[23]BTC !!as solid as gold

For every theoretical criticism of bccy, someone would challenge it with “How is gold any better?” This bpost is a biased view against bccy (in favor of gold). For simplicity, I will use BTC (or ETH) as a concrete example of bccy.

If a gold transaction happens electronically, the physical gold is still the same amount (not vanishing). Electronic audit trail of the transaction would be open, and disputes can be resolved in a court of law.

Multiple Nobel economists have said the intrinsic value of BTC is zero, but how about gold?

— Q: BTC has no future cashflow supporting its valuation, but how about gold or art collectibles?
A: I think BTC is similar to art collectibles or tulips. Gold has (no cashflow) some unique advantages as store_of_value, as discovered over centuries and widely documented.

It’s quite possible that BTC will enjoy growing demand despite its limitations, just as gold enjoys robust demand despite its limitations. (Some would see exact that scenario has materialized since the late 2010s.)

Q: Gold (and silver) is not the only rare metal in the world, and it has defeated all those competitors over centuries and emerged as the dominant physical store_of_value for (central) banks. Will BTC  follow the same path?
A: BTC has emerged dominant. A better bccy might emerge dominant later, like ETH. That may lead to a drop in demand for BTC and devaluation.
A: even if a real king of bccy emerges after some battles, it doesn’t imply acceptance by central banks as store_of_value.

— Q: BTC is not yet suitable as a medium_of_exchange, but how about gold?
A: silver (and copper) was a medium_of_exchange. Gold coin was also proven fairly effective as a medium_of_exchange. Many gold coins are issued by national banks.

— Q: Gold has a proven track record over millenniums. What if BTC also survives 50Y and earn our trust?
I think over 50Y we would see some end-use case. (Gold has end-use case like industrial and jewelry.)

50Y will witness the “inflation hedge“. (Gold is proven.)

— Q: what if central banks start to build up BTC positions within their OFR [official foreign reserve] or other national reserves?

See bccy as reserve currency@@ #volatile

Q4: what if half of all celebrities and big corporations start to build up BTC positions (comparable to gold)?
A: I doubt a sophisticated investor would allocate half her assets in BTC (or bccy in general), if she has kids or dependencies.

Q4b: what if many ibanks and big corporations take positions in BTC similar to the gold situation?
A: I doubt it could happen but if it does, then I think the key feature is central bank acceptance. So far only one central bank has accepted BTC, but I don’t want to digress.

Q: both gold and BTC has limited supply, and therefore provide store_of_value?
A: Any limit on issuing rate is hard to maintain. The case of gold is about the only proven case. For BTC, the hard limit on total supply is designed by people, implemented in software and can be scrapped given sufficient popular support. ETH has no max cap. ETH issuing rate is subject to change by the SWEs.

[16]after-tax income compare cities #beware

Beside the standard income tax, “Taxes” should  include these unavoidable, and largely predictable outlays:

  1. mtg installment… rent is a variable cost
  2. compulsory school fees, excluding enrichment programs
  3. medical insurance premium
  4. telco charges
  5. power + water + cooking gas
  6. government taxes including pTax…
  7. commute fares
  8. car insurance … gas, parking, repair are variable costs
  9. —– the other high-cost items are arguable avoidable —–
  10. flights to see family members (at least once a year — predictable) but not unavoidable.
  11. life insurance, critical illness insurance

These could add up to $3k – $5k a month. So my current after-tax income is more like $8k. Remember them when we say “this tuition only costs $150 a month”

Q: in my “staying alone” years, monthly total “tax” (excluding withholding) is …?
A: in US, it’s around $1k including rent and flights
A: in Singapore, it was probably below S$1k  including rent and flights. I used to rent 2 places.

rental yield: Chn superlow, shops better #3ratios

 


See also gross^nett rental yield #careful with U.S.

— Tier 1 China residential valuation is overpriced according to my 3_ratios

  • Ratio_II: average salary
  • Ratio_BB: For a typical household, annual CPI-basket aggregate cost should be  10~15% of their home valuation. Much lower in China top cities
  • Ratio_RR: rental yield

— Ratio_II .. According to a China government survey, in megacities like Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen, the housing-price-to-annual-income ratio was above 35 – meaning that the price of an average house is equivalent to roughly 35 years of the average Household income. Household size can be 1 or more.

