BuyafterCrash
Blog started 2016. Achieved Financial Independence in 2021. Focusing on Spiritual, Mental, Physical and Financial Fitness. Personal journal to record investment decisions for my own reference and in future, for my loved ones who will take over the portfolio. Advertising free as I'm not seeking hits or ad revenue. On the internet anyone can have a pretend portfolio, whether you think this blog is fake or real, doesn't bother me. :)
Friday, 23 May 2025
Sorry UOB, you launched the wrong China ETF
Wednesday, 21 May 2025
Sold my small CISCO holding
I initiated a small position in CISCO during the Pandemic. In other words, I picked the wrong video-conferencing stock as Zoom did much better. Nevertheless the profit for CISCO was decent and including dividends nett of withholding tax, the total gain since 2020 was about 40%. I'm doing some portfolio cleaning and it just doesn't make sense to hold US dividend stocks for the long term because of the withholding, so I sold them tonight and bought Vanguard Dividend ETF (VHYD) instead.
The next US dividend stock to unload will be McDonalds. I'm sitting on decent capital gain but withholding tax on dividends means I should exit all US dividends stocks as quickly as possible.
Posting this as a reminder to myself!
Recording my CISCO purchase: Previous blogpost
Tuesday, 20 May 2025
Mid-Year Review
Since I was free, I manage to prepare the mid-year review of my portfolio and my health, so I decided to release it early. Maybe the market will crash right after this 😅
Portfolio: Doing well. Hit the 10% mark for the first time this year.
Sunday, 18 May 2025
Pimco Income Fund (any good?)
With T-bill interest rates going down, I had written earlier about my thought process in purchasing LionGlobal All Seasons (Standard) unit trust.
To recap, I have a sizeable amount of cash and non-cash. Apart from maxxing out my SSB at $200k, I have cash in money market funds like Fullerton as well as cash in bank account. Finally, as I am almost at young senior status, I should start considering my CPF funds (above FRS) as near-cash (or at least a 5 year bond to hold between age 50 to 55).
So when my T-bills continue to mature, I should be on the look out for good replacements. Maybe a little more risk for a little more return.
Kyith in Investmentmoats has done multiple articles recently on PIMCO Income Fund. Not exactly sure why the love (or hate) for this fund in particular, but I guess it is a super popular fund so many readers will either be vested or thinking of investing in it.
I had never considered the fund before but his article piqued my interest so I went to have a deeper look. You can read Investmentmoats for more details on what the fund invests in, but after doing my own due diligence, I have decided the fund is not for me.
Fundamentally, there's the issue of my portfolio construction. I'm not sure how to fit such a fund into my portfolio. It's basically asking me to pay the fund manager a bit more (1.05% expense ratio) and to accept more risk in the hope for better return. My view of fixed income is that it should be the lower volatility part of my portfolio, to compensate for the potential wild swings in the equities portion, so on that note, the PIMCO fund doesn't fit the bill for me.
As a second order issue, the data from FSMOne shows that its 3-year Annualised Volatility as well as Sharpe Ratio is worse than the LionGlobal fund. This is rather embarrassing for PIMCO. How can an actively managed fund be so volatile?
As you can read from Kyith's article, a 6 month difference in when you entered the fund (buying in Jan versus July 2017) resulted in what could be 2.5% p.a. over 8 years turning into 1.35% over 8 years! This is not the type of volatility you want from a fixed income fund.
Conclusion?
I'm on the lookout for a lower volatility fund with decent sharpe ratio. I don't think the PIMCO meets those requires as its metrics are worse than the LionGlobal All Seasons fund. So I will stick with LionGlobal for now, but when I hit a certain amount of holdings, my usual practice is to diversify into a second fund, so I'll keep looking
🐧🐧🐧
Wednesday, 14 May 2025
Buy stuff when they are on sale
Tuesday, 13 May 2025
FLCT: Time to buy?
Monday, 12 May 2025
Trade War ended before it really started?
They didn't agree to a deal, but reducing (not even removing) tariffs seems good enough news to move the markets.