I know there are some people interested in investing here so I figured I would ask. 18.11% for me - weighed down by investments in international index funds. (One decade they'll outperform the US right? Right?)
Ever year for the last decade has been the year international is going to outperform and it hasn't yet. I have been rebalancing every year to stay about 33% in international so I never get returns like the S&P 500 does. History tells us that everything reverts to the mean eventually and international will meet the US so I keep waiting.
I'm in SPY only as well, no restrictions. 2020 saw me paying way more in taxes, only because I did a sell/buy, because I feared a sell off due to the madness approaching the general election. That turned out to be a mirage, and I had to pay short term capital gains. I think maybe 2021 was better than 2020 for the S&P500. I dumped some shares before Dec. was done, I think it allows me to reap some without being taxed. I bought some back this month with that money, but that will be short term until Dec. 2022.Pure S&P500 in all my retirement accounts so like 27% in there or whatever it did last year. I’m 32 and can’t touch those for 27 years so I just chase easy returns.
SPY + my fiancées company stock in our after tax accounts, the latter of which did ~100%. Of course it’s tanked with the rest of tech this year so we’re barely beating SPY in those now over the last 13 months.
I used to keep 20% in International, but now it's down to just 17% simply because my domestic stocks keep outperforming it by a huge margin. I'm not putting more money in... all the big S&P 500 companies are multinational anyway.
Are you really asking about 2020, or 2021?
A common refrain that has been wrong for a while now. I mean I still hold international because it might come to pass one day but the world keeps coming up with new reasons why it won't this year* (Insert every year since - 1998? Didn't find it in a 5 second google search but tis been a while)It may be time to increase international. The out-performance of the US can't last forever.
We have 9 accounts (4 from my work alone due to how they do their 4xxY accounts) so I created a spreadsheet that automatically pulls in the prices. So all I need to do change the number of shares we own every so often which takes ~10min every time I do it. At the end of every year I input the YTD returns manually (that used to automatic but something in google sheets broke) and a formula calculates the overall ROI. It also tells me my asset allocation %. I think the initial setup was ~2 hours of work but almost no real effort since then. I have slowly added things over time though. I started recording snapshots of account balances Dec 31st in 2018 and then added a chart to show progression over time. Then I started copying the end of the year info into a new tab so I can see my ROI per asset class per year. Recently I added a rough 'spending' tracker tab which will get more detailed the closer we get to retirement. I also added retirement healthcare, retirement account withdrawal rules, pension guestimates for my wife and SS projections (At full promised benefits and at 65% of promised benefits).Since I have another 25 years to work, I really haven't aggregated all of my investments together to figure it out. Sometimes I feel like a dog that has all his bones buried across the back yard. I know it's all there, but would have to find it all to even know what's what.
For my main investment account, I've stayed with the S&P 500 and small-cap index for a number of years. 2021 was a good year at ~27-28% return. I have some crypto holdings that hit almost 500% for the year but have since taken a steep dive.
I don't do FAUX, but the Duck displays some of their headlines.....Yeah, I decided around April of 2021 that a small amount of my portfolio should be in crypto and crypto stocks, just in case the fanboys are right about it going up 10X over the next 5 years. So, yeah... I bought high and got my ass kicked. I'm probably break-even at this point.