— Ratio_RR

  • As of 2022, TPY central shophouse $12k/M rental for a $3.8M (asking) price, about 4%. Very good but probably short lease remaining.
  • As of Jan 2020, for a CNY 4,000,000+ Shanghai school district home, rent = CNY 5K, NGRY == 1.5%
  • As of Sep 2016, for a typical CNY 6,000,000 Shanghai home, rent = CNY 7k to 8k/month. NGRY ~= 1.5%.
  • As of Jan 2017, for a CNY 3,000,000+ Shanghai home, rent=CNY4k, NGRY ~= 1.5%.
  • As of 2017, For a incomparable (!) Singapore public housing S$600k home, rent = S$2.5k/month. NGRY = 5%. Note private properties would show much lower NGRY.
  • Zhejiang village shop unit 店铺 — 2,500k investment. Annual gross rent 100k i.e. 4%, much higher than residential
  • BGC — Chun Tih said condo can generate at least 5% net rental yield. https://bgcmegaworld.com/for-foreign-investors/ says 8-11% GRY
  • Thailand — 泰国中心地区的公寓平均年租金回报率在房价的5-8%左右,有的地方可达15%。在旅游胜地芭堤雅,人民币60多万的二线海景公寓能租到4000元人民币/月;人民币100万的房子(better location?)能租到10,000元人民币/月 — 12% NGRY but I think these are the outliers. The typical GRY is much lower.

Conclusion: buy SG and rent out; live on rented in China

This is a sign that Shanghai/Beijing properties are overpriced relative to local living standard (CPI) and wage level. Housing overheat affects rental rate more gradually. In fact, investment and leasing markets can become somewhat decoupled in overheated locations. Owners of expensive houses are often complacent receiving a much lower rental yield than many years ago. See my blog on defying gravity.

  • buying demand is driven by deep-pocketed investors, and hot money from overseas
  • leasing demand is driven by ordinary local wage earners, so if rent rises as fast as valuations, then they will be vacant as ordinary rents can’t afford.

Q: in Manila and Phnom Penh where gross rental yield is around 7-10%, do we have reason to say property price is less overheated?
A: That is only one reason fewer to suspect overheat. Other signs may still point to overheating.

##pff protection: powerless against SOME swans[def]

Q: Why do you think Singapore among many small countries keep building their national reserve, if the reserve are powerless against so many disasters?
Q: Why does the global insurance industry has grown over centuries, with ever wider coverage, and many policies lasting 50-100 years?
Q: Why do credit unions (and banks) even exist if long-term saving and lending is actually based on shaky ground?
Same Answer: The reality is , the world will not end in 100 years, so the consistent savers do build up /formidable/ resources.

We tend to exaggerate the likelihood of various headline disasters, and then reach un-calibrated, quick, sweeping conclusions that “financial protections are often close to useless”. Such protections including

  1. gold,
  2. insurance plans
  3. government health insurance
  4. bank deposits in a resilient currency

Financial protections can be more reliable than other protections like levees, military protection, self-defense…. See also reliable shield: burnRate^wellness habits. There are rather few disasters that financial protection can’t help at all.

