Expert Guidance:
Allocate your assets
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Allocate your assets
1. Allocate your assets
2. Allocation & risk
3. Asset classes: Stock
4. Alternative investments
5. Determining allocation
6. Your allocation model
7. Why rebalance?
Market changes
Ways to rebalance
Tax issues
8. Allocation & uncertainty
 
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Market changes

Changes in the markets can make different assets grow at different rates. Over time, the ones that grow more quickly will make up a greater percentage of your portfolio than you originally planned. For instance, an asset class that initially made up 25% of your portfolio might, at some point, increase to 40% while another asset class may shrink from 25% to 10%.

For example, investors who had lots of money in small technology companies in 1998 watched the value of those investments balloon in 1999 to a disproportionately large percentage of their portfolios. But when these stocks plummeted in 2001, holdings in these small companies represented a substantially smaller percentage of their portfolio. Provided your goals and your risk tolerance haven't changed, having a lopsided allocation can interfere with your plans for meeting your financial goals. Without reallocating, you may find yourself with a portfolio that has more risk or a smaller long-term return than you're seeking.
 
Professor Roger IbbotsonProfessor Roger Ibbotson, Yale University, chairman and founder of Ibbotson Associates
         
   
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