A simple calculation

Dear Ladies and Gentlemen

If you belong to the people who pay their bills primarily in Swiss Francs and/or Euros you belong to a rather large cohort of a few hundred million people living most probably somewhere on the European continent.

Today, I would like to show you with a simple calculation why I prefer equities over bonds.

If you keep your money as liquid and as safe as possible in a bank savings-account (hopefully with a bank offering some sort of government guarantee or at least a bank not getting involved in investment banking and/or corporate debt) or you have it invested in Swiss and/or German government bonds, you, Ladies and Gentlemen, will most probably receive 0% interest. Maybe you will even have to pay a small interest for depositing your money at the bank or for investing it in government bonds of short maturity and in any case, you will have to pay some small banking fees here and there on a regular basis.

This means, in the case of you wanting to invest your money in a Swiss and/or German government bond for 10 years because of its relatively low volatility, you will have to accept 0% interest or in other words no income whatsoever from such an investment and even worse, you will actually lose small bits and pieces of your money (fees) over the entire 10-year period. This truly means that at the end of a 10-year period you have less money than when you started and in real money terms, which means adjusted to purchasing power, you may have lost 10% – 20% due to inflation over that period.

To me this seems not a very attractive investment.

On the other hand, if you invest your money over 10 years in some solid listed company that pays regular annual dividends of 4.5%, thanks to the effect of compounding you will receive some 50% return over the same period. True, you will most probably have to accept higher volatility, but doesn’t the proposed return deliver an incentive high enough to accept such volatility?

Ladies and Gentlemen, to me it does!

Now, I know this is a very simplified calculation but both examples are real and possible in today’s market environment. Solid company delivering 4.5% dividend yield on one side and 0% 10-year government bond on the other side.

Think about it!

As always, I encourage you to send me your feedback and/or questions but please don’t forget (instead of hitting the reply button) to send your messages to:

smk@incrementum.li

Many thanks, indeed!

And now, Ladies and Gentlemen I wish you a great day and weekend.

Kind regards,

Yours truly,

Stefan M. Kremeth
Wealth Management
Incrementum AG

What’s next?

Dear Ladies and Gentlemen

I receive a fair number of messages asking about my view on the markets. As my regular readers all know, I still cannot foresee the future although I am trying hard but so far, I was totally unsuccessful.

However, if we take the core messages of my recent weekly mails about long-term investing into considerations and also what Mr. Andy Haeberli, Profond’s CIO, mentioned in last week’s interview, then – at least for me – there is not much room for investments outside the “real asset” bracket.

To make money with easy to understand, straight forward fixed income strategies seems difficult with current low interest rates. Either you accept elevated currency- or counterparty risks or you will not find decent yields on your fixed income investments. When it comes to real assets you may will have to accept higher volatility – as in equities and/or precious metals – but you get higher returns in the long run.

You may know, that we offer a cashflow based mandate for our private clients and while we cannot diversify those portfolio’s entire volatility away, we receive very decent cash returns on invested capital and interestingly enough, at least half of the companies whose equities we hold in those mandates, just announced dividend increases.

Now, Ladies and Gentlemen, what I want to say with this is, that if you are willing and capable of accepting volatility in your portfolio, you may appreciate rather stable cashflows on your invested capital and this should not to be neglected because the effect of compounding interests will help you to increase those cashflows even more (in theory exponentially) over time.

While I don’t know where markets or single investments are heading, I am confident that by following a strict investment process in seeking and harvesting positive cashflows, you may not get rich over night, but you will be able to steadily increase your capital over time.

There is no magic in this and crashes may occur at any moment. However most solid global companies keep paying stable dividends even during stock exchange crashes. This means if you do not have to sell a solid investment during a stock market crash and if you are patient enough to wait until stock markets recover, your loss potential is most probably going to be limited. However, it all comes down to picking the right stocks and this is hard work and involves a lot of research and number crunching.

As always, I encourage you to send me your feedback and/or questions but please don’t forget (instead of hitting the reply button) to send your messages to:
smk@incrementum.li

Many thanks, indeed!

And now, Ladies and Gentlemen I wish you a great day and weekend.
Kind regards,

Yours truly,

Stefan M. Kremeth
Wealth Management
Incrementum AG