  1. political upheavals [looting, revolutions] that seize assets of private families. This happened to my father’s family and my mother’s family, but I won’t say financial protections were completely useless. It also happened in Cambodia (Grandpa pointed out) and perhaps Eastern Europe. I discussed this with grandpa. He said this will not happen again in China.
    • rare: armed conflicts — somewhere in your country is still “manageable”, but if it hits your city, then I hope money can buy you some travel tickets or weapons. Such things never happen out of the blue, so you have years to prepare.
    • Defining feature: anarchy including government-sanctioned anarchy
  2. hospital overrun — at national level can still be manageable, but if your city hits hospital capacity and somehow you can’t seek treatment in another city, then money can’t help. I think this happened in Wuhan, Span, Italy, NYC. Thanks to lessons from covid19, this is less likely to happen.
  3. ==== For below items , financial reserve can provide partial /relief/ or at least buy some precious time
  4. stock market boom and bust, wiping out a big chunk of your wealth. One of the most frequent disasters.
  5. government financial reform hurts my cohort. I am confident that in well-managed systems like SG or U.S. we would be given sufficient advance notice/warning.
  6. burglary .. nowadays most people keep bulk of assets offsite.
  7. — For the items below, the threats appear to be approaching from a distance. The financial cushions you built can buy you some time + some real benefits relative to the unprotected larger population.
  8. rare: high inflation more than 50% a year
  9. severe currency devaluation short of hyper inflation .. imported inflation
  10. very rare: famine — hitting somewhere in your country is still “manageable”, but if famine hits your city then money can’t help. Luckily such things always develop over decades , never suddenly like a pandemic, so your money can help you prepare. Other rare natural disasters include earth-quake, tsunami, but they affect fewer people.
  11. population aging leading to ever more people drawing from (rather than contributing to) a dwindling pool
  12. peak oil
  13. global warming and sea level rise; climate change and desertification.
    • Note sudden global-scale natural disasters including cosmic collisions happen only in sci-fi.
  14. global protein shortage but short of famine

— “Black swan” the concept .. Most writers use this term for _financial_ events. By strict definition, black swan events are so rare and unpredictable that assessing the probability will be guesswork and not based on data.

Is it simply better to put aside this theory? Well, one can study the pattern of past black-swan events and try to learn something, but I don’t know how useful that is, given that predicting similar events are by definition nearly impossible. I find it fun to read history. It doesn’t always offer any actionable insights though.

SG economy has experienced many large shocks. (These shocks could be considered white swans.) I feel the PAP leaders understand the vulnerability inherent in this system. They try to turn the vulnerability into agility.

 

too old2work #earliest show-stopper

My dad has some first-hand observations.

Exception — He pointed out doctors can indeed work till very old age. But this is the exception that proves the rule. The rule is, most professions won’t let us work till very old age.

He has many friends in this category i.e. Old teachers are not sought-after by employers beyond 65. Supply and demand. He agreed that if there’s demand, these older teachers would probably accept, perhaps at a reduced workload. Therefore, they are in fact too old to be in-demand, not too old to work.

For his type of research work, there’s no employer needed. He can work a few hours a day. Ill health can limit workload but won’t completely stop him working.

  • Q: what’s my earliest show-stopper i.e. the event that will prevent me from working full time any more? (Your first love is typically one person, not 2 individuals!) Is it supply/demand, health or something else?
  • A: I feel health is a low-chance show stopper
  • A: In whatever domain I could possibly choose for myself, supply/demand is the most likely show-stopper. US is significantly better in terms of supply/demand, and for fundamental reasons.

Having said that, my dad feels the most important factor for my late retirement plan is health. He’s speaking from experience.

Imagine you are unable to sleep more than 4 hours a day for months. Can you handle the job duty, the demand on Sys2? 

I guess good health gives inner strength/fortitude — endurance at crunch times, confidence and competitiveness to take on challenges. How important is this fortitude?

Q: Which is more effective protection for health, CI or a less stressful job?

If I’m unhealthy/weak at age 65, even though there are still some (lower-paying) jobs I can take up, they could possibly require some physical stamina and fitness that I don’t have. This could happen at 58 or 85. It’s called aging.

  • Q: what (be specific) can help us cope with the show-stopper? Note most of the learning aren’t relevant, because at my current learning capacity, I will be relevant till age 65.
  • A: a research/teaching career shift.
    • PhD in an area I believe in. See https://bintanvictor.wordpress.com/2017/01/25/what-domain-to-specialize-over-30y/
    • Improvement in written communication and analysis skills
  • A: healthy (often more expensive) food
  • A: weight management products
  • A: fitness classes
  • A: perhaps a relaxed job to provide more time for workout. Note a relaxed job per se is irrelevant because we will end up spending the extra time in low-leverage activities.

leverage≠killer_skill 4investors #Singtel

— eg: Singtel .. in Mar 2006 Singtel held cash_balance (i.e. cash equivalent) to about 5month worth of operating expenses. In Mar 2016 that “cushion” was down to 14D of operating expenses. This is a form of financial leverage.

