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Asset Allocation - Bond Proxies
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- Lemon Pip
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Asset Allocation - Bond Proxies
I am a newbie to and recently moved to DIY ISA portfolio. Over the last year I have regularly read posts on Motley Fool and now Lemon Fool.
Due to my platform charging structure I have moved from OEICs and recently built a portfolio using individual low cost ETFs to mimic the breakdown of the All World index ETF (VWRL). I also have some Cash / Gilt ETF / Corp Bond ETF/ property ETF to counteract the Equity ETFs
The Asset allocation ratio is 70% Equity ETFs /30% Cash, Bonds, Property ETFs
I also have some legacy Share certificates in Severn Trent Water, British Telecom and National Grid. These types share are often described as "Bond Proxies" .
My question is - Should I consider these Utility shares in the Equity Part or the Bond part of my 70% / 30% asset allocation or neither ?
Thanks,
Stan
Due to my platform charging structure I have moved from OEICs and recently built a portfolio using individual low cost ETFs to mimic the breakdown of the All World index ETF (VWRL). I also have some Cash / Gilt ETF / Corp Bond ETF/ property ETF to counteract the Equity ETFs
The Asset allocation ratio is 70% Equity ETFs /30% Cash, Bonds, Property ETFs
I also have some legacy Share certificates in Severn Trent Water, British Telecom and National Grid. These types share are often described as "Bond Proxies" .
My question is - Should I consider these Utility shares in the Equity Part or the Bond part of my 70% / 30% asset allocation or neither ?
Thanks,
Stan
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- Lemon Half
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Re: Asset Allocation - Bond Proxies
Definitely put them as equities. Look at their behaviour and performance and you will see why.
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- Lemon Quarter
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Re: Asset Allocation - Bond Proxies
I also have some legacy Share certificates in Severn Trent Water, British Telecom and National Grid. These types share are often described as "Bond Proxies" .
I discovered TMF in 1999 and never once heard that expression until this year. It was someone talking about a REIT.
Ten years ago, I probably thought of Lloyds and Woolworth as a Bond Proxy.
Where the hell did this ridiculous expression come from, and can we please put it to rest?
They are not bonds.
Steve
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- Lemon Pip
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Re: Asset Allocation - Bond Proxies
stevensfo wrote:I also have some legacy Share certificates in Severn Trent Water, British Telecom and National Grid. These types share are often described as "Bond Proxies" .
I discovered TMF in 1999 and never once heard that expression until this year. It was someone talking about a REIT.
Ten years ago, I probably thought of Lloyds and Woolworth as a Bond Proxy.
Where the hell did this ridiculous expression come from, and can we please put it to rest?
They are not bonds.
Steve
I have heard many financial journalists over the last two years use the term 'Bond Proxy' to describe companies such as Unilever, P&G, UU, Severn Trent Water, British Telecom, SSE, National Grid, etc. I suppose they mean these company has a reliable dividends but as you said "They are not bonds"
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- 2 Lemon pips
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Re: Asset Allocation - Bond Proxies
1nv35t wrote:No harm in considering all stocks to be a form of undated variable coupon bond...
Similarly a property/home could be considered as being equity...
There's no harm considering a duck to be a penguin, except it isn't one. If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck then guess what?
Degsy
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- Lemon Quarter
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Re: Asset Allocation - Bond Proxies
Gadge wrote:This idea of replacing vwrl with individual equities to reduce cost seems like a faff to me. How and when will you rebalanced it to keep it accurate? Is the cost saving really worth it? VWRL is cheap enough anyway.
Gadge
The OP was replacing vwrl with ETFs, one can make a good copy using vusa, vjpn, vmid, vuke, verx, vapx, vfem, vgov. Sorry for the epics, they're all vanguard etfs and cover USA, Japan, FTSE250, FTSE200, Europe exUK, Asia exJapan,, Emerging Markets, government bonds. I did some sums and depending upon exact proportion you can halve the 0.25% vwrl down to 0.12%
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- Lemon Quarter
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Re: Asset Allocation - Bond Proxies
1nv35t wrote:No harm in considering all stocks to be a form of undated variable coupon bond......
Similarly a property/home could be considered as being equity.
The problem with lumping all assets together like this is that it risks ignoring the value of diversification that is achieved by holding weakly correlated asset classes. Bonds, equities and property often move orthogonally to each other.
BofE
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Re: Asset Allocation - Bond Proxies
Degsy67 wrote:1nv35t wrote:No harm in considering all stocks to be a form of undated variable coupon bond...
Similarly a property/home could be considered as being equity...
There's no harm considering a duck to be a penguin, except it isn't one. If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck then guess what?
Degsy
Based on the discussion so far instead of having a 70% Equity/ Bonds ratio perhaps I should regard my current asset allocation in terms of :-
70 % Risk Assets / 30% Uncorrelated (safer) Assets
Along with my VWRL like copy using Regional ETFs I believe I should include HY junk Bonds with the 70 % Risk Assets.
As the value history of my Utility shares (ST & NG) performs more like Bonds I think I will regard these utilities on the 30% Uncorrelated (safer) Assets side along side my Bond ETFs VGov, SLXX, IS15, GLTS.
Stanley
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- Lemon Slice
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Re: Asset Allocation - Bond Proxies
I wonder if the Green Infrastructure funds are the closest things to "Bond Proxies"
Their revenues mostly come from government backed subsidies and power prices. They yield about 6% now and the boards have all promised to raise dividends in line with RPI
They are BSIF, FSFL, JLEN. NESF, TRIG and UKW
Their revenues mostly come from government backed subsidies and power prices. They yield about 6% now and the boards have all promised to raise dividends in line with RPI
They are BSIF, FSFL, JLEN. NESF, TRIG and UKW
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- Lemon Pip
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Re: Asset Allocation - Bond Proxies
BusyBumbleBee wrote:I wonder if the Green Infrastructure funds are the closest things to "Bond Proxies"
Their revenues mostly come from government backed subsidies and power prices. They yield about 6% now and the boards have all promised to raise dividends in line with RPI
They are BSIF, FSFL, JLEN. NESF, TRIG and UKW
These all seem to be trading at a large premium to their Net Asset Value.
Stan
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- Lemon Slice
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Re: Asset Allocation - Bond Proxies
These all seem to be trading at a large premium to their Net Asset Value.
True - but so are bonds, retail bonds and pref shares.
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