Tuesday, January 11, 2022

2021 Wrap Up: Net Worth and Investments

2021 was another strange year. Both of our incomes were depressed, and there was noticeable inflation is many of the staples we buy. In Germany, many of the activities we would have taken part in were curtailed by pandemic rules. My small side incomes sources shriveled to nothing as projects were cancelled or simply not planned.

Despite these challenges, our net worth rose year over year by 43% in USD and 53% in EUR to $124,045 and €109,697 respectively. In December, that represents a respective monthly rise of 6.65% and 6%. Our liquid net worth stood at $104,269/€91,544.

Investments in 2021

The power of compounding assets that work in the background is amazing and shocking. Yes, we made money this year. Yes, we saved money this year. But this relentless background grind of our assets - primarily in stocks, both taxable and tax-advantaged - overwhelmed whatever other forces were working on our lives.

And this was the case, despite the fact that my portfolio only returned around 20% against the S&P 500's 27%. I underperformed overall when compared to that benchmark, and still I'm surprised by how well it works.

In the period between January 7, 2021 (the date the Brexit transition hit my IB account) and December 31, 2021, our investments made a total of $15,752.53 within the taxable account. That includes $504 of dividends, with the rest being a mixture of realized and unrealized gains.

My primary contribution to this result was having some amount of fortitude to withstand all the fears hurled at us investors in 2021. The biggest gains were in positions that I'd bought in prior years and held. That's not to say that I did nothing.

In general, my decisions to sell were, at least in the short term, correct decisions. My decision to sell Square - now Block - was a good call. I sold Cloudflare, which was early but basically correct, and bought back in, which was not correct. I briefly owned a number of foreign growth stocks, but I realized their valuations were beyond comprehension, and I bailed on them. That turned out to have been a good call, though I held Alibaba too long and lost some money on that.

In May, I made big bets on Facebook - now Meta - and Amazon, which have been basically flat since then. I figured those were at least five year bets, so I'm holding without thinking about them too much. I did not expect my Apple position to continue to grow so well, but I can't complain. I also added a lot to Berkshire Hathaway and bought another share of Alphabet, both of which have paid off.

Late in the year, I took out a €30,000 loan with which to buy stocks. My largest single purchase was AbbVie, which was a terrible immediate-term pick since it declined 10% within 15 minutes, but since then has nearly returned enough on its own to pay for the entire interest cost of the loan. Other smaller picks like Intel and Enbridge have been flat but volatile. Greenbrick Partners is volatile but has given a good return so far. Likewise, small positions like Bank of America, D.H. Horton, and Pulte have all done well.

I entered the cryptocurrency space early in 2021, exited after becoming disillusioned, and then I re-entered just as a correction was starting. It's been an uncomfortable few months as my new purchases get swallowed up, but I view the space as promising enough to buy a little bit every month. However, I might be wrong, but I'm strictly using my personal allowance money (BLOW) to pay for these purchases.

On the last trading day of the year, my portfolio looked like this:

The Vanguard All World Stock Index Fund was my largest single holding since that's the entirety of my U.S. tax-advantaged accounts. The largest positions after that are Apple, Amazon, and Berkshire Hathaway, each larger than 10% of the entire investment pool. Some of that is due to deliberate position sizing, while in the case of Apple, that position simply became dominant despite a much lower cost basis.

Final Thoughts: Finding Yourself as an Investor

I have a friend who got an inheritance windfall in 2015. He basically knew nothing about investing, but he knew that he wanted to buy cheap stocks that had promising futures. Like me, he's an American in Europe, so he had to buy individual securities, and he bought around 40.

His performance has been quite good, having bought a mix of growth and value. Some choices turned out to be under performers, and they've have been cut. But he's been admirably steady in his positions even when they grow very large.

It's taken me years to "find myself" as an investor. I bounced from all sorts of styles, but what seems to work best is to be more like him: buy reasonably priced companies that have good odds of doing well in the future. Get convinced ahead of time that the purchase is a good one. It's ok to have some speculative stuff, as long as you're aware it's speculative stuff. And then for the most part let it ride.

Letting it ride is hard, but I'm getting better at it. Over the past month, the market has been rough, but my tendency to want to sell has been quiet. Likewise, I'm trying to get past the need to find the perfect investment or investment style. If I achieved greater than 10% returns annually over time, that would be an achievement.

I plan on writing more about 2021, especially about our income sand saving. Until then, stay healthy. May your 2022 be full of happiness and good fortune.