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Steve Savant

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Sub Headline: You May Not Have to Reinvent the Wheel to Plan Your Asset Allocation

Synopsis: In addition to managing non-systemic risk, one of the goals of creating a diversified portfolio is to provide a more consistent return. But while diversification can help you manage risk, it doesn’t guarantee a profit or prevent a loss in a falling market. Watch part 5 Portfolio Planning from the series Saving for Retirement in Your Working Years with syndicated financial columnist and talk show host Steve Savant.

Content: An asset allocation model is a blue- print for spreading your investment capital among different asset classes. The most suitable model varies, based on an investor’s age, economic situation, and tolerance for investment risk, plus expectations about how the market is likely to perform. Comparing different ways to allocate may help you determine the model that might be best for you.

AGGRESSIVE
An aggressive allocation, which may be appropriate for young people or those with a steady source of fixed income, tends to emphasize equities, with as much as 80% to 90% of the portfolio being invested in stock, stock mutual funds, and stock ETFs.

MODERATE
A moderate allocation might assign between 50% and 70% of the total to equities, depending on your age, your financial goals, and your other financial resources, with the balance going to fixed income and some cash.

CONSERVATIVE
A conservative allocation, which may be appropriate for older people wanting to preserve capital and collect regular income, might assign 40% of the total to equities, with the rest divided between bonds and cash, depending on the economy and an investor’s personal financial situation.

As you analyze an investment’s return remember that the gains or losses it has provided—known as past performance— don’t predict future results. The fate of some one-time stars of the stock market provides ample verification.

However, one of the core principles
of asset allocation is that an investment’s return tends to move in a statistically predictable way above and below its mean, or average value. This variation, called standard deviation, allows you to anticipate the probable range of future returns over a full economic cycle.

Contributions from the book Guide to Understanding Life Insurance in this press release are used with permission from Light Bulb Press.
 
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