a recommendation to buy, sell, or otherwise transact in any of the products mentioned. I always attempt to ensure the accuracy of information presented but that accuracy cannot be guaranteed. Do your own due diligence. I mention M1 Finance a lot around here. M1 does not provide investment advice, and this is not an offer or solicitation of an offer, or advice to buy or sell any security, and you are encouraged to consult your personal investment, legal, and tax advisors. Hypothetical examples used, such as historical backtests, do not reflect any specific investments, are for illustrative purposes only, and should not be considered an offer to buy or sell any products. All investing involves risk, including the risk of losing the money you invest. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Opinions are my own and do not represent those of other parties mentioned. Read my lengthier disclaimer here.
Are you nearing or in retirement? Use my link here to get a free holistic financial plan and to take advantage of 25% exclusive savings on financial planning and wealth management services from fiduciary advisors at Retirable to manage your savings, spend smarter, and navigate key decisions.
Sean Coster says
Hello, I am a bit stumped looking at the historical back test compared to the S&P500. When looking at the US small value + international+ emerging markets they all perform worse than the S&P500 in terms of cumulative% gained, yet your portfolio achieves greater performance. Is this due to the earlier larger drawdown of the S&P from 2000-2003, thus compounding had a greater effect on your portfolio from the get go. Or is it from multiple instances of lower drawdown throughout the entire backtest? Would this not be a cherrypicked data set then?
Thanks,
John Williamson says
Not sure what time periods or funds you’re using on your end, Sean.
Tate says
Sean, I wasn’t able to replicate back test figures either.
John, great article! very informative, and interesting. Would love for you to share the DFA mutual funds you used for historical data. I understand they will be a little different from the modern funds you chose to implement in your article, but would be really helpful for people like me who like to play around with tools like portfoliovisualizer.com and replicate!
DFA only has a handful of mutual funds that go back as far as 1998 so I replaced the aforementioned funds that were intuitive substitutes from those, and tried most of the variations (portfolios II & III).
U.S. Large Cap SPY (figured an older S&P 500 fund would be accurate-ish)
U.S. Small Cap Value DFSVX
Developed Markets DFALX
DM Small Cap Value DISVX
Emerging Markets DFEMX
EM Small Cap Value DEMSX
Long Term Treasury25 VUSTX (same reasoning, as I didn’t see a DFA long term treasury bond that went back to 1998)
Obviously these aren’t 1:1 because the figures are so much different than in your article, which is why it would be beneficial to see them! Not a problem if you can’t share them for any reason, just thought I would ask. Thanks!
John Williamson says
I think you hit ’em.
Paul GIlreath says
John,
Thank you so much for your work on this site. Wow… incredibly comprehensive. For your Ginger Ale portfolio, I couldn’t figure out what you used in Portfolio Analyzer to get those results, since so many of your funds are newer. Would you mind sharing what you used? Thanks again for the incredible work.
Paul
John Williamson says
Thanks, Paul! DFA’s mutual funds.
Nate says
I like this portfolio and the logic behind it.
I am curious what people think of substituting a Russell 1000 fund or etf like VONE in place of VOO for these reasons:
–VONE still has 0 exposure to small cap growth and almost no small cap, so you can still save that segment for the AVUV.
–Less overexposure to FAANG, and lower concentration in the top 10%.
–Though both are passive indexes, VOO tracks the S&P which itself has more of an active managed element than the Russel 1000..
–With a little bit of leverage to the VOO/EDV by substituting a little UPRO/TMF, at least to me, I’d rather my non leveraged large US stock segment not be limited to just the S&P picked stocks.
All that said, I realize this is not a substantial change as VOO and VONE will likely continue to have a lot of overlap. I just like the idea of VTI, other than the small cap growth, based off your reasoning, So, VONE seems closer to a VTI- ex-smallcap than VOO. Maybe there is an even better index to track for a total US market minus small cap?
