Asset Allocation is a concept of determining and maintaining a plan of investment in terms of a chosen mix of investments in different assets.
A large part of financial planning is finding an asset allocation that is appropriate for a given person in terms of their appetite for and ability to shoulder risk. This can depend on various factors; see investor profile.
To further break down equity investments into additional asset classes consider the following:
In year 2000, Ibbotson and Kaplan used 5 asset classes in their study "Does Asset Allocation Policy Explain 40, 90, or 100 Percent of Performance?" The asset classes included were large-cap US stock, small-cap US stock, non-US stock, US bonds, and cash. Ibbotson and Kaplan examined the 10 year return of 94 US balanced mutual funds versus the corresponding indexed returns. This time, after properly adjusting for the cost of running index funds, the actual returns again failed to beat index returns. The linear correlation between monthly index return series and the actual monthly actual return series was measured at 90.2%, with shared variance of 81.4%.
In both studies, it is misleading to make statements such as "asset allocation explains 93.6% of investment return". Even "asset allocation explains 93.6% of quarterly performance variance" leaves much to be desired, because the shared variance could be from pension funds' operating structure. The statistics were most helpful when used to demonstrate the similarity of the index return series and the actual return series.
In fact, low cost was a more reliable indicator of performance. Bogle noted that an examination of 5 year performance data of large-cap blend funds revealed that the lowest cost quartile funds had the best performance, and the highest cost quartile funds had the worst performance. *
In asset allocation planning, the decision on the amount of stocks versus Bonds in one's portfolio is a very important decision. Simply buying stocks without regard of a possible bear market can result in panic selling later. One's true risk tolerance can be hard to gauge until having experienced a real bear market with money invested in the market. Finding the proper balance is key.
| Cumulative return after inflation from 2000-to-2002 bear market | |
|---|---|
| 80% stock / 20% bond | -31.35% |
| 70% stock / 30% bond | -25.81% |
| 60% stock / 40% bond | -19.99% |
| 50% stock / 50% bond | -13.87% |
| 40% stock / 60% bond | -7.46% |
| 30% stock / 70% bond | -0.74% |
| 20% stock / 80% bond | +6.29% |
| Projected 10 year Cumulative return after inflation (stock return 8% yearly, bond return 4.5% yearly, inflation 3% yearly ) | |
|---|---|
| 80% stock / 20% bond | 52% |
| 70% stock / 30% bond | 47% |
| 60% stock / 40% bond | 42% |
| 50% stock / 50% bond | 38% |
| 40% stock / 60% bond | 33% |
| 30% stock / 70% bond | 29% |
| 20% stock / 80% bond | 24% |
The tables show why asset allocation is important. It determines an investor's future return, as well as the bear market burden that he or she will have to carry successfully if to realize the returns.
Input parameters are for illustration purpose only; actual returns will vary.
Roger G. Ibbotson and Paul D. Kaplan, Does Asset Allocation Policy Explain 40%, 90%, or 100% of Performance?, The Financial Analysts Journal, January/February 2000
Thomas P. McGuigan, The Difficulty of Selecting Superior Mutual Fund Performance, Journal of Financial Planning, February 2006
James Dean Brown, The coefficient of determination, Shiken: JALT Testing & Evaluation SIG Newsletter, Volume 7, No. 1, March 2003
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"Asset allocation".
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