Asset Allocation

Asset Allocation

February 06, 2025

These days, at 41 years old with a family, a demanding career and an 8-piece band, it’s hard to find time to do anything. My life seems to resemble a triangle: in one corner is a job that I love, in another, people that I love, and in a third, music that I love. The lack of time to do anything else is a blessing in disguise. It allows me to focus on what I do best and to hone those skills. The amount of progress I have experienced in those three areas of my life has been immense and it is a direct result of the fact that I don’t spend much time doing anything else. If my life were more like a square or a pentagon, it would just mean less time for family, career, and music.

Warren buffet once said “Defining what your game is — where you’re going to have an edge — is enormously important. Once you’ve done that, buy and hold.” This is how I think about that triangle just mentioned. When it comes to portfolio management it is a similar concept: choose your lanes and stay the course.

The art of portfolio management starts with asset allocation. What asset classes do we want to use in our portfolio? There is a growing list of these. Two generations ago there were basically three: stocks, bonds, and real estate. Today, there is a cornucopia of asset classes. Below is a list commonly cited by most financial and investment institutions:


Aggressive Allocation

Bank Loan

China Region

Commodities Broad Basket

Commodities Focused

Communications

Conservative Allocation

Consumer Cyclical

Consumer Defensive

Convertibles

Corporate Bond

Derivative Income

Digital Assets

Diversified Emerging Mkts

Diversified Pacific/Asia

Emerging Markets Bond

Energy Limited Partnership

Equity Energy

Equity Market Neutral

High Yield Muni

India Equity

Industrials

Inflation-Protected Bond

Infrastructure

Intermediate Core Bond

Intermediate Core-Plus Bond

Intermediate Government

Japan Stock

Large Blend

Large Growth

Large Value

Latin America Stock

Long Government

Long-Short Equity

Long-Term Bond

Macro Trading

Mid-Cap Blend

Mid-Cap Growth

Mid-Cap Value

Miscellaneous Fixed Income

Miscellaneous Region

Miscellaneous Sector

Moderate Allocation

Money Market-Tax-Free

Money Market-Taxable

Multisector Bond

Muni National Interm

Muni National Long

Muni National Short

Muni Single State Interm

Muni Single State Long

Muni Single State Short

Muni Target Maturity

Natural Resources

Nontraditional Bond

Options Trading

Options-based

Preferred Stock

Prime Money Market

Real Estate

Relative Value Arbitrage

Short Government

Short-Term Bond

Small Blend

Small Growth

Small Value

Stable Value

Systematic Trend

Technology

Ultrashort Bond

Utilities

Wow, that’s a lot. Obviously, a well-diversified portfolio doesn’t need all these asset classes, but it does need to think beyond just stocks, bonds, and real estate. Almost all portfolios will, and should, have some large-cap exposure. But whether it needs small or mid-caps is debatable. Typically, the more equity exposure you have the more equity categories will be used. But what’s most important is sticking with the asset classes once you’ve chosen them. This is known as strategic asset allocation. Here, our personal opinions about where we think each asset class is headed are irrelevant. If your strategy is to have 10% in small caps, then you rebalance to that target on a regular basis. If you were to shift your exposure to small caps to 15% because you thought that asset class was poised to outperform, then you are engaging in tactical asset allocation. Here, we are adjusting target weights to our asset’s classes.

Tactical asset allocation is more speculative than strategic. It is also more likely to result in sub-par returns if you don’t know what you are doing. Ironically, sometimes doing nothing can result in a tactical decision. Often when one asset class outperforms, investors are reluctant to rebalance because what you are essentially doing is selling an asset class that is doing well and buying one that isn’t. But is this not the ultimate investing mantra? Buy low and sell high? Recency bias – a common behavioral finance pitfall – is rampant in portfolio management. Sticking to your asset allocation and maintaining a strategic approach can keep investors from making this mistake.

There is a third portfolio strategy known as dynamic asset allocation. Using this technique involves getting in and out of asset classes all together. Obviously, this is the most speculative of three strategies and should rarely be used.

Most people understand the value of diversification (don’t put all your eggs in one basket). But there are levels to diversification. Having all your money in a stock mutual fund is more diversified than having it all in one stock. But that might not be enough diversification either. Depending on your risk tolerance you may need several funds in several asset classes.

If you are managing your nest egg yourself and have never asked yourself, "What assets classes do I want to own?", then you might not be taking this job as seriously as you need to. Which particular asset classes you own is not the most important part, what’s imperative is that you clearly define a strategy and stick with it.

Investors should note that asset allocation and diversification do not assure a profit or protect against loss in declining markets and neither can guarantee that any objective or goal will be achieved.