Expert Guidance:
Allocate your assets
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Allocate your assets
1. Allocate your assets
2. Allocation & risk
3. Asset classes: Stock
Bonds
Cash
Allocating with derivatives
Futures & options
4. Alternative investments
5. Determining allocation
6. Your allocation model
7. Why rebalance?
8. Allocation & uncertainty
 
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Asset classes: Stock

For investors seeking long-term growth, stock and stock mutual funds are usually the meat and potatoes of their investment portfolio.

Although your stock investments can increase and decrease significantly in value over the short term, the longer you stay in the stock market, the more likely you are to come out ahead. That's why most financial experts agree that the younger you are, the more you should stress stocks in your portfolio. If you begin investing early, you have time to ride out the inevitable ups and downs in the stock market.


 
Professor Roger IbbotsonProfessor Roger Ibbotson, Yale University, chairman and founder of Ibbotson Associates
Roger Ibbotson discusses how stocks may perform in the future.
Some studies suggest that future stock returns will be lower than past returns. One study even suggests that the future equity risk premium will be negative, meaning that stocks will not beat bonds in the future.

Over the past 76 years, stocks have provided an annualized return of approximately 11% per year. Of that return, according to Ibbotson research, 1.25% was from an increase in the price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) — the rest was from actual earnings, dividends, and inflation growth. Since the P/E ratio is unlikely to double again as it did in the past, we should expect equity returns slightly below the historical average going forward. However, there is still good reason to believe that stocks will continue to provide significant returns over the long term. We're projecting an average annual return on stocksgoing forward of about 9%.
 
         
   
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