With a strong financial position, Singtel could easily tap capital markets (bonds etc) and bank financing to raise working capital. Therefore the increased leverage may or may not be a concern.

— eg: Lehman .. (based on https://hbr.org/2009/09/lessons-from-lehman) was overleveraged at 30+.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
In both cases, the leverage is powerful, enviable, a sign of strength when times are good. Those good times could last decades, so the observers may never notice the hidden weakness/risks.

Individuals can borrow from banks but corporations do that at a fundamentally deeper level — some players in a given market must take on leverage just to compete. My focus is _personal_ (and family) finance.

  • eg: Individual home buyers, car buyers … can avoid leverage. It may look silly, but legit.
  • eg: Individual currency traders can use low leverage like 10, even though it may be unexciting and slow.
  • — Below examples are not about leverage but about risk-taking for higher profit:
  • eg: Individual stock investors can avoid hot stocks, even though many believe “If you bother to trade U.S. stocks but avoid hot stocks, then what’s the point?”
  • eg: Individual stock investors can favor stocks with high dividend but low growth. This style is often sidelined, dismissed, but still a legit style. Many (me too) believe that the hottest growth stocks don’t pay dividends.

In many of these examples, the good times would cast these risk-averse individuals in bad light, as laggards, as /also-rans/, as “missed the show”, but what about in bad times? XR would probably agree with me that “strength would emerge”.

Buffett once quoted his partner saying “there are only three ways a smart person can go broke: liquor, ladies, and leverage.”

In my case, I actually take risky bets with my HY/PE etc but that’s a digression.

(med++)disaster wip’out all subsequent income..really@@

See also earliest show-stopper

  • Out of 100 CI insured healthy adults, how many would make a claim? In the TPD case, the percentage is much lower.
  • Out of 100 CI claims, I guess a small number (10?) would become permanently unable to work. In the TPD case, the percentage is probably higher.
  • Since my #1 concern is loss of income, CI insurance doesn’t meet my needs. Perhaps ElderShield and TPD offer partial protections. No effective insurance exists for job loss.

Looking at the PR chart, the biggest risk is (partial) loss of income, to the tune of $120k x 25Y = 3million. But what insurable events could cause such a loss? Not many:

  • a horrific accident? low Probability(hit)
  • disability and death? I did hear of middle-aged professionals getting hit with such things, but in my opinion low Probability(hit)
  • major_illness leading to 1 ADL and full-time nursing care? Fairly low Probability(hit) but higher than TPD
  • major_illness leading to occupational disability.. higher probability(hit) than ADL
  • major_illness forcing us to take a more relaxed job at age 48, 53 or 59… Well, like many hardworking people, I already feel the strain of aging, parenting, competition from younger peers, lack of exercise etc. So far I didn’t like a lower-gear job, but a major illness could be the last straw to convince me? Plausible theory, but completely imaginary. I don’t know anyone having this experience.
  • Without major_illness, growing too old to work 8 hours a day (like grandpa)? Not insurable!
  • supply/demand … loss of competitiveness — is arguably the most likely cause but Not insurable

Just kidding — we wish there’s some “rate lock” product to “lock in” our current level of income! But no insurer would offer such a guarantee, because the insured guy can easily fake and exercise the option.

entry/exit: stick to proven rule@@

I often hear authors advocate discipline — “Set your own rules and follow them consistently.” However … Q: why do we need to monitor the market rather than program a computer to do so?

More importantly… Q: how do I know when to turn on manual override and modify my rule?

I think in reality, what we can realistically do is “Follow personal rules 95% of the time” What percentage of retail investors have the discipline to achieve that? One in 10? Among this subset of (millions of) investors, their numeric rules are all different and therefore create millions of “free agents” that power the free market.

bold^critiq^jolt^origContent^misPerception

  • origContent .. is the “weakest” tag. By default, t_critiq and t_bold blogposts are also original contents.
  • t_critiq ..  critical, skeptical assessment of mainstream, conventional wisdom.
  • t_bold .. is the strongest, and most selective tag.
  • All 3 tags above are mutually exclusive.

t_jolt is often temporary for a few months to years.

