Personal Finance & Money Asked on July 30, 2021
I have saved some money that I would like to use in the next 1-3 years to start a company. In the meantime I would like to make sure that inflation does not eat up into my accumulated capital. I am fine with any configuration that just tracks inflation i.e. perfectly fine with 0% real returns if I can really lower my risk (not more than 5-10% real capital loss).
Given the current environment however I am a bit at a loss at how to achieve that. Two main risks I worry about are inflation and rising rates.
Cash – will get crushed by inflation
Bonds – will get crushed by inflation && rising rates
Stocks – might survive inflation but will get crushed by rising rates
Something like VTIP seems ideal, short term bonds that are inflation-protected. Avg. maturity is 2.7 years which will incur some capital loss under rising rates, but losses would be limited. A couple of questions:
Does this actually satisfy my constraint i.e. 0% real return in next 0-3 years with very minimal risk or am I missing something?
What are good EUR/GBP/JPY equivalents? I want some more currency exposure. IBCI is going in that direction, but the avg. weighted maturity is almost 9 years which I’m not comfortable with (significant capital loss for e.g. a 2% yield increase).
I have around 15% of my money in gold. Should I raise or lower this given the objective above?
Is there any way to get exposure to commodities in a simple way (e.g. not get USO crushed as so many retail investors got last year when they wanted to bet on oil).
You seem to have a lot of conflicting ideas of what risks you are concerned about. What risks matter most to you should be driven primarily to your financial goals, which in your case is the startup costs for your future company. But what do you know for sure about those costs? Also, what level of $ are we talking about? If you plan on saving $20k over a few years to start a small business, losing a hypothetical 1-2% / year might just mean $1000 lost over 3 years, or $0.80 a day.
(1) Do you know how much $ you will need? How have you defined those costs? Is it rental space for an office or retail front, or salary costs for employees, or perhaps simply living expenses while you get a consulting business off the ground? Signing a 3 year lease to lock in your living expenses might be the best short-term hedge against inflation you can get. Buying a house can do a similar thing, but only over a longer term (typically 5+ years), because closing costs make mobility very expensive, so there is a risk associated with that.
(2) Related to #1, what currency will those costs be in? You mention covering yourself in multiple currencies, but if you are saving for a specific cash outlay in one jurisdiction, then saving money in multiple currencies is simply adding currency risk to the equation.
Why are you trying to get invested in commodities? Commodity trading is not at all related to a low-risk investment plan.
Gold also is not really a proven 'hedge' against inflation or anything else; there is an element (pun) of speculation there that you might consider as being 'prudently risk-averse', but isn't necessarily anything of the sort.
Inflation adjusted bonds could be a fine way for you to get a more guaranteed real-value return, as long as you know the timing of maturity (you mention starting a business in 1-3 years, and that doesn't quite line up with getting a 2 year bond, for example).
In short - determine what exactly you are most concerned with - you can't address every financial opportunity and safeguard at once.
Correct answer by Grade 'Eh' Bacon on July 30, 2021
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