Asset Allocation Review: Jan 2005


© Kirk Lindstrom

Asset Allocation Review for Jan 2005:

The most important factor determining your financial success is your asset allocation. You can hit homeruns with the occasional individual stock pick or a great market timing move, but doing either over and over a period of decades is hard, if not next to impossible, to do. The experts say you are much better off allocating your assets between stocks, bonds, real estate and cash to fit your lifestyle and risk parameters then let the market do its work for you. In this article, I'll show you what past allocations have returned over the past 15 years so you can decide what allocation is best for you.

Core and Explore

As I say on my Welcome Page, I advise a "core and explore" approach to investing.

Core means place 80 to 99% of your money into a CORE, buy-and-hold, no load, mostly indexed, mutual fund portfolio. Explore with the remainder as you learn and try to beat the core portfolio. I give several possible core portfolios in my free sample newsletter issue that would work well for most people.

You can use the "explore" part to try your hand at individual stock picking, market timing, managed mutual funds, etc. to see if you can beat the averages. Many use my stock picking advice in my newsletter as a way to "explore". If you do beat the averages, then the explore portion of your portfolio grows faster and you get to critical mass faster. If you don't beat the averages "exploring", then the smaller portion allocated to personal active management doesn't significantly impact your overall goal of reaching critical mass.

Benchmarking

Key to measuring your success is to have a suitable benchmark to compare your results to.

For this article, I will use a "benchmark portfolio" consisting of:

I will give returns for portfolios comprising 80:20, 50:50 and 20:80 Stock:Bond ratios. You can then decide what portfolio to compare your personal results with.

Data Sources

The "total annual returns" I will use in these calculations include "Capital Return" and "Income Return". "Capital Return" is net asset value appreciation measured as "price per share" while "Income Return" is simply the dividends paid.

Vanguard lists these returns by year at their web site. You have to navigate into the site, enter VTSMX or VBMFX then click on "Performance."

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Here's the follow-up discussion on this article: View all related messages

28.   Oct 26, 2005 5:56 PM
In response to Re: Re: Historical Returns and Asset Allocation posted by bob90245:

Yeah, somehow I stated it wrong. ...


-- posted by Kirk


27.   Oct 26, 2005 2:20 PM
In response to Re: Re: Historical Returns and Asset Allocation posted by bob90245:

I'm not sure that falls out of MPT. It is indep ...


-- posted by Normxxx


26.   Oct 26, 2005 12:39 PM
In response to Re: Historical Returns and Asset Allocation posted by Kirk:

Anything that reduces volatility should r ...

-- posted by bob90245


25.   Oct 26, 2005 9:31 AM
In response to Historical Returns and Asset Allocation posted by bob90245:

It is interesting to note that rebalancing reduces SD ...


-- posted by Kirk


24.   Oct 26, 2005 9:03 AM

IS A DOLLAR CRISIS LOOMING?

By Axel Merk | 26 October 2005

“It’s the 70’s, stupid!” was a headline on CNBC on Wednesday, October 5, 2005— a day wh ...


-- posted by Normxxx





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