John Williamson says
Sounds good to me. Thanks for the thoughtful comment, Nate. VONE is also a great tax loss harvesting partner for VOO.
Aleksei says
Hi John, thanks for this article.
Could you please elaborate on how did you choose allocation percentages. I’m particularly interested why you decided to allocate 20% in developed markets and 20% in emerging markets compared to Ben Felix’s portfolio with 32% developed and 12% emerging markets.
John Williamson says
Already discussed that above. Global market weight is roughly 3:1. I want 1:1. EM have a reliably lower correlation to the US compared to DM.
nancy arulraj says
can you tell me how a Canadian portfolio would look like please?
John Williamson says
Sorry, I’m not familiar with which products are or are not available in Canada.
Jon says
So I’ve been doing a lot of thinking. I’ve viewed this page a hundred times but never felt compelled to use this portfolio for a number of reasons. Mostly because I didn’t understand it.
Then I found Paul Merriman’s Ultimate Buy and Hold portfolio and read all his research about why he chose what he did. It sounded logically sound to me. However, the more I look at it in my own portfolio, I start to question aspects of it. He splits US/Int’l 50/50 which I don’t like. He has a 4:1 split on Developed/Emerging which is too low. Small cap growth (through blend) isn’t worth investing in either it seems.
Then I saw your Vigorous Value portfolio which attempted to correct some of the parts I was having doubts about. There are some aspects of that one that I’m hesitant on as well such as a low large cap blend allocation in regards to small cap blend. I still want to invest in the Googles and the Microsofts of the world.
So I have circled back to this portfolio and it finally makes sense to me. It has allocations that I like and fits moreso what I have been looking for. I will likely be adopting your portfolio for my own use in the near future.
Sometimes you just have to do your own research before coming to a conclusion, which is something all investors should be doing. Thanks for giving your insights in everything you do here.
John Williamson says
Thanks for the comment, Jon!
Charles says
Nice article. Many of us are nearing or at retirement. Could you look at or suggest good portfolios appropriate for retirees who, by definition, are going to be looking to reduce risk and volatility.
John Williamson says
Thanks, Charles. Adjusting for retirement largely comes down to shifting asset allocation into more bonds and adding TIPS. I mentioned one model specifically in this post and another on my recent post on tail risk. Dalio’s All Weather Portfolio may be another good example.
Aakash says
Hello! Thanks a lot for all of the information you provide on your site!
May I suggest adding a description of the type of fund when you provide a summary breakdown of the fund and percentage. For instance at https://www.optimizedportfolio.com/ginger-ale-portfolio/#ginger-ale-portfolio-pie-for-m1-finance only the tickers are listed with the percentage. But the retirement section at https://www.optimizedportfolio.com/ginger-ale-portfolio/#adjusting-this-portfolio-for-retirement includes a description of each ticker too – this is helpful and avoids the need to search the page again for the fund to recall the fund description. While opening the M1 link can also help, some of the ticker descriptions names are not always as clear and your descriptions can help with this.
Thanks!
John Williamson says
Sure thing. Thanks for the suggestion. Makes sense.
Logan says
Found this blog a few days ago and have been reading it a lot. Great stuff!
I was curious, What would you think about replacing the VOO with NTSX in this portfolio? I was thinking this might be a good idea because it would give exposure to shorter term treasuries as well?
Thanks for all the great content,
Logan
John Williamson says
Thanks, Logan! That’d be a fine idea. Just changes the bond allocation and duration. But keep in mind 90/10 VOO/EDV nearly matches NTSX’s exposure, so we’ve sort of already got it indirectly, with international stocks added.
Tom B says
Hello and good day, enjoy your articles 🙂 On your Ginger ale (retirement) portfolio is the allocation correct for todays date? I have had a mighty fine run with USA, ETJ and QYLD. Thinking about your retirement portfolio as a new direction for allocations. Thanks
Tom
John Williamson says
Thanks, Tom. Not sure what you’re asking.
