Asset
Allocation Is Not Dead
By
Julia Curbo, Portfolios
101
A February article in the Wall Street Journal discussed
the end of asset allocation. In the interim, of course,
many undiversified investors have gotten a rude awakening.
The cornerstone of Modern Portfolio Theory, asset
allocation is the strategy of dividing up your assets
based on a tradeoff of risk and return. The central
theme is that based on your own personality, objective,
and constraints, you should try to maximize your return
for a given level of risk (or minimize your risk for
a given return).
As described in the article, investors frequently
move away from this method in order to concentrate
on higher-return investments. One financial advisor
related a story of a client calling to ask why he
wasn't doing as well as his son (his son had made
57% last year while the client had only made 20%).
The financial advisor had to throw his hands up in
disgust. What made it is worse was that the financial
advisor had to talk the father into investing in a
balanced portfolio to begin with. Originally, the
father had only wanted to invest in bonds. Now, he's
complaining about only making 20%! Another story in
the article described how an individual increasingly
was moving money away from his financial advisor to
himself so he could manage it and generate higher
returns.
What has caused asset allocation to fall from grace
is this incredible bull market. With returns of large
capitalization, growth stocks (i.e., technology) doing
so well, many investors have believed they could achieve
better results by concentrating their investments
in this category. Over the last few years, this strategy
has proved very successful. However, you must consider
the risk that's being undertaken. Asset allocation
may not provide you with stratospheric returns, but
it should lower your risk.
Central to theme of asset allocation is diversification.
That is, all assets do not move up or down at the
same time. Because they do not behave in the same
way at the same time, you lower your risk for your
total portfolio by spreading your investments over
several asset classes instead of just concentrating
it on only one.
As an example, a 100% bond portfolio may be of relatively
low risk but if bonds overall perform poorly, then
you're sunk. That is why a mix of stocks & bonds is
often less risky and generates higher returns then
a total bond portfolio.
Gary Brinson, head of Brinson Partners, an institutional
money management firm, and one of the leading proponents
of asset allocation, argued that this fascination
with concentrating your investments goes in cycles.
He believes that people are abandoning asset allocation
just at the time when they need it the most. While
concentrating your investments in high performing
sectors may increase your returns in the near term,
it will also increase your losses over the long term.
It is exactly at the peak of a bull market when you
need asset allocation the most. And this is often
when people abandon it because their concentrated
investments are doing better than a balanced portfolio.
Are we at the top of the bull market now? We may be
and we may not be. However, is it more likely that
we are today versus 3 years ago? I think the answer
is yes. Now is the time to diversify for a market
correction. Now is the time to lower your risk and
maintain strong returns (maybe not astronomical returns,
but strong ones) by using asset allocation.
Julia Curbo manages Portfolios
101, a web site dedicated to portfolio management,
personal finance, and retirement planning. A form
of this article was originally posted to her Web site
in February, 2000.
8/04/00