Things go better with Coke - would you like some?
Warren Buffet first invested in Coca Cola in 1988. He (Berkshire Hathaway) now own 400m shares, 9.4% of that company.
As a result, on the 15th March of this year he received a payment of $168,000,000 from Coca Cola. In cash. It’s a quarterly dividend.
Rule of 72
This is the most important calculation any investor needs to know. It is simply a shortcut to estimate the number of years required to double your money for a given rate of return / interest / yield.
Converting cash sums into monthly pay cheques: rational income investing in a post-QE environment
In this free white paper, we argue that Modern Portfolio Theory is an inappropriate basis for generating a retirement or other long-term income for individual investors because their main objective is reliability of income, not capital growth.
In Search of the Perfect Portfolio
The golden goose of low fees and high yields has been the dream for investors and advisers alike and a common way to try and achieve this has been to predict the markets. However, in reality, this is akin to trying to predict the lottery.
When QE Broke the 4% Rule
Research from the actuary Lane Clark & Peacock assessing modelling of retirement portfolios alongside consideration of relevant asset allocations for decumulation. It also outlines their thinking on why the heuristics on spending rules and portfolios need to be updated.
Delay for more Pay: Should I defer my State Pension?
The government will increase your State Pension for every week you defer it. You delay, they pay. This increase amounts to 1% for every 9 weeks you defer or 5.8% per year. But is it worth it?
Dealing with Average % in Investment Calculations
A very simple rule that is very important – investment returns are not symmetrical; if you have an investment that falls 20%, it has to then grow by 25% just to get back to where you started.
3 Ways to Earn the Same Return With Less Risk
In our everyday course of business we are constantly assessing investments, and we abide by the rule that if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. That said, we believe there are three simple concepts you can employ to potentially earn the same return with less risk.
Jargon Busting
As in every industry, the number of financial planners claiming to be experts are endless, but in reality, very few will give clear, personalised expert advice to those who are not planning investing with gold bars and computer code and mid-Atlantic hotel rooms.
5 Common Questions About Investing for Income in Retirement
Learn more about how much money you will need and how long it’ll last in retirement.
11 Common Investment Mistakes
Investing might seem simple…buy low, sell high right? In reality, investing is a road riddled with potholes and cracks and successfully navigating it isn’t as easy as it might seem.
Income Investing Via Natural income
Research from the perspective of a mathematical theorist examining the patterns and behaviours of trust dividend payments to determine confidence levels for future projections via algorithms, and, specifically, the correlations to be found within the trusts. This drills down into the actual volatility of income to determine whether or not the term ‘risk’ is being correctly applied to income streams.
Dividend Return Projections
From an actuary’s perspective, the dividend returns of a pre-selected set of investment trusts are analysed to determine the mathematical relationship between demonstrable historical movements and future projections. It considers confidence levels within set bounds by calculating correlations and measuring causation effects, comparing model forecasts against actual portfolio returns.
5 Reasons Why Dividend Investing Works
We believe dividend investing is the best way to secure a retirement income and beats capital investing for capital hands down. 5 of these reasons are exposed in this article.
 
                         
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
