Seems like every time I turn around, I need to pay to fix something. These unforeseen expenses… we have no choice but to pay ’em.
Asset allocation is the most important thing in the world. Yet most investors spend zero time thinking about it.
Maybe they have a brokerage account with 10 tech stocks in it and think they are diversified. Or they have an S&P 500 index fund and think they are diversified… even though 50 million other people are in the same trade.
I’ve read a lot of bad literature on asset allocation that encourages people to put their entire portfolios in stocks—simply because they “return the most.”
It’s not hard to poke holes in that argument. If you want to invest in the thing that returns the most, then why not put all your money into bitcoin?
Too risky, right? But if bitcoin is too risky, why are stocks safe? There are lots of stocks that are more volatile than bitcoin.
People target returns in their portfolios without putting any thought into risk. They get an idea in their heads of what they want their portfolios to return, so that’s what they target.
I think people have it completely backward.
Instead of targeting returns in their portfolios, they should target risk—with returns being a secondary concern.
The whole idea of investing is that you construct a portfolio that you can hold through the ups and downs… and there will inevitably be downs.
Here’s what happens: People have a risky portfolio consisting of only growth stocks, they sustain a 40% drawdown, and it causes them so much stress that they are forced to liquidate it—and then the returns stop compounding.
Your goal is to build a portfolio that will help you stay invested.
You could achieve this by constructing a portfolio with less risky stocks. But they’re still stocks and subject to the same macro factors that affect all stocks.
You need exposure to different asset classes that are less correlated or negatively correlated. That's what reduces your risk.
It may also reduce your returns. But if you’re creative about it, it doesn’t have to.
One main reason that people don’t diversify into other asset classes is that they don’t understand other asset classes.
Stocks are easy to understand. Stocks go up; stocks go down—not too hard. It’s a little more complicated than that, but for the time being, let’s assume that stocks are linear instruments.
Bonds are more complex. People don’t like to invest in things they don’t understand. When I was learning to invest, all I knew was that I had to have an allocation to bonds for diversification purposes and that bonds went down when interest rates went up.
Most people don’t think much about having an allocation to real estate in their portfolios, but they do anyway, through the equity in their own homes. For a lot of people, that is all the exposure to real estate that they need. If you need more, you can buy residential property, commercial property, or real estate investment trusts (REITs). Real estate presents liquidity challenges, and publicly traded REITs are an acceptable way to get exposure.
Most people don’t spend much time thinking about getting exposure to commodities, but it’s not that hard. Gold is one-stop shopping—an allocation to gold gives you your commodity exposure, which is one of the most proven ways to hedge your portfolio during times of uncertainty. Plus, if you’re anxious about storing your money in banks right now, gold is a pretty good place to have it.
One of the best and easiest ways to invest in gold is through Hard Assets Alliance. In fact, it’s extending a special offer to Jared Dillian Money readers—12 months of free storage if you open an account today. Details here.
And, of course, no asset allocation discussion would be complete without a discussion of cash. Cash is many things. Cash is optionality—it is the option to buy something cheaper in the future. Cash is an asset class in and of itself—it doesn’t return very much, but it is an asset class.
What I’ve just described is the Awesome Portfolio. Over the last 50-odd years, it has pretty much returned the same as stocks—but with just half the volatility.
It works because it targets risk instead of returns. In fact, it doesn’t promise returns at all. What it does promise—and deliver—is a manageable level of risk.
It's designed to let you stay invested and keep compounding in any kind of environment. If you’re interested in learning more, you can do so here.
Remember, investing is all about psychology. If you can defeat your instinct to focus on returns over risk, you will succeed in boosting the former with far less of the latter.
Jared Dillian
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