Showing posts with label total wealth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label total wealth. Show all posts

Saturday 14 April 2012

What is the Present Value of Your Lifetime Income?

Utility of money depends on your whole lifetime wealth.

Do this interesting exercise - Estimate the Present Value of your Lifetime Income.

What is gaining, losing or giving $10,000 or $100,000 today to you when compared to the Present Value of your lifetime income?

Are you rational or irrational in your handling and managing of your finances, work and leisure time today?


[In economics, utility is a measure of satisfaction, referring to the total satisfaction received by a consumer from consuming a good or service but also referring to satisfaction received by its contingent production relations. Given this measure, one may speak meaningfully of increasing or decreasing utility, and thereby explain economic behavior in terms of attempts to increase one's utility. Utility is often modeled to be affected by consumption of various goods and services, possession of wealth and spending of leisure time.]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utility

Wednesday 27 May 2009

Total Returns vs Total Wealth vs Total Real Returns

Total Returns

Total returns means that all returns, such as interest and dividends and capital gains, are automatically reinvested in the asset and allowed to accumulate over time.

A graph depicting the total return indexes for stocks, long- and short-term bonds, gold, and commodities from 1802 through 2001, showed that the total return on equities dominates all other assets. Even the cataclysmic stock crash of 1929, which caused a generation of investors to shun stocks, appears as a mere blip in the stock return index. Bear markets, which so frighten investors, pale in the context of the upward thrust of total stock returns.

Total Returns vs Total Wealth

However, the total wealth in the stock market, or in the economy, does not accumulate as fast as the total return index. This is so because investors consume most of their dividends and capital gains, enjoying the fruits of their past saving.

It is rare for anyone to accumulate wealth for long periods of time without consuming part of his or her return.

  • The longest period of time investors typically plan to hold assets without touching principal and income is when they are accumulating wealth in pension plans for their retirement or in insurance policies that are passed on to their heirs.
  • Even those who bequeath fortunes untouched during their lifetimes must realize that these accumulations often are dissipate in the next generation.

The stock market has the power to turn a single dollar into millions by the forbearance of generations - but few will have the patience or desire to let this happen.

Total Returns vs Total Real Returns

The focus of every long-term investor should be growth of purchasing power - monetary wealth adjusted for the effect of inflation. The growth of purchasing power in equities not only dominates all other assets but also shows remarkable long-term stability. Despite extraordinary changes in the economic, social and political environments over the past two centuries, stocks have yielded between 6.6 and 7.0 percent per year after inflation in all major subperiods.

The wiggles on the stock return line represent the bull and bear markets that equities have suffered throughout history. The long-term perspective radically changes one's view of the risk of stocks. The short-term fluctuations in the stock market, which loom so large to invetors when they occur, are insignificant when compared with the upward movement of equity values over time.

In contrast to the remarkable stability of stock returns, real returns on fixed-income assets have declined markedly over time. From 1802 to 1926, the annual real returns on bonds and bills, although less than those on equities, were significantly positive. However, since 1926, and especially since World War II, fixed-income assets have returned little after inflation.