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

For investors who are attracted to hedge fund strategies but can't afford the extremely high minimums or long-term financial commitment that these funds require, market-neutral mutual funds may offer an alternative. These funds follow a controversial investment strategy — alternately called market-neutral, zero beta, and long/short portfolio investing — that is designed to maintain average annual returns that are a few points above the return on three-month U.S. Treasury bills, regardless of whether the market is going up or down. The goal is to provide a measure of stability within your investment portfolio.

Market-neutral fund managers use computer programs to evaluate and rank possible investments quantitatively, analyzing price-to-earnings ratios, yield, volatility, earnings growth, and other factors. The fund then buys the stocks ranking at the top, and sells short the ones at the bottom.

Because meeting the fund's goals depends so heavily on accurate assessments of future market movements, some experts consider market-neutral funds more speculative than funds that follow a more conventional trading approach.
 
Professor Roger IbbotsonProfessor Roger Ibbotson, Yale University, chairman and founder of Ibbotson Associates
         
   
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