| The Stock-Bond Decision |
| Written by David McBride | |||
|
January 2010 Choosing a basic stock-bond mix is an important first step in portfolio design. Although the decision may appear simple, it can have a profound impact on your wealth. The theorem proposes that all investors who are willing to take stock risk should begin with a diversified market portfolio. Each investor then can dial down total risk in the portfolio by adding fixed income to the mix. The greater the bond allocation relative to stocks, the less risky the portfolio and the lower the total expected return; the greater the stock allocation relative to bonds, the higher the portfolio's expected return and risk. After establishing the basic stock-bond mix, investors turn their attention to refining the stock allocation, which is where the best opportunities to refine the risk-return tradeoff are found. Investors who are comfortable with higher doses of equity risk can overweight or "tilt" their allocation toward riskier asset classes that have a history of offering average returns above the market. Research published by Eugene Fama and Kenneth French found that small cap stocks have had higher average returns than large cap stocks, and value stocks have had higher average returns than growth stocks. By holding a larger portion of small cap and value stocks in a portfolio, an investor increases the potential to earn higher returns for the additional risk taken. Research shows that two risk factors-maturity and credit quality-account for most of the average return differences in diversified bond portfolios. Long-term bonds and lower-quality corporate bonds typically offer higher average yields to compensate investors for taking more risk. But keep in mind that these premiums are considerably lower than the market, size, and value premiums documented in the equity world. The stock-bond decision drives a large part of your portfolio's long-term performance. During portfolio design, evaluating different stock-bond combinations can help you visualize the risk-return tradeoff as you consider the range of potential outcomes over time. Once you determine a mix, it can guide more detailed choices of asset classes to hold in the portfolio. And as your appetite for risk shifts over time, you can revisit the mix to estimate how shifting your portfolio mix may impact your wealth accumulation goals in the future. Stock is the capital raised by a corporation through the issue of shares entitling holders to an ownership interest of the corporation. A bond is a loan that an investor makes to a corporation, government, federal agency, or other organization. Also known as debt or fixed income securities, most types of bonds pay interest based on a regular, predetermined coupon rate that is set when the bond is issued. A bond portfolio designed for income also carries significant risks, including default and term risk, call risk, and purchasing power (inflation) risk. Foreign securities also are exposed to currency movements.
|
-
"Any chance that mutual funds as a group could outpace a suitably weighted market index (including large and small stocks alike) is, simply put, ‘gone with the wind.'"
~Jack Bogel, Vanguard, Ex-Chairman -
"The only way an investor can get killed is by high fees or trying to outsmart the market."
~ Warren Buffett -
"The stock market is designed to transfer money from the active to the patient."
~Warren Buffett -
"The S&P index benchmarks outperformed their active peer funds in all nine Morningstar style boxes over the past ten years."
~Gus Sauter, Vanguard Group -
"The only consistent superior performer is the market itself and the only way to capture the superior consistency is to invest in a properly diversified portfolio of index funds."
~Rex Sinquefield, Director, Dimensional Fund Advisors -
"For most of us, trying to beat the market leads to disastrous results."
~Prof. Jeremy Siegel, author -
"It is basically impossible to beat the market."
~Prof. Eugene Fama -
"I was not always an obnoxious indexing zealot. Ten years of believing in and selling active management strategies in the brokerage industry made me this way."
~Rick Ferri,CFA, author, financial adviser -
"The media focuses on the temporarily winning active funds that score the more spectacular bull's eyes, not index funds that score every year and accumulate less flashy, but ultimately winning, scores."
~W. Scott Simon, author -
"A low-cost index fund is the most sensible equity investment for the great majority of investors. My mentor, Ben Graham, took this position many years ago, and everything I have seen since convinces me of its truth."
~Warren Buffett -
"Only about one out of every four equity funds outperforms the stock market. That's why I'm a firm believer in the power of indexing."
~Charles Schwab -
"Of the 355 equity funds in 1970, fully 233 of those funds have gone out of business. Only 24 oupaced the market by more than 1% a year. These are terrible odds."
~Jack Bogle -
"The fund industry's dirty little secret: most actively managed funds never do as well as their benchmark."
~Arthur Levitt, Chairman, SEC
© 2009 HonorVise Investments, LLC | All Rights Reserved Worldwide | 3525 Piedmont Road, NE, Building 8, Suite 515, Atlanta, GA 30305 | Toll Free: (888) 317-6545






