Asset allocation is not the same as diversification.
Rather, it refers to the strategy of allocating your investment funds among different types of investments, such as stocks, bonds, or money-market funds.
- In the long run, you will be better off with all of your assets concentrated in common stocks.
- In the short run, this may not be true, since the market occasionally has a sinking spell.
- A severe one, such as that of 2000-2002, can cause your holdings to decline in value 20% or more.
- To protect against this, most investors spread their money around.
They may for instance,
- allocate 50% to stocks, 40% to bonds, and 10% to a money-market fund, or,
- a more realistic breakdown might be 70% in stocks, 25% in bonds, and 5% in a money-market fund.
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