My Public Equities Returns Over 20 Years (ages 12-32)

A few weeks ago I asked Fidelity to send my brokerage history dating back to when I opened the account in 1998.  Last week I got a big package in the mail and so thought it’d be a great time to go through my investing track record!

When I got into the market

When I was in 5th grade, I really wanted to open a brokerage account.  It was the beginning of the dot com bubble, and everyone seemed to be talking about the stock market.  It seemed like a good way to make money.

I’d heard stories of how my Dad took his paper route money when he was a kid and started trading stocks.  But, he was a bit reticent to let my brother (a year younger) and I open accounts given the market was so hot, and that we had a good chance of starting out investing at the peak of a cycle.

Luckily, my Mom thought it was a good idea and eventually took us to Fidelity one afternoon to open accounts.

By this time, I was 12 and in 6th grade.  But, not too young to start saving (in fact we’d opened savings accounts when I was in first grade – the idea that for every $100 I scrapped together I could get $5/yr for free was too good to pass up – this was when interest rates weren’t 0%).

My Performance

The first year was rough.  I bought one stock, MXE, a Mexican Holding company (like Berkshire Hathaway, but cheaper, and maybe the Mexican market was being overlooked, was the vague investment thesis).  It went down 17% that year (I eventually made a modest profit off it).  Most of my ideas in the early days were from reading Worth magazine to see which stocks they were pumping at the time, and then pick the one I liked the most.

The next three years were pretty amazing though.  I traded in and out of a few tech stocks.  I was in cash for the blow up in 2000.  And, I was finally was able to afford a share of BRK.B (Berkshire Hathaway’s “b class”).  These all lead me to beating the market by 125% over 1999-2001.  Finally, I had that freshman year nest egg I always dreamed of :).

I won’t bore you with every trade (there were many over the decades, but not that many each year).  In summary, here’s a chart of my annual returns over the last ~20 years:

Over the next decade or so, I made some good calls and bad ones.  Overall, I tend to beat the market in down turns, and lag it when things are going great.

Here’s a chart of my annual returns relative to the S&P 500:

I’m proud to say that my public equities have outperformed the S&P 500 by about 3% per year on average.  Of course, a lot of this is luck.  I had some rational behind every trade I made, but does a freshman in high school really know what they are doing?

It’s interesting to note that my annual returns are starting to converge closely with the S&P 500 over time:

Scorecard

The S&P has returned a 6.5% IRR since 1998 – 2017 (when my data ends for now), vs my 9.5% average annual return.

Overall for every dollar put into the S&P in 1998, you’d expect to have $3.29.  For every $1 I invested, I have $5.59, which is about 41% more.

Data notes

I’m understating my returns a bit here.  My transaction costs were around $20/trade when I started, which was a meaningful amount of money relative to my overall portfolio.  So, my returns are probably a bit higher each year, especially in those early years (>1% of my portfolio went to fees in 1999 alone).

I got the S&P return data here for reference.

I almost calculated a sharpe ratio, but realistically I’d need to do a lot more data analysis on my portfolio and I don’t have all the info I need.  However, I’d like to think my standard deviation relative to the S&P is lower given I’ve always had a decent amount of money in cash.

What I learned

  • Starting to invest/save early has a few major advantages including compounding, as well as working towards your 10,000 hours to “master” money management.
  • You can start with a very small amount of money, my first savings account had <$100, and as long as you have >$1,000, you can start investing in the market.
  • It’s important to take a long term view on your savings/investing.  I’ve never withdrawn money from my Fidelity account.  This is money I don’t need, and won’t need unless something very terrible happens.
  • Don’t freak out during downturns, and don’t think you’re a genius when you make a lot of money.  A lot of this is luck, which hopefully evens out over time.
  • You have to pay up for really great companies – I sold Amazon 5 years ago because it was very “expensive” on a P/E basis.  This is really hard for someone like me who’s naturally frugal.
  • Analyzing your investing style and decisions can give you some insights into your personality/strengths/weaknesses – I’m less aggressive than I should be, cheaper than I should be, and tend to focus on ‘contrarian’ opportunities more than average.
  • Almost no one can consistently beat the market – this is why the  majority of my money is now in low cost ETFs, with a few exceptions.  Of course, if you are extremely shrewd and level headed and can dedicate >10 hrs/day to it, there is a lot of alpha out there.
  • You can’t regret bad decisions and missed opportunities, just learn from them.
  • Allowing your child to start investing with a small amount of money is a good idea, as long as they are very interested in it, and prudent.  They’ll lose money at some point, which is a good thing.  And, over time, they’ll learn a lot while saving along the way.

