6Lun·

So, after my lukewarm stumble onto the stage of the community recently, now for real:


Hello everyone (friendly nods to all),

I've been a mostly silent reader for a while now, but I'd like to introduce myself - even if I don't know what I'm up to - in keeping with local custom:


I am 55 & a civil servant in the Federal Civil Service, which puts me in the fortunate position (I hope) of not having to rely on additional income from investments for a materially bearable retirement (in twelve years' time, I would just about reach retirement without deductions after 40 years in the civil service). Investment is therefore essentially a consumption alternative, a safety cushion and - later - intended for my sons (living with their mother, 17 & 13 years old; each with their own portfolios / savings plans). My investment horizon is therefore open ended (or determined biologically or by the legitimate major needs of the offspring).


My investment history - still perceptible in the portfolio presented here - begins in 1996/1997 with the first (and later unfortunately also the second) placement of the $DTE (-1,37 %) T-share and the IPO of $PSM (-0,49 %) ProSieben (which has since more than made up for its initial investment through dividends, good boy). At some point, he inherited the current e.on position from his grandparents $EOAN (-1,15 %) e.on position and a position in $VOW3 (-0,24 %) Volkswagen, which I sold several years later on the advice of my savings bank at the time (bygones).


Then nothing for a long time (studies/traineeship, career start - I was "investing in my current account" and couldn't even manage to process my business trip expenses on time, tststs).


With a wife and children came the need to make provisions (the little guys simply cost a tidy sum through the cycle), which I initially did through sporadic ad hoc investments:


In particular hubris, at the beginning of the subprime crisis I trusted the investment banks to have everything under control and bought shares in $DBK (+0,08 %) Deutsche Bank (close to ATH), Bear Stearns and Merrill Lynch (the relics can be found as a minus at $BAC (+0,01 %) Bank of America for Bear Stearns and - invisibly - a tax loss carryforward to offset the now quite respectable $JPM (-0,09 %) J.P. Morgan position for Merrill Lynch), $DBK (+0,08 %) with additional purchases slowly creeping back into a "perhaps at some point back to zero" zone.


Otherwise, a number of active funds ($n/a LU0557858130, $n/a LU1143163779, $n/a IE00BG7PHW03, $n/a LU1496713741, $n/a DE0008474750, $n/a GB0030932676, $n/a (+1,12 %) LU1864952335 and predecessors), of which only $n/a (+0,11 %) Pictet Water had actually performed noticeably positively on a time-weighted basis.


From around 2015, I then gradually started to populate the current portfolio with various equity and ETF savings plans at ING ($GOOG (-0,72 %) Alphabet C, $AAPL (-0,76 %) Apple, $KO (-0,05 %) Coca-Cola, $NESN (-0,86 %) Nestlé, $BAYN (-2,87 %) Bayer (ouch!), $SIE (+1,36 %) Siemens, $DIS (+0,3 %) Walt Disney, $PFE (-0,09 %) Pfizer, $PR1J (+0,12 %), $FLXC (-0,61 %), $FLXK (+1,36 %), $EXS1 (+0,82 %), $LCUK (-0,06 %), $C060, $XMUS (+0,39 %), $DBXW (+0,27 %), mostly at 50 euros/month), supplemented by a few nicely timed individual purchases in $AAPL (-0,76 %) , when it was still trading at around 80 euros before the 3:1 stock split, as well as $MT (-1,91 %) AcelorMittal and $BHP (-0,85 %) (mini position, but with a nice dividend yield since then).


With supply chain problems and inflation emerging at the end of corona/beginning of Ukraine, I then started to invest in another portfolio, the actually far too expensive $SPAG (+0,19 %) iShares Agribusiness and $EXV6 (-0,65 %) iShares STOXX Europe 600 Basic Resources as a hedge against the rising cost of living that had gone wrong (had bet on more pronounced sectoral greed-flation).


Since I have since followed the recommendations of $VWCE (+0,19 %) resp. $ACWI (Glashaus!) in the meantime, the aggregated lump and the $AAPL (-0,76 %) and $GOOG (-0,72 %) was getting a bit scary, but I didn't want to touch the corresponding equity savings plans (more on this in a moment), I put my basic trust in the long-term out-performance of the US equity market into practice by investing in two "equal weight" index funds, namely with $WEBA (-0,39 %) on the NASDAQ100 (also with a savings plan) and $XDEW (-0,19 %) on the S&P500 (one-off investment only).


Some of this, especially the earlier investment history, is foreign to my Getquin portfolio history, as I only entered this after a portfolio reorganization in early 2023.


Over the years, my employer has steadily introduced stricter regulations for private financial transactions, which currently makes it practically impossible for me to invest in individual names or funds with certain predominant industry shares. However, in an exemplary manner under the rule of law, previously existing savings plans were protected in the respective iterations of the tightening, so that I jealously continue the remaining share savings plans (see above lump at $GOOG (-0,72 %) and in particular $AAPL (-0,76 %)).


I currently save monthly as follows (savings rate): Grandfathering: $GOOG (-0,72 %) (100), $AAPL (-0,76 %) (50), $DIS (+0,3 %) (50), $PFE (-0,09 %) (50), $KO (-0,05 %) (50); "regular": $VWCE (+0,19 %) (currently 520 with annual 4% dynamic), $SPAG (+0,19 %) (100), $WEBA (-0,39 %) (100), $EXV6 (-0,65 %) (100), $10AJ (-0,18 %) (100) and - before first-time execution - (100). $SDIP (-0,49 %) (100).