AZ says
John – great article!
I was wondering – for the 10% bond portion, could you use TLT instead of EDV?
I believe that they are both long term treasury ETF’s – what is the difference between them?
Thanks!
John Williamson says
EDV is just greater duration.
Jake Pisano says
Hello!
New to this blog and have been reading all day! I was wondering what your contributions are to the HEdgefundie Adventure portfolio. I notice you call it “Lottery” and just wondering what you contribute?
I
Max Kuchuryan says
I’ve been wondering the same thing. I’m currently invested in the 100% stocks version of the ginger ale portfolio (22 years old, want more risk right now), and also wonder what a “safe” percentage of my portfolio allocation would be to HFEA. Or if it’s even worth to get into right now.
Dov says
Hi John,
I am 28 years old and pretty new to the investing world. When I first started, I played around with stocks but quickly realized (and learned through actually reading some books) that I should be putting all my investment money in indexes (besides for some “fun” money if I really wish.
However, after all this research, I realized that I am a set it and forget it type of guy. I switched from Robinhood to M1 after reading your posts.
I maxed out a Roth IRA in Vanguard last year (just opened). Decided to max out this year ONLY in Hedgefundie’s Adventure in M1 and will continue in the future to use Vanguard (I started with a Vanguard 2060 Target Date Account as it seemed the simplest….I hope that is fine…)
Now I have about $40-$50k that I want to invest long term. I was almost going to put it basically all in the Ginger Ale Portfolio, but after reading comments I am realizing you perhaps meant for this to be in a retirement account (or other tax-efficient accounts) and if I am planning on investing this money in a taxable account, I should perhaps reconsider or adjust the allocations you set forth?
So bottom line: (1) I know you do not give personal financial advice here – but is the Ginger Ale Portfolio intended and completely fine for a long term taxable account? Would you perhaps change the allocation and take away some “value” funds? I am not so knowledgable with the tax ramifications and would really like to just put some money in a set it and forget it portfolio, which I guess is the point of this portfolio, but now am confused if a taxable account is what you intended.; and (2) as an aside – is it fine to have two Roth IRAs, one being my main one that I will try to max in Vanguard and the 2nd “lottery ticket” Roth IRA in m1 with Hedgefundie’s Adventure just to see how it goes (I know not to go over the federal maximum of course)
Thank you again for all of your detailed posts!
John Williamson says
Tax efficiency is not black and white but rather a sliding scale (see this page). This portfolio is fine for a taxable account, albeit comparatively less tax efficient than something like 100% growth stocks, but you can also simply allocate based on tax efficiency if you can, e.g. stocks in taxable and bonds in IRAs. Yes, fine to have multiple accounts, but not necessary; you could bucket within a single account.
David Friedman says
Brilliant analysis.
When the Fed stops pumping, is there a better case for dividend-paying equities?
Thank you
John Williamson says
Thanks. Maybe. Maybe not. I neither try to time the market nor interest rate changes. Value stocks tend to pay dividends.
Megan Hughes says
Hi John,
Love all the excellent information on this site. Thank you for all the hard work you are putting in here.
I have a question about your own portfolio (The Ginger Ale Portfolio). In this post you do not mention anything about UPRO.
However, In the HEDGEFUNDIE’s Excellent Adventure (UPRO/TMF) – A Summary you shared that you are long several leveraged funds.
Would love your input on this.
Thank you!
John Williamson says
Thanks Megan! I have a “lottery ticket” in the Hedgefundie strategy that receives no new deposits, so I don’t view it as part of the portfolio.
JB says
Do you like the additonal fees/premiums for International Small Cap (and EM) are worth it?
John Williamson says
Small cap value? Yes. Small cap blend? Possibly.
JB says
Is this allocation still current? I haven’t seen any updates since July.
How do you feel about DGS vs. AVES at this point? DGS is about twice the fees as AVES. Do you have thoughts on one or the other for 2022?