More to come

I’ve had the opportunity to do some investing in private tech companies, and so would like to update my overall annual investing IRR with these returns in a future post.  Overall I’d estimate I’ve gotten around a 7x return on these investments over the past 8 years.  It should be very interesting data to add!

4,222 Replies to “My Public Equities Returns Over 20 Years (ages 12-32)”

  1. I want to to thank you for this very good read!!
    I certainly enjoyed every bit of it. I have got you book-marked to look at new stuff you post…

  2. I am really impressed with your writing skills and
    also with the layout on your blog. Is this a paid theme or did you
    customize it yourself? Either way keep up the excellent quality writing,
    it is rare to see a nice blog like this one today.

  3. Thanks , I have just been searching for info about this subject for a while and
    yours is the greatest I’ve discovered till now.
    However, what in regards to the bottom line? Are you sure in regards to
    the supply?

  4. I enjoy what you guys are up too. Such clever work and coverage!
    Keep up the excellent works guys I’ve included you
    guys to our blogroll.

  5. Howdy! This post couldn’t be written any better! Reading this post reminds me of my good old room mate!
    He always kept chatting about this. I will forward this write-up to him.
    Fairly certain he will have a good read. Many thanks for sharing!

  6. hey there and thank you for your info – I have certainly picked up anything
    new from right here. I did however expertise some technical points using this web site, as
    I experienced to reload the site lots of times previous to I could get it to load correctly.
    I had been wondering if your web hosting is OK? Not that
    I’m complaining, but sluggish loading instances times will often affect your placement in google and could damage your quality score if advertising and marketing with Adwords.

    Well I’m adding this RSS to my email and can look out for
    a lot more of your respective exciting content.
    Ensure that you update this again soon.

  7. I’ve been exploring for a little for any high quality articles or blog posts in this sort of house .

    Exploring in Yahoo I at last stumbled upon this site. Reading this information So i’m happy to convey that I’ve an incredibly just right uncanny feeling I found out just what I needed.
    I so much indubitably will make certain to don?t fail to remember
    this web site and provides it a glance regularly.

  8. I savour, lead to I found just what I was taking a look for.
    You’ve ended my 4 day lengthy hunt! God Bless you man. Have a great day.

    Bye

  9. Thanks for your personal marvelous posting! I quite enjoyed reading
    it, you may be a great author.I will always bookmark your blog
    and will eventually come back at some point. I want
    to encourage you to ultimately continue your great job,
    have a nice evening!

  10. You really make it seem so easy along with your presentation but I find this topic to be actually one thing that I believe I might by
    no means understand. It seems too complex and very
    huge for me. I’m looking forward to your subsequent
    put up, I will attempt to get the hang of it!

  11. Hello! This is my first visit to your blog! We are a collection of volunteers and starting
    a new project in a community in the same niche.
    Your blog provided us valuable information to work on. You have done a marvellous job!

  12. hi!,I like your writing very much! proportion we communicate extra approximately your
    article on AOL? I need a specialist on this house to unravel my problem.
    May be that’s you! Having a look forward to peer you.

  13. I think the admin of this website is genuinely working
    hard in favor of his website, for the reason that here every stuff is quality based material.

  14. Neat blog! Is your theme custom made or did you download it
    from somewhere? A design like yours with a few simple tweeks would really make
    my blog stand out. Please let me know where you got your theme.
    Cheers

  15. I got this web site from my pal who shared with
    me about this web page and at the moment this time
    I am browsing this web site and reading very informative articles or reviews at this time.

  16. I’m gone to say to my little brother, that he should also
    pay a quick visit this webpage on regular basis to take updated from most up-to-date reports.

Comments are closed.