Categories
Financial Technology

Adding Your NAB Trade Portfolio to Navexa

It’s now easier than ever to export your historical trades from your NAB Trade account — and automatically add future buy and sell trades — to your Navexa portfolio tracker account.

Navexa’s portfolio tracker provides insights into holding and portfolio performance, returns, income, diversification, tax and more.

To deliver accurate and up-to-date tracking and analytics data on your portfolio, your Navexa account requires that you upload your data.

There are three ways to do this.

First, you can add your holdings manually, one at a time.

If you only hold a handful of stocks and you trade relatively infrequently, this might suit you just fine.

Just select ‘Add Holding’ next to your portfolio’s name when you’re viewing your portfolio in Navexa to add holdings manually.

The second way to add portfolio data to your account is to upload a .csv or .tsv file using our Portfolio File Uploader tool.

This requires that you collate and format the document and run it through our tool to ensure we correctly add each of your trades accurately.

To add data this way, select ‘Import Portfolio File’ from the dropdown menu next to your portfolio name.

But if you’re trading with NAB Trade, there’s a third, much quicker, more direct way to accurately add your historical trade data to your Navexa portfolio.

Quickly & Easily Add Your NAB
Trade Portfolio to Navexa

Here’s the best way to add your historical trades to Navexa if you’re a NAB Trade customer.

Next to ‘Add Holding’, you’ll see the option to ‘Import From Broker’.

Import From Broker
Import From Broker

This brings you to a list of brokers. Simply find and select NAB Trade.

Below the NAB Trade account screenshot, you’ll see a list of steps to go through to export and add your data to Navexa.

NAB Trade file uploader

Follow the instructions in the list:

Step 1: Click the ‘Trading’ menu.

Step 2: Then click ‘Confirmations’

Step 3: Set the date range to the maximum range you want to import and click the ‘Apply’ button.

Step 4: Click the ‘Download’ button.

Step 5: Once the file is downloaded, upload in Navexa below:

From here, select ‘Choose File’ to find it on your computer.

Then, click ‘Upload File’.

Now, you’ll see this:

Broker File Upload

It should only take a few minutes for your NAB Trade data to show up in your Navexa account.

You’ll receive an email confirming this.

Then, you’ll be able to use your Navexa account to browse all your historical NAB Trade trades and holdings!

Automatically Add New NAB Trade Buy & Sell Trades to Your Navexa Account

You can use Navexa Link to automatically forward your NAB Trade contract notes to your account.

This will mean every time you make a new trade, you’ll see it reflected in Navexa shortly afterward.

This is how you set it up.

Click ‘Manage Portfolios’.

Find the portfolio you want to update with your new trades, click ‘Actions’, then click ‘View/Edit’.

Under ‘Navexa Link’, you’ll see an email address.

This is your unique forwarding email address for the portfolio.

Copy it, go to the email account where you receive your NAB Trade contract notes, then create an email rule that forwards all future contract note emails to this address.

Just allow five minutes or so for us to set up your account to display the new trades.

Integrating Your NAB Trade Account
With Navexa Has Never Been Easier

With our NAB Trade Broker File Upload, and Navexa Link, you just need to complete two tasks when setting up your Navexa account.

Upload your historical trades to bring your Navexa account up to date with your NAB Trade account.

Then, set up Navexa Link contract forwarding for your portfolio or portfolios.

You’ll never have to manually add a trade again.

And if you want to create another portfolio, simply repeat the process for historical trades and contract note forwarding.

Categories
Financial Technology

Integrating Your CommSec Trading Account With Navexa

We’ve created an easy way for you to use data from your CommSec broker account in your Navexa portfolio tracking account. Read on to see how to add historical trades and automatically update new trades from your CommSec account.

The Navexa portfolio tracker serves self-directed investors in two key ways.

First, by calculating, tracking and displaying your true, annualized returns for the entire duration of your portfolio.

Second, as an impartial platform focused not on trading but on analytics and reporting, Navexa provides a range of tools to help you better understand and interpret your portfolio performance.

These include portfolio contributions and diversification reports and charts, extensive dividend recording and reporting tools, and taxable income reports for both capital gains, investment income and calculating unrealised gains tax obligations.

But to provide you with accurate and up-to-date portfolio tracking and analytics, you need to make sure your Navexa account contains complete and accurate historical trade data, and accurate data on any new buy or sell trades you make.

We solved the second part of that problem with Navexa Link, our tool for automatically forwarding contract notes to your Navexa account in order to effortlessly add your latest trades.

We also created a way for you to add historical trades by uploading .csv or .tsv file (go here for a simple guide to our Portfolio File Uploader).

If you trade with CommSec, there’s now an even better way to add your historical data from your trading account.

How To Easily Import Your Historical Trades From Your Commsec Account Into Navexa

In the portfolio page of your Navexa account, if you click on the dropdown menu next to ‘Add Holding’, you’ll see the option to ‘Import From Broker’.

Import From Broker

Click that link and you’ll go through to a list of brokers. Click CommSec.

CommSec

You’ll see a CommSec account screenshot and a list as follows.

CommSec

Follow the instructions in the list:

Step 1: Go to the ‘Portfolio’ tab.

Step 2: Then go to the ‘Accounts’ sub tab.

Step 3: Then go to the ‘Transactions’ sub tab.

Step 4: Set the date range to the maximum range you want to import and click the ‘Search’ button.

Step 5: Click the ‘Download’ button and select ‘CSV’.

Once you’ve downloaded the file from your CommSec account, hit ‘Choose File’ on this page and select it.

Then, click ‘Upload File’.

Then you’ll come through to this screen:

Broker File Upload

Depending on the size of the CommSec file you’re uploading, it should only take a few minutes for Navexa to add the historical trade data to your account.

You’ll see an email notification when the upload is complete.

Then, you’ll be able to use your Navexa account to browse all your historical trades and holdings!

This is the fastest way to add historical trade data from your CommSec trading account to your Navexa account.

So, what about future trades, after you’ve uploaded everything to date?

How To Automatically Update Your Navexa Account With The Latest Trades From Your Commsec Account

You can manually add each new trade you make to your Navexa account.

But, it takes time.

And, it could impact the accuracy of your portfolio performance calculations if you make any errors when manually adding the trade data.

Our Navexa Link contract notes forwarding tool solves both those problems.

Here’s how it works.

Click ‘Manage Portfolios’ in your account.

Find the portfolio you want to automate your trades for and click ‘Actions’, then select ‘View/Edit’.

Under the heading Navexa Link, you’ll see an email address.

This is your unique forwarding email address for the selected portfolio.

Copy that email address, go to the email account where you receive your contract notes from your broker, and create an email rule that forwards all future contract note emails to this address.