John Williamson says
Yes. AVES is still very new; waiting to run a regression on it. If anything changes, it will be noted clearly in the post.
Frederick says
Hello John.
I am new to your writings (3+ hours today!) and greatly appreciate how clearly you explain your reasoning for selecting one fund over another and the factors you consider when building a portfolio (or improving one of the others).
Though I will retire in two years, would you give me the green light to continue in a Ginger Ale-style portfolio (rather than shift to 40/60 or the like) if I was sure that I wouldn’t need to use the money in that fund for 20+ years? Thank you for your thoughts.
John Williamson says
Thanks so much for the kind words, Frederick! I can’t provide personalized advice; I can only provide my ramblings and then it’s up to you.
Vijay says
Thanks for the detailed post. It’s incredibly helpful, and I really appreciate it!
I understand the role of each ETF and how they collectively diversify the entire portfolio.
However, I’m curious how you arrived at specific percentages for each ETF.
Did you programmatically backtest every combination of ETF weights? Or did you pick a number simply based on what felt right?
I’m not sure how to allocate percentages to get the optimal diversification benefit.
John Williamson says
Glad you found it useful, Vijay. Somewhat arbitrary, and largely dependent on how much of a factor tilt I wanted based on my personal risk tolerance and conviction to avoid tracking error regret. Attempting to optimize for expected returns based on backtests leads to overfitting. The historically optimal portfolio (in sample) is almost always not the optimal portfolio in the future (out of sample).
Tommy Bridges says
Hey John –
Great stuff as always.
Had a question about how you calculate your total Asset Allocation across accounts. I believe you only hold NTSX in your taxable account – does that 90/60 allocation get factored into this larger pie, or is this only focused on your IRA / 401k accounts? And how do you go about doing those calculations with leveraged funds such as NTSX or UPRO?
Thanks so much for the great site!
Greg Nyers says
John, thank you for your insights on moving this portfolio to retirement mode. Given that typical retirement planning timelines are age 65 to approximately 90, I’m wondering why you went to an 8 to 10-year duration on the bond side by moving from EDV to VGIT and SCHP? Seems that could increase reinvestment risk.
John Williamson says
Just a general framework, not set in stone. I’m not as much of a fan of long bonds in a bond-heavy portfolio. Using intermediates means less interest rate risk. 10 years or so into retirement, the allocation would become 30/70, which is risk parity for intermediates. I’d also be caring more about preservation, so I don’t need to try to generate the highest return.
Paulo says
John,
I’m from Brazil and also a huge fan of Ben Felix. That’s how I got to your blog. I really enjoyed you article. I’ve been investing in ETFs similar to yours, however I’ve been struggling to find a small cap value ETF in developed markets ex-US. Currently, I’m long in IVLU (value large caps). Have you ever considered ISVL? Do you think AVDV is a better option?
Thank you again for all the information available.
John Williamson says
Thanks Paulo. I do think AVDV is better than ISVL.
Aakash says
Is SCHP considered intermediate term? It appears to have maturities from 1 to 20+ years.
Thanks.
John Williamson says
Yes. Duration is 8 years.
Aakash says
Do you see yourself switching from VEA (Vanguard) to AVDE (Avantis) for international developed markets? If not, may I ask why?
Thanks!
John Williamson says
Probably not. Factor loading isn’t terribly different between the two. That fund is meant to be index exposure with very light factor tilts.
Marc says
Seasons Greetings John! Loved the article, as always. Thanks so much for sharing all of your analyses. If only more smart people were so generous in sharing their insights!
Just confused on the “underweight” of Developed and the “overweight” of Emerging Markets, based on global market capitalization (50% US, 10% EM so I guess that leaves 40% Developed). For over on the EM, I can see from a Risk Parity perspective, but not understanding the under for Developed.
John Williamson says
Thanks, Marc! We only have 100% to work with. Increasing EM necessarily means decreasing DM. I think I explained the reasoning in a bit more detail here.