In addition, I have reflected certain market assessments at the respective point in time through individual purchases in country ETFs (long-term catch-up potential of the emerging markets through $HMEF (-0,07 %), $FLXC (-0,61 %), $FLXK (+1,36 %) - $FLXI (-0,86 %) was now too expensive for me and the Indian economy was not sufficiently represented by companies listed there; the sleeping innovation giant Japan through $PR1J (+0,12 %), "luxury always works" even in times of inflation through $DX2G (+0,85 %)Europe - especially CH and UK - as a general counterweight to the US through $VEUR (+0,31 %) and the sensible Nordics by $XNZN (+0,54 %)), so that there is now a colorful bouquet of ETFs. However, I am not fundamentally dissatisfied with this, especially as far as these are distributing & savings plan-capable in my ING portfolio, so that their distributions (from 75 euros) are automatically reinvested ($VEUR (+0,31 %) - is so large that this could work for each of the quarterly distributions, $DX2G (+0,85 %), $PR1J (+0,12 %)).


I think that as long as I am still subject to my employer's investment restrictions, I will only make marginal changes to this. For a "fire and forget" portfolio, however, I could imagine switching to a 70/20/10 portfolio in the medium term. $WEBG (+0,3 %), $HMEF (-0,07 %), $SDIP (-0,49 %) (@ING: please $SDIP (-0,49 %) savings plan, thank you!). Let's see what the end of PFOF brings on the cost side, especially for savings plans.


So, that's it; thanks for your patience and perseverance. You're welcome to give me tips, but as I said, my hands are largely tied (and I don't think much of the crypto tulip bulbs until they become an actual means of payment, not just for buying sinister services on the dark web)...


Here's to a successful investment community (&thanks for having me)!

40Puestos
316.699,75 €
33,67 %
106
22 Comentarios

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I haven't looked at your portfolio, but I celebrate your portfolio presentation. I want to see something like that more often here. And not always just "Here portfolio, give feedback. But only if it's good" ♥️

My condolences for the tied hands at BaFin (or similar). But it's often not so bad to be forced to be reasonable here 😁
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completely cool written & described! 😁👋
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@damike Grazie! The word is my oyster...
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Great idea.
I read here earlier that there is probably an ETF in which there are only ETFs.
Maybe your portfolio is something similar.
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Personally, there would be too many ETFs for me, I would lose the overview and would rather take an ACWI. But as long as you're okay with it and you've obviously thought about why you have these ETFs, it's all good.
What do you mean by employer restrictions? Are there general investment restrictions in the public service or only in your specific area?
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@Psychedelic_Sunflower Well, @DonkeyInvestor has already plucked my cap off my head - as far as I know, this is not a general restriction on public service, but only due to a special function...
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@amanaplanacanalpanama sorry, but I know it all too well 😅. If you want me to delete that part of my comment, let me know
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@DonkeyInvestor all good. ☺️
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@DonkeyInvestor Are there any other civil servants who are subject to such rules? I mean, except in higher positions, very specific positions or deeply economic positions, civil servants are usually allowed to manage their own assets.
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@topicswithhead I have no idea
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hD or gD? If that's what you want to say. In general, I'd be interested to know what you think about the financial aspects of becoming a civil servant.
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@Europoor hD (lawyer); the decision to work in the public sector ultimately depends on the individual's need for security. With the same qualifications and the same professional commitment, the earning opportunities in the private sector are probably better - in my opinion, the afterburner of the public service is the pension in monetary terms (71.75% of the gross of the last three years or so with 40 years of crediting, which are not easy to achieve in the public service), unfortunately I don't know what the situation is regarding the permeability to the private sector (plus possibly back), although I seem to remember that improvements in this respect were once under discussion, at least for public service -> PW
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@Europoor returned too early: transferring pension entitlements to pension insurance). In the public sector, you typically only make career moves at rather long intervals, so to stay with it for life, it helps to find a job that is intrinsically motivating/fun. Fortunately, this is the case for me most of the time...
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Nice. Thanks for the detailed introduction 😉👍🏼
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Don't you realize partial gains? Even if you only save the same shares and ETFs, you can realize partial sales in boom phases and reinvest in your savings plans when prices fall. PS: Shares that you acquired before 2009 are of course excluded.
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@Miyamoto As far as I know, all ETFs were acquired after 2009, for individual shares -> quasi prohibition of sale by the employer, FSA is exhausted by distributions and a rollover of ETFs (sale with new acquisition to realize the deferred tax burden) requires a time interval of at least one week (I mean?!) and two notifications (sale and "repurchase"). I had already considered selling the mini positions in individual shares and shares with particularly high hidden liabilities (e.g. my first 20 $DBK ) at the same time as shares with high reserves (my first 20 $AAPL ), but I shy away from petitioning my employer, which would probably be necessary for this...
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Top, keep it up! 👍
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Bayer should be sold. The share is dragging the portfolio down
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I would no longer add to Pfizer. No growth in the share.
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@Irina Let's say: given the current dividend yield, $PFE might not be the worst stock to build up tax offsetting potential for the time of a "big" portfolio reorganization as soon as I am no longer subject to the trade restrictions of my employer. Of course, this does not apply to $BAYN to the same extent at the moment, but to be honest, I expect them to overcome the Monsanto debacle at some point and then resume their original position in the chemical industry. Industry again. I am patient in this respect, of necessity.
If you really want to have a savings plan on the Global X SuperDividend,
then you can get a dual portfolio with another neo-broker (e.g. Scalable Capital, Trade Republic or Finanzen.net Zero) and run it there.
However, I no longer buy Global X SuperDividend, but only buy the best shares directly in which the Global X SuperDividend is invested.
This week, for example, I bought a few shares in Avance Gas Holding.
https://www.globalxetfs.com/funds/sdiv/
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@sv00010 Already done at Scalable...
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