Once you’ve created the automatic forwarding in your email account, you’re good to go.

Just allow five minutes or so for us to set up your account to receive and reflect the new trades you’ll be forwarding.

Then, you’ll see every trade you make automatically displayed in your Navexa account and factored into your portfolio performance.

This will save time and ensure your Navexa portfolio’s accuracy.

We’ve Made It Easy To Integrate Your CommSec & Navexa Accounts

Between our historical trades importing tool for CommSec trading accounts, and our Navexa Link tool for automatically adding new trades to your account, you really only need to complete two tasks when creating your Navexa account.

First, upload your historical trades to bring your Navexa account up to date with your CommSec account.

Then, set up Navexa Link contract forwarding for your portfolio or portfolios.

From there you’ll never have to manually add a trade again.

And if you want to create another portfolio, simple repeat the process for historical trades and contract note forwarding.

It’s all part of our mission to create seamless, simple portfolio tracking for CommSec customers using Navexa.

Categories
Financial Literacy Investing

Dividend Reinvestment Plans: Some of the Key Pros & Cons

Dividends don’t always arrive in the form of cash. Some stocks allow investors to automatically reinvest their dividend payments into additional shares. Here, we take a look at some of the positives and negatives associated with reinvesting investment income instead of receiving dividend payouts as cash.

So, you’re collecting dividend income from your investments.

Great!

Investing in quality dividend-paying stocks can be a brilliant way to boost your returns — see how one of my income investments paid back nearly half my capital in just four years.

There’s more to dividend investing than just getting paid to hold shares, though.

Some stocks don’t simply pay you a cash dividend on a regular basis.

They give you the option to reinvest your dividend income into additional shares.

As you’ll see in our post explaining dividend reinvestment plans (DRPs), this option can have powerful effects on long-term returns.

On a long enough timeline, a DRP could be the difference between making a few hundred thousand dollars on an investments, and a couple of million.

But that doesn’t mean that choosing a DRP for your investment income is always going to be the default best option.

In this post, I’m going to go through three pros and three cons of reinvesting your dividends.

I should point out, though, that this is by no means an exhaustive list.

(Nor does it constitute financial advice.) 

DRP Pros: Compounding Through Increased Exposure & Saving On Brokerage Fees

  • Compounding

I like what Einstein (allegedly) said about compound interest being the eighth wonder of the world.

The true wonder of compounding only becomes apparent with enough time.

As a long-sighted value investor, I try to let time work for me.

By that, I mean I look for quality, undervalued stocks and I buy them with a view to going ‘The Full Buffett’ and holding onto them for decades.

If you’re prepared to be patient and hold an investment for a long time, a DRP might work in your favour.

Why? Because over time, not only will your additional shares compound the size of your overall position, but you’ll receive more shares each time (since dividend amounts relate directly to your position size).

In some cases, with the right companies over a long enough time, you could double the size of your position simply by allowing reinvested dividends to accumulate.

  • Increasing Your Exposure

Another advantage of using the DRP on an investment is that, over time (and again, the more time you allow, the more powerful the effect could be) is that accumulating more shares increases your exposure to the stock.

If you’ve selected a quality company to invest in, and the company’s stock increases in price over time, you will have more shares exposing your portfolio to that capital gain.

In simple terms, if you had 1,000 shares worth $10,000 in a company that rose 100%, you’d have 1,000 shares worth $20,000.

But if you’d reinvested your dividends and that had netted you, say, an extra 200 shares, you’d have 1,200 worth $24,000.

  • Acquiring Extra Shares Without Paying For Them

One of the factors many investors neglect to consider when calculating their TRUE returns is brokerage fees and other transaction costs.

Generally, when you make a trade, you’ll pay your broker a fee to facilitate that trade.

This is another reason why I favour longer term, relatively inactive investing as opposed to buying and selling frequently, trying to chase trends or predict the market.

If I hold a single investment for 20 years, the fact that I paid, say, $100 brokerage becomes virtually irrelevant when I annualize my return.

And if you prefer not to let fees eat into your returns, you might like the DRP option, too.

Some stocks’ DRPs allow you to accumulate the additional shares for zero fees, since you’re not buying through a broker but rather have a direct agreement with the company itself.

So, those are three upsides to DRPs. In my view, investing this way only really delivers a meaningful advantage if you allow enough time for compounding, increased capital exposure, and the benefits of not paying brokerage on your additional shares to accumulate.

Now, let’s take a look at the downsides of DRPs.

DRP Downsides: Opportunity Cost, Less Control, And The Flipside of Increased Exposure

  • You Don’t Control The Price Of Your Additional Shares

Acquiring additional shares through a DRP is great, in principle. Like I said, on a long enough timeline, and provided you’ve invested in a quality company that grows stronger and more profitable, it’s a sound idea to acquire more shares.

But like I also said, I’m a value investor.

I only buy shares in a stock I calculate is trading under its intrinsic value.

If you share that approach to buying stock, you may find that a DRP has an unintended downside; acquiring additional shares at prices above what you’d choose to pay were you analysing the stock with fresh eyes as a new investor.

Not only do you not get to choose the price you pay for each bundle of additional shares, you don’t get to choose the timing of the reinvestment, either.

So, in terms of control and in the spirit of not paying more than you want to, a DRP may be a downside.

  • Opportunity Cost

The essence of the DRP is that you receive shares instead of cash.

As we know, this can have plenty of benefits, especially if you’re investing for the long term and intend to let the power of compounding work its magic over.

However, one potential downside of opting for a DRP over a cash dividend, is that you’ll miss out on opportunities to do things with that investment income other than automatically convert it into additional shares.

In other words, opting to reinvest your dividends could have a negative impact on your portfolio diversification.

Consider early 2021’s cryptocurrency bull market.

Say you’d been reinvesting your dividends in one of your stocks for five years, and you’d turned a $10,000 position into a $20,000 position (between capital gains and the DRP).

Not bad, a 100% gain.

But say you’d taken the cash dividend instead and invested it in Bitcoin, you could have exposed that income to far greater capital gains.

Of course, this is a simplistic example that benefits from hindsight (five years ago and even today, many still wouldn’t recommend cryptocurrency as a sound investment).

The takeaway here is, while a DRP can be a powerful tool in compounding your investment income and position size, it can also cost you the opportunity to invest your dividends in other assets and opportunities.

  • The Flipside Of Increased Capital Exposure

This potential downside is a reflection of the potential positive we mentioned above — increasing your exposure.

Because, of course, if a DRP increases your exposure to a quality stock’s capital gains, it can equally expose your capital to greater losses.

This is something you should always take into account if you’re reinvesting your dividends back into a stock — and of course any time you invest — your capital is always at risk.

