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Cash, which includes money market investments,
presents the fewest opportunities for growth and is the least risky.
Bonds are also called income investments, have some potential for
growth. They present more risk than cash but less risk than stocks.
Trying More Than One Pond
Generally, a balanced portfolio will have a mix
of all three investment types. You can also diversify by investing
in other investment categories within equity and income investments.
For example, equity investments can be divided
into narrower investment types, or categories: growth-style and
value-style investments. Growth-style investments are stocks of
companies that are expected to experience rapid earnings growth
resulting from strong sales, talented management and dominant market
positions. Value-style investments are shares in companies that
investors deem unattractive for some reason and as such tend to be
priced low relative to some measure of the companies’ worth.
Equity investments are also divided by the market
capitalization of a company’s stock, which is the measure of the
size of a publicly traded company, as determined by multiplying the
company’s share price by the number of shares outstanding. This is
why investments are referred to as “large-cap” or “small-cap”
investments.
You can further diversify his or her equity
investments by spreading risk across different industries or
geographical regions. Someone who invests in one type of investment
(such as stocks) and one investment category (such as large-cap
growth stocks) might spread risk by investing in companies in a
number of different industries or companies based in different
geographical regions, both domestically and internationally.
Similarly, bonds are categorized based on
time-to-maturity and quality. An investor who wishes to minimize
exposure to risk may invest in a bond with a relatively short
maturity, such as a 3-month U.S. Treasury bill, instead of a bond
with a long maturity, such as a 30-year U.S. Treasury bond. Such an
investor would also want to consider bonds rated as “investment
grade” by Standard & Poor’s and Moody’s. For more information about
risks associated with bonds, please see When One Goes Up, The Other
Goes Down: Rising Interest Rates Could Mean Falling Bond Values.
Getting More Bite For Your Bait
Investing in mutual funds instead of individual
stocks can ease the burden of diversification, because the assets of
each mutual fund are usually invested in dozens of different
companies. How much to allocate among stocks, bonds and cash, as
well as how much to allocate among stock and bond categories,
depends on your age, your investment horizon, other demands on your
dollars, your tolerance of volatility and the size of your
portfolio.
Diversification takes effort. Some part of your
portfolio, such as stocks, may grow faster than other parts, such as
bonds. Eventually your portfolio will become unbalanced. In some
cases, you may want to reallocate assets in order to retain the
appropriate percentage of assets in each area, based on your
investment needs.
Creating and then maintaining a diversified
portfolio can be a complicated process. Your financial
representative is ready to help, both with an initial asset
allocation consultation and periodic portfolio checkups.
Roger Sorensen
America's Financial Guide can be found at ==>http://www.slave2work.com/
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