Collected more this month than last year, but still lagging last year's dividend YTD.
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. :)
While I mentioned that I have not been buying Gold, one of my favourite Unit Trusts had taken a tiny position in Gold (0.55% of portfolio) by January 2025 or earlier (the above screenshot was taken in Feb 2025 of the previous month's factsheet). Currently the value of that holding is now 0.99% of the portfolio which I presume is mainly from price appreciation. That should be good for a couple of basis points of alpha which is not that much, but good to know that occasionally active managers can make good trades....
Link to Feb 2025 post: BuyafterCrash: Lion Global All Seasons Fund revisited (SRS strategy)
When I first started this blog in 2016, one of my earliest posts was about Gold and how I felt it was insurance rather than investment. If everything was normal it should match inflation plus a few basis points for 'holding cost.' If something terrible happened, then the 'insurance' function would kick in and the price would spike. The 2016 photo above shows my tiny gold holdings which I have not increased since 2016 (I think I bought a couple more bars/coins after the photo was taken but nothing after 2016).
Instead, my strategy was to invest in economies that have a significant commodities business as any increase in commodity prices would benefit that economy. Specifically, I have a large position in Australia, which is the 3rd largest producer of gold.
Recently, there has been a sustained increase in the price of gold, which cannot be explained by its 'insurance' function. Perhaps the idea of you should pay a price premium for a 'store of value' function has taken root thanks to crypto. Or crypto millionaires and moving some of their crypto winnings to Gold.
I do not plan to buy more Gold as I find it too difficult to value. As I mentioned in 2016, Gold doesn't generate earning or cashflow. Instead I hope to be a beneficiary of the Gold boom indirectly though the Australian market.
My 2016 Post: BuyafterCrash: Gold?
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Postscript: The morning after I posted this, CNBC reported a rare earths investment framework/agreement between US and Australia.
Trump threatened 100% tariffs in retaliation for China rare earth export controls, but market quickly recovered and marched upwards.
For October I bought more VWRD and a smaller amount of VHYD. Also continuing my HK/China ETF RSP with FSMone. Nobody really knows when the next correction will occur so I will just continue adding to VWRD.
One thing I am paying attention to is the (over)concentration of the ETF constituents. FSMOne provides a useful auto-calculation in their ETF pages and I noticed that 3010.HK is on one hand, relatively less concentrated with top 25 holdings comprising 46.13% of total assets and on the other, TSMC is a whopping 13.5% individual weightage.