While the stock market does generally rise over the long term, that doesn’t mean every stock does.

Everything, in theory, can go to zero.

So if you were invested in a company that collapsed or went bankrupt, that increased exposure through your DRP could result in you losing more money than you might have if you had simply collected your dividends as cash.

Dividend Income: To Take The Cash, Or Reinvest?

Dividend reinvestment can be a valuable tool for the investor.

Of course, like any decision we’re faced with when trying to build wealth in the market, there are pros and cons.

Using a DRP to compound your income and capital can be a powerful way to grow your portfolio.

Compounding, increased capital exposure, and zero or few brokerage fees are in my view key benefits of utilizing a DRP.

On the other hand, increased exposure could bring increased risk, while DRPs may also inhibit you from investing in other opportunities or diversifying your portfolio.

The other key potential downside to DRPs is that you lose control over the timing and price of the additional shares your dividends will earn you.

In my opinion — and bear in mind I am not a professional investor or advisor — it’s important to view a DRP investment in both the wider context of your overall portfolio and financial goals, and — in my opinion — through the lens of long term investing.

I hope this post on the pros and cons of DRPs has been helpful for you.

I’ll leave you with one of my favourite investing quotes, from Warren Buffet’s business partner, Charlie Munger:

“The big money is not in the buying and selling. But in the waiting.”

Categories
Financial Literacy Investing

Ex-Dividend Dates Explained: What, When & Why

What does it mean when a stock goes ‘ex-dividend’? As you’ll see in this brief guide, the ex-dividend date is an important part of the income investing — and, potentially the value investing — process. We explain what it means and why you should understand its impacts when buying stocks for both capital gains and dividend income.

If you’re new to income investing, you may think earning dividends from stocks you own is simple and straightforward.

In principle, it is; You buy shares in a profitable company that pays a portion of its earnings out as cash dividends to investors who’ve traded their capital for shares in the business.

I’ve personally been receiving income from some of my investments for years now.

I’ve seen first-hand how powerful a steady stream of dividends can be for your overall portfolio performance.

But understanding investment income is a little more complex than just buying and holding any stock that pays a dividend.

Here, we explain the finer points of dividend payments.

As you’ll see, the date a company pays out a dividend to shareholders is just one of the key dates you need to be aware of as an investor.

What Does It Mean When A Stock Goes Ex-Dividend?

There are four key dates around dividend payments.

The first is the declaration date. This is the date the company announces it will issue a cash dividend in the future.

Second, you have the record date. That’s the date the company goes through its list of shareholders to confirm those who are eligible to receive the upcoming dividend.

Third is the ex-dividend date.

This is an especially important one, as it determines which shareholders will be considered eligible on the record date.

The ex-dividend date is commonly set two days before the record date.

This means you must own shares in the company on or before that date in order to qualify for the upcoming dividend.

Finally, there’s the dividend payable date, or simply the payment date.

That’s exactly what it sounds like; the day the company pays out the dividend to the shareholders who’ve met the criteria to receive it.

Those are the four key stages of a dividend.

The ex-dividend date is arguably the most important because it’s the cut-off point for determining whether or not you will receive the next scheduled payment for your shares.

Is It Better To Buy A Stock Before Or After The Ex-Dividend Date?

In my opinion — and everything on our blog is opinion, it’s not financial advice — there’s no great advantage to buying before or after the ex-dividend date.

But that’s because I personally prefer to hold any shares I buy for a relatively long time.

If you’re looking for a quick cash gain, you may consider trying to buy shares in a stock right before the ex-dividend date.

On paper, that might not seem like a bad idea.

In reality, the market adjusts the stock price when a company trades ex-dividend. This takes account of the cash payment being made to shareholders.

Generally, the share price adjusts by the amount of the dividend, meaning if you buy right near the ex-dividend date and sell right after the dividend payable date, you could take a small capital loss despite having captured the income.

In other words, trying to dip in and out of a stock to grab the dividend may not work out as profitably as you’d hoped.

Even if that weren’t the case… and you could dip in and out of a stock quick and easy to claim some fast income, you’d still have fees and taxes to contend with, which would eat into your gains (see the full list of factors that impact your true portfolio performance).

Still, there probably are people out there who buy and sell around ex-dividend dates regardless of the downsides. So…

Are Ex-Dividend Dates Value Investing Opportunities?

I personally follow the value investing strategy set out by Benjamin Graham and, later, Warren Buffet.

I prefer to look for high quality companies trading below their true value.

If I find one of those, I’d rather buy shares and hold them for a (very) long time than trade frequently.

So, for me, an ex-dividend date isn’t necessarily an investment opportunity in itself.

But, if I calculate that this is a stock I want to own, I might look to get in before the ex-dividend date.

Having said that, since my investment strategy is a long term one, missing a single dividend payment by buying in after the ex-dividend date wouldn’t bother me one bit.

I’d be looking to hold (that’s stockspeak for ‘hodl’ if you’re joining us from the crypto world) those shares for many years, ideally capturing a long term capital gain plus the income the company pays out over that time.

But, that is just me. Not everyone invests the way I do (learn about my experience buying my first ever shares to see why I invest the way I do).

I hope this post has shed some light on ex-dividend dates, the process they’re part of, and the impacts they can have on both stock prices and investment income.

Categories
Investing

The Big Short (Squeeze): Unpacking The GameStop Saga

A subreddit community takes on the Wall Street elite. The battleground? A struggling brick-and-mortar games retailer. What does the GameStop short squeeze saga reveal about the changing investment landscape… and investing in a market where powerful, internet-driven trends can make seemingly worthless assets explode higher for no real reason?

Make no mistake; The GameStop story runs deeper than a group of investors collaborating on Reddit to push a stock to all-time highs for the sake of it.

ICYMI, GameStop, a video game and consumer electronics company floundering in recent years amid failed investments and the rising dominance of online retail, rocketed from $US17.25 to $US325 in the first month of 2021.

Why?

Because the users of r/wallstreetbets orchestrated a massive ‘short squeeze’ in a bid to push GameStop’s share price up to $1,000.

For some, the mission appears similar to a ‘crypto pump’, where investors band together to drive a tiny, cheap cryptocurrency’s price higher so they can cash out for massive, quick profits.

For others, however, the GameStop short squeeze appears to be about more than getting rich quick.

Because if the internet raiders can continue to push the stock’s price higher, they’ll cause the hedge funds and Wall Street elites trying to ‘short’ GameStop to lose large sums of money.

In other words, this is like the stock market equivalent of the people rising up against the vastly more powerful individuals whose wealth traditionally dominates the stock market and whose influence and power traditionally rakes in the biggest profits — often at the expense of everyday investors.

