As I sit here writing this post the Excel spreadsheet that I use to track my wealth and portfolio performance tells me that I have accrued 76.1% of the wealth that I require for Financial Independence (and Early Retirement if I should choose to retire from work). If there is one thing I've learnt over the 7 and a bit years that I've been accruing that wealth it is that if you want to be the person who retires by 40, who makes early retirement extreme work or who reaches financial independence in 10 years and not the one who retires when the government tells you to then you need to not only be tenacious and not blow with the wind but also rigorously PDCA (Plan, Do, Check, Act).
When I say this I'm not saying to continually alter your investment strategy to today’s new fad. That’s just going to lead you astray and hinder your wealth creation. Instead it’s going to have to be far more subtle and purposeful than that but it’s important because I can guarantee, if my example is anything to go, that a large portion of both your life and investments are going to be different from what you originally planned. Therefore to reach your goal some course correction is going to be required. Let me maybe demonstrate the principle with some personal examples:
When I say this I'm not saying to continually alter your investment strategy to today’s new fad. That’s just going to lead you astray and hinder your wealth creation. Instead it’s going to have to be far more subtle and purposeful than that but it’s important because I can guarantee, if my example is anything to go, that a large portion of both your life and investments are going to be different from what you originally planned. Therefore to reach your goal some course correction is going to be required. Let me maybe demonstrate the principle with some personal examples:
- When I first went DIY in 2007 I was naive and really in a state of investment strategy flux as I learnt. By 2009 the foundation of my strategy was built but it actually took until late 2011 to reach maturity with the addition of a High Yield Portfolio (HYP) portion. As I move quickly forward to Financial Independence then I can see some more subtle change as I work to build regular income streams from areas like extending the HYP portion of my portfolio.
- When I started out Vanguard didn't exist in the UK. They were of course big in the US but didn't actually come to the UK until 2009. Vanguard funds and ETF’s now form a cornerstone of my portfolio lowering my investment costs.
- By 2010 I had cottoned onto the need to save hard, by both maximising income and minimising spend, and was regularly saving 60% of my gross earnings plus employee pension contributions. That quickly moved to 2011 when I was without work. Onto today and my family life has changed such that to maximise the benefit to the family I am paying all the family bills meaning over the last 15 months my savings rate has now fallen to an average of 50%. Within this 50% I'm also making significant contributions to help my better half’s wealth (not detailed on Retirement Investing Today) to grow as quickly as my own meaning my wealth growth rate will also slow from what was planned. To keep to plan I've had to work hard to continually increase earnings but also reduce costs through these changes.
- In recent times we've seen and are seeing a lot of post Retail Distribution Review (RDR) change within the investment world. It looks to now be stabilising and while I've generally not come out of it all too badly I am considering a shift away from Youinvest for my SIPP to again lower investment costs.
- The market moves and I respond with rebalancing according to my strategy as well as continually buying the most under performing asset class with new money.