Asset Allocation

The process of distributing investments across major asset classes based on goals, risk tolerance, and time horizon.

Portfolio Management

Definition

Asset allocation is the single most important investment decision, explaining over 90% of portfolio return variation according to Brinson et al. (1986). Strategic asset allocation sets long-term targets (60/40 stocks/bonds). Tactical asset allocation adjusts weights based on market conditions. The right allocation depends on an investor's goals, risk tolerance, time horizon, and financial situation.

lightbulb Example

A 35-year-old investor targets 80% equities (50% domestic, 20% international, 10% emerging), 15% bonds, 5% alternatives. At age 55, the allocation shifts to 55% equities, 35% bonds, 10% alternatives to reduce risk as retirement nears.

verified_user Key Points

  • Determines 90%+ of portfolio return variation
  • Strategic = long-term targets; tactical = short-term adjustments
  • More stocks for longer horizons; more bonds for shorter
  • Regular rebalancing maintains target allocation

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