What Is A Short Squeeze?

To understand what a short squeeze is, you need to know what shorting is.

In simple terms, short selling is when you borrow shares from a broker and sell them for a given price, under an agreement that you will buy those shares back at a given point in the future.

If you borrowed $5,000 worth of shares in a company you thought was going to be trading 50% lower in three months — and your prediction proved correct — you’d be able to buy those shares back for $2,500, return them to your broker and pocket the other $2,500.

That’s the basic idea of short selling.

It’s a way to potentially profit from prices falling instead of rising.

A short squeeze is when upward price movement puts pressure on short sellers whose shorts are nearing expiry.

GameStop is a prime example.

Investors buy up the stock, driving the price higher. This pressures the short sellers to buy too, since they are trying to protect themselves against the losses they’ll incur if the stock doesn’t fall to their target price by the agreed date.

Another way to think of a short squeeze is that it’s a battle between those wanting to profit from higher prices, and those wanting to profit from lower prices.

Veteran Trader: Beware Ego, Bias & Thinking You Can Resist The Trend

Jason McIntosh is the founder of Motion Trader, an algorithmic trading and stock market advisory service.

Jason’s been investing and trading professionally for three decades.

Here, he shares his thoughts on short selling, the GameStop story and a dangerous idea many investors grapple with.

“Short selling is a dangerous game, even for the professionals.”

— Motion Trader’s Jason McIntosh

It’s a situation where there is unlimited downside and limited upside i.e. the most a stock can fall is 100%, but it could rise many times more (as the short sellers of GameStop experienced).

It’s basically the opposite to what investors should be looking for.

I target set-ups where I have “asymmetric” risk/reward. That is, I need the potential of making much more than I’m risking.

While short sellers can get this dynamic, it’s nowhere near as good as when you buy shares.

Before I invest in anything, I ask the question: Could I make a multiple of what I’m risking?

“No matter what your numbers say, all that matters is what the market does.”

— Motion Trader’s Jason McIntosh

Another thing to bear in mind is around following the price action.

I’m sure there was ego involved with the GameStop short sellers.

They did their numbers and they were sure they were right — this probably made resistant to taking an early loss.

But no matter what your numbers say, all that matters is what the market does.

It’s more important to exit and stay in the game, than fight on and risk being wiped out (something many retail investors experience).

“Simple lesson: Don’t fight the trend…”

— Motion Trader’s Jason McIntosh

The final point is that markets can run further than just about anyone can imagine.

This is why investing with the trend and letting winners run is so important.

GameStop, Tesla, Bitcoin, and many others had huge gains amidst widespread disbelief.

Many people have lost large sums of money fighting the trend. Others left big sums on the table by exiting too early.

Simple lesson: Don’t fight the trend and let your profits run.  

Buy The Hype? Or Ignore The Noise?

The conflict between fundamental value and market behaviour has always been a point of contention for investors.

The GameStop story — still unfolding at the time of writing — shows you two things.

First, the power of the market to make investors abandon ideas of fundamental value and pile in on a trend.

GameStop isn’t Tesla. It’s a beat-up traditional retailer that probably would still be trading flat were it not for r/wallstreetbets.

Second, the power of the internet to challenge the financial establishment.

As Jason points out, Bitcoin and GameStop aren’t that different.

One could take the view that they’re junk assets devoid of any meaningful fundamental value.

Or, one could look at the gains and accept that when a trend takes hold and creates events like these, you’re better off being in to win than sitting on the sidelines.

Whichever way you prefer to view it, the reality is that the GameStop short squeeze is going to make (and lose) a lot of people a lot of money.

Categories
Cryptocurrencies Investing

The Top 10 Performing Cryptocurrencies Of 2020 (Bitcoin Wasn’t Even Close)

Last year was packed from beginning to end with extreme and unexpected events. The cryptocurrency markets were no exception. In this post, we reveal the top 10 performing cryptos in 2020, how they compared to the top performing stocks, and share some analysis and predictions on Bitcoin and the wider crypto and blockchain sectors for 2021.

Bitcoin is the coin we most often talk about when discussing the boom and bust cycle of the cryptocurrency markets. The original crypto recently smashed through US$40,000 to make yet another all-time high.

But looking back on 2020, it turns out Bitcoin didn’t even make the top 10 in terms of gains.

When you zoom out and compare the crypto markets to the major stock markets in the US, you’ll see that the top performing crypto — with a tiny market caps relative to Bitcoin — eclipsed even the so called ‘Golden Bull’ microcap NASDAQ top performer last year.

So what wild and unexpected twists and turns will we see across stocks and cryptos in 2021 after the crises-packed 12 months just gone?

Let’s start with the top performing cryptocurrencies of 2020 (all prices are in US Dollars).

An Average Gain Of Nearly 1,700%: The Top 10 Performing Cryptocurrencies Of 2020

With so many different exchanges and price trackers around for cryptocurrencies, it’s not uncommon for investors to never really know the all-time high for a particular coin.

The same goes for determining the precise price movement for a given period.

According to coincodex.com, the top performers for 2020 were:

KSM: 4,813%
CEL: 3,263%
YFI: 1,832%
THETA: 1,776%
SNX: 1,481%
ZIL: 1,204%
ADA: 662%
ETH: 608%
WAVES: 595%
XEM: 533%

Bitcoin came in 15th, just over 300%, before it embarked on its steep ascent to new highs the first weeks of 2021.

Ethereum was by far the biggest crypto by market capitalization in the top 10, ending the year just over $100 billion.

Top performer, KSM, had just over half a billion dollar market cap.

So you can see that much like the microcaps that come from nowhere each year to top the stock market gains leader boards, it was — apart from ETH — the smaller, lesser recognized cryptocurrencies that produced the biggest gains in 2020.

A $1,000 investment in KSM could have transformed into just under $50,000 in 12 months.

As for the top 10 cryptocurrencies by market cap, this widely-referenced annual experiment spread $1,000 evenly across each.

The return, a less stellar but nonetheless impressive 139%.

Still, when you compare that against the S&P 500’s 16% gain in 2020 (admittedly, still impressive during a pandemic!), there’s no denying where you would have been better investing that $1,000 last year.

Given the explosive start to the year cryptos have had in 2021, what might be possible in the next 12 months? We’ll get to that. First, let’s look at stocks.

NASDAQ Plays Host To Biggest 2020 Stock Gains (Thanks BTC) While Tech Stocks Dominate S&P 500

The NASDAQ more than doubled the S&P 500’s 16% annual gain in 2020, finishing up 43% higher at the end of the year.

But the top performing stocks on those indices gained way more than that.

Technology dominated the S&P 500, where Tesla ended 2020 the top performer on 743%, Etsy delivered 302% and Nvidia gained 122%.

