![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi John - How are you ? How come you weren't at the Hinckley
end-of season cook-out this evening ? I bet we can move this thread to women and soaring if we keep at it... See ya, Dave PS: and of course you know about our Fair Value product... BB wrote: It's been a long and hard-fought battle, but the prize for wandering off topic furthest and fastest in r.a.s. history can now be awarded! Well done! (And, since my office is next to the guy who invented the term "efficient markets", I can't help but thank Andy for following up on this one.) John Cochrane |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
BB wrote:
It's been a long and hard-fought battle, but the prize for wandering off topic furthest and fastest in r.a.s. history can now be awarded! Well done! Now just a moment here! The subject is "How to buy a glider affordably - redux", and that's what we've been talking about. Maybe it should of been "How to make enough money to buy a glider that isn't affordable", but it wasn't. Frankly, it's the Original Poster who was off topic! Or is that what you meant? Going off topic in one posting? You know, that is exceptional... -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly "Transponders in Sailplanes" on the Soaring Safety Foundation website www.soaringsafety.org/prevention/articles.html "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" at www.motorglider.org |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
yea no kidding, the original post had nothing to do with gliders. he
was trying to work some stock or money market system or something. most of those schreders are going for 3-4 times what i payed for my cherokee with an enclosed trailer. just remember, if youve got enough glider to make it back to the airport, you probably could have gone at least a third longer distance if you wouldve just kept going downwind! i bought my glider to avoid having to share gliders with people (a'la club) call me selfish but i like having my own ship to go cross country when and where i want. Ill keep a partner in bed and that is all. |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
yea no kidding, the original post had nothing to do with gliders. he
was trying to work some stock or money market system or something. most of those schreders are going for 3-4 times what i payed for my cherokee with an enclosed trailer. just remember, if youve got enough glider to make it back to the airport, you probably could have gone at least a third longer distance if you wouldve just kept going downwind! i bought my glider to avoid having to share gliders with people (a'la club) call me selfish but i like having my own ship to go cross country when and where i want. Ill keep a partner in bed and that is all. |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In this part of the world most gliders (UK) are syndicated
(partnerships). In fact several people at our club are in multiple syndicates. For example one person has shares in a Bocian, K13 and a primary. Another has a 1/10th of a Nimbus 3dt and 1/2 an asw20. Keeps the cost down and the utilisation up. If you find a partner with a different lifestyle it helps. for example a 9-5 person and someone who works shifts such as an airline pilot or retired. Incidentally I was sat at a table outside our club drinking tea today and noticed I was in company with a junior world champion, 18m world champion, ex club class world champion, the chairman of the BGA and two ex british team members. How cool is that! Nigel Nigel |
#16
|
|||
|
|||
![]() On Oct 29, 12:00 pm, Nigel Pocock wrote: In this part of the world most gliders (UK) are syndicated (partnerships). In fact several people at our club are in multiple syndicates. For example one person has shares in a Bocian, K13 and a primary. Another has a 1/10th of a Nimbus 3dt and 1/2 an asw20. Keeps the cost down and the utilisation up. If you find a partner with a different lifestyle it helps. for example a 9-5 person and someone who works shifts such as an airline pilot or retired. Incidentally I was sat at a table outside our club drinking tea today and noticed I was in company with a junior world champion, 18m world champion, ex club class world champion, the chairman of the BGA and two ex british team members. How cool is that! Nigel Nigel |
#17
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
So cool you all have to sit around drinking tea instead of flying?
Mike Incidentally I was sat at a table outside our club drinking tea today and noticed I was in company with a junior world champion, 18m world champion, ex club class world champion, the chairman of the BGA and two ex british team members. How cool is that! Nigel Nigel |
#18
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
At 08:18 29 October 2006, Tony wrote:
yea no kidding, the original post had nothing to do with gliders. he was trying to work some stock or money market system or something. most of those schreders are going for 3-4 times what i payed for my cherokee with an enclosed trailer. just remember, if youve got enough glider to make it back to the airport, you probably could have gone at least a third longer distance if you wouldve just kept going downwind! i bought my glider to avoid having to share gliders with people (a'la club) call me selfish but i like having my own ship to go cross country when and where i want. Ill keep a partner in bed and that is all. You guys need to read more than the subject line... My post referred back to a post a year ago where someone asked if he had a new glider on order with a delivery a year out what was the best thing to do with his money. It ended up in a bet between a few of us and Tom Seim who made a prediction about the performance of the Fidelity ContraFund versus the broad market and Euro/$ exchange rates. His suggestion was to keep you money in dollars and invest in the ContraFund. Turned out to be bad advice. My post was to close the loop on that bet. BB is right - it went way off topic in the 2nd reply and never came back. Unless you consider spouting about anything vaguely related to the subject line as 'on topic'. How it morphed into Cherokees and patnerships and motorgliders is a testament to short attention spans. 9B |
#19
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
At 08:18 29 October 2006, Tony wrote:
