Last post, I had a $2.1M account with $1M in gains.

    In 6 months, the account grew another +$470K so I'm at +$1.5M of total gains since my first post 5 and a half years ago. I did withdraw $250K to buy a new home, so the account sits at $2.3M.

    Ending – Net Deposits = +$1.5M in gains

    That's a +27% compound return a year for nearly 6 years. I continue to crush regular, r/stock boomer index fund portfolios:

    I (blue) am +263% while stocks (green) are barely +100% over that time period

    The account has $7.3M assets and $5M borrowed in options so that's 3.2x leverage. I'm under-leveraged, I know. The prudent and correct thing is to borrow another $2M and get back to the optimal 4x leverage. I haven't decided.

    Summary:

    – Borrow 2-4x the value of your account on margin.

    – Dump it all in a multi-asset, diversified portfolio. For the stock sleeve, I prefer smart-beta funds due to their higher expected returns. The goal is maximum compound returns.

    Positions: Stocks, bonds, mutual funds and $5M borrowed in Box Spread Options

    Q&A

    1) When will you de-lever/pay-off the debt/liquidate?

    – Never. This maximizes returns. Why do anything but this?

    2) What's it like for your account to grow +$1M per year?

    – It's cool, you should try it. Save what you can, invest it like this and give it time. I started with just $20K in 2017.

    3) Are you a billionaire with a bunch of assets elsewhere?

    – I have every penny riding in here. Any other place it could be in will earn me less than 27% per year so why do that?

    I borrowed $5.7M to invest. Should I borrow more?
    byu/Dry-Drink inwallstreetbets



    Posted by Dry-Drink

    29 Comments

    1. Notwolferd1588 on

      I refuse to believe anyone with access to that much money is asking Reddit for help. Fuck off and do it yourself.

    2. The day of reckoning is coming, its one margin call away and you will be ABSOLUTELY crying about why you did not liquidate

    3. Me: How retarded is this?

      ChatGPT: 8/10. In short: it looks like genius on paper, but in reality, it’s a high-probability financial disaster masquerading as skill.

    4. I can tell it is bothering you, that you haven’t borrowed more, so I fully support you, you should definitely borrow a lot more. Do you really wanna be the guy who didnt borrow enough money when he was already up a couple of mil?

    5. Personal_Breakfast49 on

      You should start a fund and do it as your main activity with other people’s money.

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