Over on the NASDAQ, however, a string of microcap tech companies not traded on the S&P 500 delivered some crypto-esque gains.

In fact, the top performer, Bit Digital (which gained 3,691%) owed it’s number one status directly to the crypto bull market that took hold late in the year.

The microcap car rental company focused on mining bitcoin, which allowed it to outperform vaccine companies, renewable energy stocks and biotech players.

Three of the NASDAQ’s top 10 last year gained their spots through cryptocurrency activity.

The highest performing non-crypto stock on the NASDAQ last year was Novavax, which received more than $1.6 billion as it emerged as a player in the COVID-19 vaccine contest of 2020. 

So it’s not as though last year was a write-off for stocks and a home run for cryptocurrencies.

But, while the best performing stock on the major US exchanges could have turned $1,000 into more than $40,000 (thanks Bitcoin), the top performing crypto last year still could have made you a better return.

And if you’d gone for a more measured approach and deployed that $1,000 across the top 10 cryptos by market cap (which represent most of the capital in the crypto markets), you could still have more than doubled your money, compared to relatively weaker double-digit gains from the NASDAQ and weaker again from the S&P 500.

Here at Navexa we aren’t in the business of telling you what to buy or sell.

Whether it’s an asset class, a sector or an individual investment, we only look at the data. The past is never a guide to future performance for any market, sector or investment.

When you consider what a wild ride the world and the markets went on last year, you can understand why making predictions about 2021 is especially fraught.

Our Crypto Analyst’s Three Predictions For 2021

Aaron Boyd is a blockchain engineer and co-founder of Pretoria Research Lab in Berlin.

According to Aaron there are three major developments on the cards in the crypto space this year.

The first hinges on continuing monetary expansion and currency devaluation (which you can read more on in our Medium article here).

Twenty five percent of all US Dollars in existence were printed in 2020.”

That’s not a typo.

The amount of money in the global financial system exploded higher again last year as governments keep up the same strategy they’ve been using to deal with crises for centuries — printing more.

Aaron: “Trillions more Dollars will be printed in 2021 for COVID relief and stimulus packages. This will result in new all-time highs for crypto assets — and stocks.”

That might sound strange, but as fiat currency itself grows less valuable as a result of its diminishing scarcity, that ‘cheap money’ pours into the stock market at the same time as it boosts interest and confidence in Bitcoin’s intrinsic (and decentralized) scarcity.

In other words, in terms of crypto and stock prices in 2021, expect to see more of the what we saw in 2020.

Aaron notes that cryptocurrencies are increasingly becoming a credible alternative hedge to expansive monetary policy.

Gold and other precious metals have historically held this safe haven role.

But in 2021, we’ll see more private investors and institutions choosing Bitcoin over bullion.

It won’t all be smooth sailing and ever higher prices, though, according to Aaron.

There will be another market correction after the past couple of months’ bull run.

Bitcoin will be declared dead for the 417th time!”

No Matter Where Stocks & Cryptos Go In 2021, Make Sure You’re Effectively Tracking Your Performance

Whichever way you slice it, 2021 is going to be an unprecedented year for the markets.

Bitcoin probably could be declared dead yet again… And then go on to hit $100,000 a month later.

That’s not a prediction. But after such a turbulent 2020, you have to concede that anything is possible this year — in both stocks and cryptos.

Whether you’re investing in one or both, make sure you’re getting the data and insights you need to make informed decisions.

The Navexa portfolio tracker gives you the tools to track, analyze and report on ASX, NASDAQ and NYSE holdings and every cryptocurrency, as well as cash accounts and unlisted investments.

Categories
Financial Technology

The 30 New Features We Added To The Navexa Portfolio Tracker In 2020

Evolution is essential in financial technology. In 2020, continuous development and improvement took the Navexa platform from a basic, single-currency portfolio tracker to a multi-currency, multi-asset portfolio tracker that allows you to track, analyse and report on virtually anything you want.

Twelve months ago, Navexa welcomed the first subscribers to our portfolio tracking platform.

Now, as 2020 draws to a close, the people joining Navexa today are finding a very different service from the one those initial subscribers signed up to.

The early Navexa interface
Navexa in late 2020

In this post, we’re detailing 30 notable improvements and updates we’ve made to the platform over the course of 2020.

Note: We’re not including the Mobile App we launched this year as a new feature!

#1 Bulk Portfolio Uploader

Initially, you had to manually add individual holdings and trades to your Navexa account.

So our first order of business this year was to make life easier for you to upload your whole portfolio.

Our Bulk Uploader tool provides a simple two-step process for adding your portfolio using a CSV template.

#2 Taxable Income Report

Our next move was an important one for our community: The ability to generate a taxable income report from your account.

This means you can easily collect data on all your dividend income for tax purposes.

Plus, if you hold stocks that pay dividends in a foreign currency, your account reports on them, too.

#3 Portfolio Contributions Report

Subscribers can access portfolio contributions report.

This shows you how each of your holdings is contributing to your portfolio’s overall performance.

It’s handy in understanding quickly which of your assets are boosting or dragging your total return.

#4 File Attachments

Navexa lets you upload trade statements and dividend statements to go with a particular trade.

This helps you centralize your documents and streamlines personal record keeping.

#5 Adding Notes

Along with file attachments, we added a feature that lets you make and save notes on specific trades and dividends for future reference.

#6 PDF Report Exporting

About the same time, we updated the portfolio diversification chart in the portfolio screen and made it possible to export PDFs for your capital gains and income tax reporting.

#7 Portfolio Sharing

Portfolio tracking might be at the core of Navexa’s service. But behind that are core values that include financial literacy and democratisation.

So, we developed the platform that that you can invite other people to view a read-only version of your portfolio.

You can invite existing users, or invite non-users to view you portfolio by creating their own account.

#8 Date Range Control

We added a date range control at the top right of the portfolio screen.

You can filter the whole page by the range you select.

This allows you to see the capital gains for the day, the week, the month and so on.

This change applies across your account, giving you more analytic flexibility.

#9 Automatic DRP Recording

This update allows you to switch on the Dividend Reinvestment Option to record dividends as new shares instead of income.

A simple, but important development that delivers more flexibility.

#10 Chart Upgrade

We upgraded our performance charting so you can now view performance in percentage terms with ASX benchmarking.

#11 20X Faster Market Data

This change mean the ASX data Navexa uses to display your portfolio and holding analytics now updates more than 20 times faster than before.

#12 Intra-Day Pricing

We rolled out an intra-day price chart for your portfolio and holdings.

This allows you to monitor price action during live trading sessions.