yea no kidding, the original post had nothing to do with gliders. he was trying to work some stock or money market system or something. most of those schreders are going for 3-4 times what i payed for my cherokee with an enclosed trailer. just remember, if youve got enough glider to make it back to the airport, you probably could have gone at least a third longer distance if you wouldve just kept going downwind! i bought my glider to avoid having to share gliders with people (a'la club) call me selfish but i like having my own ship to go cross country when and where i want. Ill keep a partner in bed and that is all. You guys need to read more than the subject line... My post referred back to a post a year ago where someone asked if he had a new glider on order with a delivery a year out what was the best thing to do with his money. It ended up in a bet between a few of us and Tom Seim who made a prediction about the performance of the Fidelity ContraFund versus the broad market and Euro/$ exchange rates. His suggestion was to keep you money in dollars and invest in the ContraFund. Turned out to be bad advice. My post was to close the loop on that bet. BB is right - it went way off topic in the 2nd reply and never came back. Unless you consider spouting about anything vaguely related to the subject line as 'on topic'. How it morphed into Cherokees and patnerships and motorgliders is a testament to short attention spans. 9B |
#20
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Tom's advice: Don't buy Euros in 11/05, instead buy ContraFund (versus alternative funds, such as an S&P ETF or Euro-based index) and wait. Specific Euro prediction: weakening Euro from $1.20 in 11/05 to $1.10 or $1.05. Actual performance: Euro has strengthened from $1.20 to $1.25. What can I say, I was wrong on where the Euro would end up. I also said you can go broke trying predict currency exchange rates. My stated philosophy is to wait until the real invested returns allow you to buy the glider at what you consider to be an affordable price. Exchange rates WILL cycle; being patient is what it is all about. ContraFund: up 10.9% or 9.97% after management expenses S&P 500 index: up 15.1% DAX (German market) index: up 28.2% The S&P 500 did outperform ContraFund over the last year, but FCNTX handily beat it over a (longer) 3 year period. I realize that a lot of you regard 1 year as long term, but it isn't. I said it before, but I guess it just hasn't sunk in: I don't "chase" returns, I find money managers that are in the top quintile (that is the top 20%) of their peer group over a long period of time. Relative performance can vary pretty dramatically over a short period of time. The S&P 500 has outperformed FCNTX for just the last 6 months. So if you had taken $100,000 for a new glider (pick your own number, but this one is nice and round) and invested it in the ContraFund and taken it out yesterday to buy Euros you would have 87,644 Euros or a 5% return after adjusting for exchange rates. If on the other had you had bought Euros a year ago and put your money in a no-load DAX index you would today have 107,017 Euros, or 23% more than under Tom's strategy. In fact buying Euros and investing in a short-term money market fund would have done better too. You are, indeed, extraordinally skillful at predicting the past! Again, short term time horizons amplify differences in investment strategies, but give us little insight as to what the future will bring. Personally, I recommend a minimum of 5 high-grade mutual funds for an adequately diversified portfolio. And this should include international exposure, which has outperformed U.S. concentrated mutual funds such as ContraFund (FCNTX). It is a moot point now because FCNTX is closed to new investors. For a strategy that relies on mutual fund upgrading (keeping your portfolio in the top quartile or quintile) go to http://www.fundx.com. They are now recommending a number of ETFs (exchange traded funds) such as PWV, EZU FEV and IEV. In practice, I rebalance my portfolio 3-4 times per year. This process led me to reduce my holdings in FCNTX, which now represents about 3% of my holdings. My largest holding is AEPGX (American Funds EuroPacific - notice the "Euro"), which returned 20% in the last year, followed by Fidelity Diversified International, which returned 17%. I also own one fund , Fidelity Latin America (FLATX), that returned 45%, but this is definitely not one for the faint of heart! My recommendation regarding FCNTX was based on its outstanding performance over the long haul (10 years), and that, given the attention span of the typical glider pilot, I had to limit it to a single pick. I still believe that 10 years from now it will be a good choice. Of course there is still a month to go so maybe the ContraFund will make a big move, but over the past 12 months (and particularly the past 3 months the ContraFund has significantly underperformend all the major market indicies. This was the point about chasing past returns - anyone looking at the ContraFund performance up to last November and deciding to invest with an expectation of above market returns would have been disappointed. Credit to Tom for putting his money where his mouth was and making a prediction - many people don't have the strength of their convictions. He just didn't turn out to be right on either count up until now. The principal of compound rate of return will make me right at some point in the future. FCNTX's historical return of over 11% means it will double, by the rule of 77s, in 7 years. And FCNTX is STILL in the top quintile of its peers, which is why I still own it. But you have to manage your portfolio; if any funds fall out of the top quantile dump them and replace it with one that is (and has been over a significant time period). BTW: my portfolio returned over 17% in the last year. Tom |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Euro vs Contrafund Update, or How to Buy a Glider Affordably | [email protected] | Soaring | 6 | July 7th 05 05:07 AM |
Euro vs Contrafund, or how to buy a glider (affordably) | [email protected] | Soaring | 2 | March 27th 05 07:46 AM |
Bad publicity | David Starer | Soaring | 18 | March 8th 04 03:57 PM |
"I Want To FLY!"-(Youth) My store to raise funds for flying lessons | Curtl33 | General Aviation | 7 | January 9th 04 11:35 PM |
I wish I'd never got into this... | Kevin Neave | Soaring | 32 | September 19th 03 12:18 PM |