Well I guess you just uncovered a bias of mine
I was starting from the assumption that the strategy picked was neither “going all in on TSLA puts” nor “I only invest in canned food and ammo because our society is going to collapse because of the reptilian conspiracy”
I had narrowed the band to a range of sensitive approaches, imagining one would get less return because he/she chose to have less risk and/or volatility.
I probably should have just said:
“Dividend investing may or may not beat “SPY and chill” in the long term, but it also tends to have lesser drawdowns: if that is what helps you stay steady during times of turbulence, it’s worth the price”
My portfolio has probably underperformed the S&P500 in the last 10 years, if anything because I invest internationally, but I am fine with that as I have a tilt towards safety (ie stuff that will hold up well in case things go bad).
I know it feels like we have outlawed recessions through rates cutting and debt, but being Italian I know how crippling it is to live in a country that has to fight with a ratio of debt to gdp around 130.
It’s great when you go from 60 to 130, it’s less great when you stop and the economy lags, because the country has to throw such a huge chunk of the budget into interest expense payments and they cannot afford to spend elsewhere useful.
In japan, salaries are essentially the same, in real terms, than what they had in 1990
In Italy, they’re probably worse: entry level salary for an economics graduate in Milan is the same (nominal terms) today than it was when I started working in 2004.
1100€ or so net per month, in case anybody is interested.