#13 More Data-Rich Update Emails

We improved the weekly and monthly portfolio update emails connected to your account to show you more information about how your portfolio has performed over those time periods.

#14 Mobile App Fingerprint Login

Over on our mobile app, we added finger print login capability, making it easier and faster to log in to your Navexa account on your phone.

#15 NYSE & NASDAQ Exchanges Added

One of the biggest changes we made this year was expanding Navexa from just Australian stocks and funds to include the two majors US markets.

The platform now delivers official data from the ASX, NYSE and NASDAQ.

You can add and track holdings from the US exchanges like you would ASX-listed holdings.

Your account will still report in AUD (and show you the currency gain or loss on your holding screen, too).

We also adjusted our bulk uploader tool so you can use it to import your US holdings.

#16 Return Of Capital Trade Adjustments

Navexa now supports Return of Capital events. You can add these events to a holding and the tax reporting tool will automatically account for it when you create a report.

#17 Another Charting Improvement

We made a small improvement so that all performance charts start at 0.

#18 Automatically Import New Trades

Navexa Link is our tool for importing trades from your broker using contract notes.

We created it so that, even after you’ve used the Bulk Uploader to start your account, you don’t have to keep manually adding new holdings and updating trades.

All you need to do is follow the simple guide we’ve created to set up your email account so that your Navexa account can start reading your contract notes and updating your portfolio accordingly.

#19 Upcoming Dividends Report

Wondering when your next dividends are due? Wonder no more.

We created a report that allows you to see your upcoming dividend payments from the holdings in your portfolio. How far ahead the tool can forecast depends on the individual holding.

You’ll see a chart plotting when your payments are due in the time frame you specify, and a table of payments with your total income at the bottom right.

#20 Dividend Contributions Report

Consider this one a cousin of your Portfolio Contributions report. This lets you see at a glance which holdings are bringing in the most — and least — income for your portfolio.

#21 Unrealized Capital Gains Report

Your UCG Report shows you what tax you’d have to pay and what cash you’d have were you to sell some or all of your holdings.

Navexa’s Reports page

#22 Upgraded Holding Screen

We re-arranged the layout of the holding screen and added more information.

You can now access pricing and dividend information, view trades and adjustments, relevant news and more.

#23 Trust Tax Reporting

This update means you can now run tax reports for ETF holdings. You’ll see additional fields on the add/edit dividend page and that will be reflected in your taxable income report.

#24 More New Brokers For Navexa Link

We’re always adding to our list of Navexa Link-supported brokers based on what our community tells us they need. We recently added Self Wealth & CMC Markets.

#25 Portfolio Groups in The Navexa App

Accessing Navexa on iPhone and Android continues to become better. You can now view your portfolio groups in the app and on PC.

#26 Account Search Function

Click the ‘Search’ icon or hit forward slash on your keyboard to search a holding or portfolio within your account.

#27 Holding Opening Balance Control

Many Navexa users add holdings that they first bought years — or even decades — ago.

That means you may not be able to easily access the exact buy price for a stock.

Now, you can choose to set the opening balance of shares for a holding instead of the exact buy price.

In other words, even if you don’t have access to the necessary historical data, you can still measure the holding’s performance.

#28 DRP Balance Tracking

We’ve improved the Dividend Reinvestment Plan tracking capability in your account.

If you hold a stock that has a ’round down’ DRP, select ‘Round Down With Balance Tracking’ from the holding’s DRP dropdown menu.

#29 Track Unlisted Investments 

Navexa started out for tracking stocks. Then, we added cryptocurrencies and cash accounts. Now, you can track pretty much anything you like in your account. We’ve added Unlisted Investments to the ‘Add Holding’ options. We’ll be refining this in the near future so that you can track specific aspects of unlisted holdings like property, vehicles and collectibles, for example.

Simply select Unlisted Investment next to Cash Account to add a custom holding.

Unlisted Investments
You can now add Unlisted Investments to your Navexa account

#30 Improved Complex Situation Accuracy

We’re always fine tuning the Navexa platform so that it gives you more accurate, useful analytics on your portfolio and holdings. At the time of writing, we’re about to update the performance calculation equation to more accurately reflect and report complex situations (for example, if you made several buy and sell trades on a certain holding).

30 Improvements and Counting:
Much More to Come in 2021

Navexa has grown more than ever in the past 12 months. Your account now delivers more tools, more accuracy, more speed, more reporting — more of all the things you need to effectively track, analyse and understand your investments, be they traditional stocks, cryptocurrencies or unlisted investments.

The next 12 months holds much, much more for our platform.

If you have any features or tools you’d like to see added to the platform, don’t hesitate to get in touch.

Categories
Financial Literacy Investing

Three Mistakes To Avoid When Calculating Portfolio Return

The truth about portfolio performance and investment returns is a lot more complex than most people realise. Here’s three tips on better understanding how your money is performing in the market over time.

When someone asks you how your investment portfolio is performing, what do you say?

‘Not bad’? ‘Could be better’? ‘Stock X has been on a tear lately’?

If you use a financial advisor to manage your investments, do you simply glance at the ‘annual return’ figure and say that’s how your portfolio has performed?

What about income from dividend payments?

Or taxes?

What about time?

Are you happy to look at the short term and cherry pick assets that have performed well?

In this post, we’re going to explore the common problems people have in understanding and expressing their portfolio performance.

Specifically, we’re revealing three mistakes you should avoid when you’re analysing your portfolio and determining its performance.

These mistakes relate to our understanding and perspective on time, our tendency to ignore the impact of dividend income and reinvesting, and the dangers of ignoring the impact fees and taxation has on your overall portfolio performance.

Here at Navexa, we believe intelligent investing hinges on carefully analysing data to get a clear view of your portfolio’s big picture.

Mistake I: Not Annualizing
Your Investment Returns

Say you buy a stock at $5.00 and you sell it for $10.00.

Boom, that’s a 100% gain!

Awesome, you doubled your money.

Good for you. But, what’s missing from the above account of your epic gain?

Time.

Consider this; Two investors buy a stock each. The stock price of both increases by 100%.

Say it took one of them 12 months, and the other three years.

Is it the same result?

On paper, yes. Their capital doubled.

But there’s little doubt you’d rather do it in one year than three.

When you ‘annualize’ your investment returns, you factor time into your calculations.

There are various methods of doing this, but the basic idea is that you divide your capital gain by the time it took you to realize it.

So, 100% in a year is an annualized 100% gain — it took one year to realize.

But 100% over three years is a 33.3% gain, because it took three years to realize.

Annualizing your portfolio performance gives you a more balanced and realistic understanding of your returns over time.

Time, after all, is a finite resource for every investor. So it pays to factor it in!

