Expert Guidance:
Allocate your assets
Home > Investing basics: Diversifying your portfolio > Allocate your assets > Your allocation model > A moderate approach
   
Allocate your assets
1. Allocate your assets
2. Allocation & risk
3. Asset classes: Stock
4. Alternative investments
5. Determining allocation
6. Your allocation model
An aggressive approach
A moderate approach
A conservative approach
A short-term approach
Allocating retirement accounts
Annuitization
Managing your allocation
7. Why rebalance?
8. Allocation & uncertainty
 
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A moderate approach

A moderate allocation model — in which you invest about 50% to 70% of your portfolio in stock and stock mutual funds — can help you balance some of the volatility of stocks with the more reliable income provided by bonds and cash equivalents. The trade-off is that this approach will probably not provide the same level of growth in the long term as a more aggressive strategy.

A moderate allocation plan might be appropriate for investors who want to buffer short-term volatility in their portfolios, need to balance near-term and long-term financial goals, and have less than 10 years until retirement.

If you're not a risk taker by nature but are willing to tolerate some volatility in your portfolio, a moderate allocation model may be suitable in almost any circumstance or financial situation.

And keep in mind that what might be considered a moderate, or even conservative, approach at 25 years of age — say 70% stocks, 20% bonds, and 10% cash — would be quite an aggressive approach by the time you reach 60.
 
Professor Roger IbbotsonProfessor Roger Ibbotson, Yale University, chairman and founder of Ibbotson Associates
         
   
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