## durability@升值[appreciation] #holding power

Experience shows that our estimate of the downside is usually an underestimate.
Therefore, some risk-averse investors dare not or refuse to trust the conventional wisdom about long-term strength of equity asset class.
They would prefer cash or safe asset classes like soverign bonds.

They suspect that, in general, high-risk-high-return assets may turn out to be high-risk without a real alpha [i.e. without significant likelihood of excess return].

I see long-term strength only in U.S. equity. I consider all other markets highly unstable, but that is probably simplistic and over-generalized.

Q: Pick a random 10Y window some time into the near future (within your lifetime). What is your estimated probability that SP500 (or another stock market) would show a positive return?

The skeptics would probably say slighly above 50%. Some would say that a fairly priced SP500 could, in theory, shoot up 100 times (above fair value) over a year shortly before that window, and then it would be precarious and could collapse any time. However, such a scenario is unlikely because SP500 is hard to manipulate. The buyers would put themselves at grave risk by bidding up the price.

( In contrast, Beijing rEstate valuataion is possibly 5 times above fair value, and could collapse any time. )

How about insurers? I think they invest some 10-20% in eq, the rest in bonds. Appreciation in their portfolio tends to be durable.

How about CPF (and pension funds)? For decades they have relied on eq to provide the required return. They have been fairly reliable, despite many swan events.

Temasek’s 400b is invested mostly in equities, with 62% allocation to Asia. Apparently, there is long-term strength in Asia equities, but I think this is misleading, because the retail investor would lack the resources of a gigantic fund, and unable to limit numerous losses that add up.

Some would predict an eq hedge fund could hit “positive returns for a few years, then give all up in one bad year”. Well, MLP is one of the biggest hedge funds and we count some pension funds and insurers as investors. We are mostly equities but rather stable over the last 3 decades.

Now I feel Nsdq (or another U.S. index) is susceptible to “fast_window” of 500% appreciation. That would precede a very long trough.


past title: durability of asset appreciation

Q: after an asset appreciates by 100%, how confident are we about its stability? Note cpf and bonds won’t show such high appreciation.

  • eg: appreciation of a racing horse .. won’t last long
  • eg: One 92s27 classmate (水生?) bought a recreational club membership nearby. The membership is lifetime and transferrable, with a market price. My classmate felt confident that the price has held steady. If it shows an appreciation, how much confidence do you have?
  • eg: gold .. a curious story. Somehow it is perceived as more stable than stocks, but still not very stable.

— holding power.. My bias: the stronger investors, the wise investors tend to allocate more to the more “durable” assets, and hold them through a trough, rather than liquidating at a loss.

Q: What if a durable asset hits a swan, and experiences a trough longer than expected? Is it really durable?
A: That scenario is non-academic; it is the reason for risk-management. We would need to reassess the 20Y prospect. Very unlikely we would need to liquidate at a loss.

— swan events .. a major source of instability. I feel U.S. stocks and some rEstate markets recover fast or don’t fall enough to wipe out 3Y of appreciation. I tend to see an economic basis for their appreciation.

In contrast, if the stock/rEstate price is in a speculative bubble, then it isn’t durable. The crash doesn’t need a swan event.

see also scenario plann`: asset devalue over50-100Y

— eg: FWD300 surrender value grows year after year, faster than FLI. The longer you hold, the sweeter.

In constrast, cpfLife has declining surrender value 🙁

— eg: bccy .. no basis for their valuations, so I feel high valuations can evaporate faster.

Binance founder CZ … over 5Y became #1 richest Chinese in the world, but how long did he last?

— eg: rEstate .. appreciation is usually more stable. We are more confident about its durability. I think rEstate have much slower price changes than stocks. The monthly count of transactions is a trickle compared to stocks.

In general but not always, the faster something appreciates, the less durable, unless it is a scarce resource without substitutes.

— eg: SP500.. no other stock index shows the same /durability/ of appreciation.

— eg: single-name stocks ..
For a growth stock, the appreciation is mostly based on projected growth, rather than declared earnings. I feel it is less stable.

Compared to traditional blue-chips, tech blue-chips have less moat, and face more frequent challengers and churn.

I feel traditional, boring stocks seldom show fast appreciation. When they do, I feel more confident about its durability.