Mistake II: Treating
Dividend Income Separately

If you own a stock that pays a dividend, you’re collecting income simply for holding the company’s shares.

Investments that pay an income are central to compounding capital and building wealth over the long term.

However, there’s sometimes a tendency for investors to think of their stock’s capital gains as one thing and their income as another.

In some ways, they are separate.

But in terms of calculating the true performance of a holding or portfolio, it’s vital to factor in dividend income.

For instance…

Say Stock A goes up 100% in price over three years (a 33.3% annualized return), and Stock B goes up 110%.

If you fail to account for dividends, you’d think Stock B would be the winning investment.

But if Stock A paid you a 8% quarterly dividend over those three years, and B only a 3% dividend…

Then you’ll find that despite returning a lower capital gain, Stock A delivered the better return on account of the superior dividend income.

This applies even more so when you’re reinvesting your dividends into new shares in a holding.

It’s vital to treat investment income as a factor in calculating you’re overall true portfolio performance.

Mistake III: Disregarding
Broker Fees and CGT Events In
Your Portfolio Performance

Every time you buy or sell an investment, you’ll pay a fee for the transaction to your broker.

Say you pay $10 per trade.

One hundred trades will cost you $1,000 — regardless of whether the investments themselves make any return.

You broker fees should factor into your portfolio performance calculation.

It’s money you’ve spent in the investment process. Money you ideally want to (more than) make back in capital gains and dividends.

The other thing to note about trading fees is obviously that the more you trade, the more capital you’ll burn in the process.

The same goes for CGT — capital gains tax — events.

In Australia, every time you sell a holding you trigger a CGT event.

For argument’s sake, let’s return to the example from earlier.

Say you make a 100% capital gain on a stock over three years.

And say that stock made you another 50% in dividends over those three years.

That’s an annualized gain of 50% (150% total divided by three).

If it was a $10,000 investment to begin with, on paper you’d have $25,000 in capital.

Now let’s deduct the broker fees for buying and selling: $24,980 left.

Now, let’s deduct a notional capital gains tax of 25% on the gain itself ($14,980).

The tax would be $3,745, leaving a gain of $11,235 and total capital after exiting the position of $21,235.

So when all is accounted for — annualization, broker fees and taxation — you’re investment, while you might have liked the sound of 150%, has returned you a 37.45% annualized return of $3,745 over three years.

How Navexa Gives You a Clearer Picture of Portfolio Performance

The Navexa portfolio tracker platform is designed to help you quickly and easily see your portfolio’s true performance.

That means, your annualized return taking into account dividend income, broker fees and taxation.

Cherry picking results to brag about — like the 150% above, for instance — might seem like a good idea.

But the reality of investing is that you must be blunt with yourself about the costs of making money in the markets.

That means not ignoring the key factors we all have to work with when we buy and sell stocks: Capital gains, dividend income, trading fees, tax obligations and, above all, time.

Categories
Cryptocurrencies Tax & Compliance

The Ultimate Guide To Australian Crypto Tax

If you’re buying and selling cryptocurrencies in Australia, you need to know your tax obligations, the ATO’s position on cryptos and a couple of key ideas to help keep your crypto investing and trading on the right side of the law.

When cryptocurrencies burst onto the scene in 2009 with Bitcoin, governments and central banks were quick to deride and discredit the strange new financial instruments. 

It’s wasn’t money, they said. 

It’s a ponzi scheme, they said. 

Cryptos would never threaten to destabilize nor replace ‘real’ money.

The financial establishment largely elected to ignore cryptos in the hope they’d go away. 

But go away cryptos did not.

More than a decade since their inception, cryptos look more than ever as though they’re here to stay.

A quick glance at Coindesk and you’ll see that cryptos and the blockchain technology behind them are edging ever closer to the hallowed ‘mainstream’ adoption:

The institutions and authorities which a few years ago seemed to cover their ears at any talk of them, are now actively seeking to make money on cryptos, too. 

In late July, Bitcoin charged back above $US10,000.

According to analytics from Glassnode, that drove the number of Bitcoin addresses worth more than a million dollars 38% higher to about 18,000.

That’s 18,000 millionaires who may never have grown so wealthy had cryptocurrencies not emerged. 

And when citizens gain wealth — from work, investing, selling property, whatever it may be — the government tends to take a cut. 

Despite remaining skeptical about cryptocurrency’s legitimacy, many governments are now creating new tax legislation in the blockchain space.

That’s the case in Australia and that’s the topic of this guide to crypto taxation. 

Of course, we’re not tax accountants or lawyers, and none of what follows constitutes personal financial advice.

If you’ve been buying and selling crypto and you’re unsure about your tax obligations, this article is a good place to start.

Do You Have To Pay
Tax On Crypto Gains?

The Australian Taxation Office doesn’t regard cryptos as money or foreign currency.

Rather, it sees them as a form of property.

And like property in Australia, they expect you to pay tax on any capital gains you make from investing in this property. 

The ATO says that ‘transacting with bitcoin is akin to a barter arrangement, with similar consequences’.

Those consequences are that you need to pay tax on any gains you make. 

This tax is called Capital Gains Tax (CGT) and is applied equally to cryptocurrencies as it is to other goods such as real estate, shares, and some collectibles or items. 

The ATO spells it out here.

CGT is not a special tax as such, and is simply considered part of your ordinary income you might earn from salaried employment.

The main difference is that capital losses (where sale of an asset results in a net loss) cannot be offset against your ordinary income — only other capital gains, either in that financial year or in the future.

Another important point (and crucial for planning your trades) is that if you hold a CGT asset for 12 months or more, the CGT rate is reduced by 50%.

Example 1: Short Capital Gains

Alice wants to invest in cryptocurrencies, and purchases 1.0 Bitcoin on 1st January for $5,000.

Three months later on 1st April, she sells her Bitcoin for $6,000, and has made a profit of $1,000.

This net gain of $1,000 is added to her ordinary income and charged at the progressive marginal rate for her bracket.

Example 2: Long Capital Gains

Bob purchases 1.0 Bitcoin on January 1 for $5,000.

Fourteen months later on April 1 the following year, he sold his Bitcoin for $8,000 AUD, and has made a profit of $3,000.

However, he has held the asset for more than 12 months and is eligible for the CGT discount of 50%.

Thus the net gain of $3,000 is reduced by half and $1,500 is added to his ordinary income and taxed at the marginal rate for his bracket.

It was folk wisdom (or perhaps wishful thinking) in the early days that only crypto to fiat trades would be applicable for CGT.

This is not the case.

Crypto to crypto tax rules are the same.

The only difference is that you must perform a fair market evaluation of the asset’s worth at the time of the trade in Australian Dollars.

This might be already provided on the trades list for the exchange you use. Or, you might need to use a well-regarded asset tracking site or API to find the backdated asset price.

Example 3: Crypto to Crypto Trades

Charlie purchases 1.0 Bitcoin on January 1 for $5,000.

On February 1, he traded his Bitcoin for 650 Litecoin. On this day, 1 Litecoin is worth $10 AUD. So for taxation purposes, he has sold his Bitcoin for 650 x $10 = $6,500.

The same process then applies. This net gain of $1,500 is added to his ordinary income and charged at the progressive marginal rate for his bracket.

Importantly, $6500 also becomes the cost base for his Litecoin going forward.

When Charlie sells these Litecoin later on, the purchase price is considered to be $6,500.

Does This Mean Tax Authorities
Are Admitting Cryptos Are ‘Money’?

Just because the ATO taxes crypto-to-cash and crypto-to-crypto transactions, doesn’t mean the government is making a declaration on the broader role of cryptos in the financial system.

Nor does the ATO appear to be ‘targeting’ crypto traders to penalize them for making money on the controversial and commonly misunderstood ‘asset’ class.

Here’s the latest guidance from the ATO:

Australia’s crypto tax policy is similar to the legislative requirements you have as an individual if you collect and resell luxury cars for the purpose of making a profit.

Each sale is a CGT disposal and you need to pay tax on that event.

The ATO has for many years now consulted with experts and the public on the taxation treatment of cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin.

Although the laws were perceived by many to be unclear and still in active discussion, since 2014 the ATO guidelines have been very clear.

My Experience: How To
Minimize Crypto Tax Stress

Navexa’s crypto consultant, Aaron Boyd, shares his personal experience on paying tax on his crypto profits:

Having been involved in the crypto space since 2013, frankly I was expecting blockchain assets to remain a grey area for some time and not really require any action. 

Nonetheless, I followed a comprehensive tracking schedule from day one.

This helped me backtrack and ultimately submit amendments for previous years where (at the time) I wasn’t sure exactly how to treat crypto assets.

Here are my three biggest tips:

  1. Record everything. The important information is the action you took (deposits, trades, withdrawals) and the date. If possible, addresses and on-chain transaction IDs are very useful as well. If you have most of this information, you can always calculate your tax liability later on. 
  1. If your situation is complicated, use a blockchain taxation specialist. Crypto Tax Australia has been instrumental in getting my data clean and across the line for a number of years and I can recommend their services . They have been featured on Nugget’s News ( https://youtu.be/1mnn2r1Ysv8 — and I recommend watching this interview ) and have a deep technical understanding of all the various blockchain edge-cases.
  1. Use software that can make your life easier. Originally, I was using bespoke spreadsheets, but this only gets you so far and is incredibly time-consuming, especially if you are a frequent trader. Today, there are many crypto tax software suites that perform exchange imports, automatic price discovery, data cleanliness, tax reporting, and so on. In the past I’ve use Cointracking.info, but there many other great resources now (https://tokentax.co/, https://koinly.io/).

Navexa — the platform hosting this blog post — is one such software service that can help you get your crypto taxes in order.

Navexa’s portfolio tracker lets you track your crypto holdings and trades in fine detail, then auto-generate a comprehensive tax report for a given time period.

From there, you can either report directly to the ATO at tax time, or work with a specialist crypto tax accountant to finalise your tax report before submitting.

Categories
Financial Literacy Investing

Finding Financial Freedom By Creating Passive Income

Financial independence or ‘freedom’ is the ultimate goal for many. But what is it, exactly? We take a look at the role of passive income and intelligent financial management in building financial freedom.

Building a passive income is something many people dream of, but few achieve.

For those who do manage to build a passive income, enjoying true financial freedom becomes more realistic.

It’s easier than you think to build a passive income stream.

Before we get into that though…

What is Financial Freedom, Exactly?

The truth is that financial freedom means different things to different people.

One person might say they only need a million dollars to feel financially free.

Another might say a billion.

Generally speaking, though, financial freedom means collecting a comfortable income from your money, instead of having to trade your time for money.

If you have enough savings, investments and liquid funds available to live the lifestyle that you and your family want, then you have financial freedom.

In other words, you might say it’s having the ability to choose how you spend your time, rather than having to devote your time to making money.

Few people achieve that goal.  

A survey by GoBankingRates found that 69% of Americans have less than $1,000 in their savings accounts.

In Australia, savings.com.au reports that about half the population has less than $10,000 in savings.

Saving for a rainy day is the first and most important step to financial freedom.

Think of it as the foundation for financial freedom.

Once you’ve created a firm foundation, you can start to look at building up passive income.

What Are The Best Ways
To Earn Passive Income?

The idea of having a passive income is often dismissed as a ‘get rich quick’ scheme.

Perhaps that’s because many people don’t like the idea of parking a substantial amount of money in an investment for a long period of time.

The truth is that passive income is the opposite of ‘get rich quick’.

It’s more like ‘get financially free slow and steady’.

There are, however, ways to make the money you are already earning work harder for you and generate a passive income through interest or an investment portfolio.

The average annual return of the stock market over a 10 year period is 9.2%.

That’s far higher than a typical savings account.

If you follow the golden rule of personal finance and pay yourself first by saving some money — even a small amount of money — then the returns you’d see investing in the stock market over the long term could be life-changing.

Imagine you invested $70 per week, every week, for a decade.

With returns of 9.2% per year, compounded, your $33,600 deposits could earn an extra $21,726 in interest, making them worth $55,396.

That’s a pretty impressive return for a relatively modest investment.

The 20-odd grand of interest is your passive income.

If you were able to invest $10,000 a year for 20 years, for argument’s sake, you can see how you’d create a substantial passive income over time.

This long-term, passive income-focused investing can become the path to financial freedom.

How Much Money Do You
Need To Be Financially Free?

Financial independence is a very personal thing. How much money you need depends on your own lifestyle.

In general, if you want to be able to live off the interest on your savings you should aim to be drawing down no more than 4% per year.

So, you should aim to save enough to be able to do that.

If you want to withdraw $40,000 per year, you would need savings of $1 million.

If you live more modestly, you could get away with smaller savings.

Do I Have To Be Rich To
Achieve Financial Freedom?

You don’t have to be rich to start saving.

Simple things like cutting your outgoings and building a modest emergency fund can help you avoid expensive borrowing.

Once you have a safety net you can start investing while looking to increase your income.

Even if you feel like the amount you can save now wouldn’t make a difference, it’s worth making a start.

Consider the snowball cliché.

Even the greatest avalanche starts with a single flake.

And if you’re serious about investing to create passive income and financial freedom, platforms like Navexa give you the tools you need to make intelligent decisions for your portolio.